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The Firebird - A Crux Fairy Tale

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He's lost into his own story, now !!! :duke:

That's the best way. ;) And you're right, I did rather get lost in the snow. But it's alright now.

I apologise for my previous apology. There will be a couple of highwaymen after all. Also the unexpected return of Windarsky and Repertorevitch. Can't keep them out, it seems.

Very soon now... :attention:
 
Chapter 10:

Except for the actual bonfire with the erstwhile accused witches chained to it, the village of Grud’ was literally on fire. Both churches had suffered extensive damage, and a large number of villagers, tapping into their vast wellspring of superstition, had concluded that God was angry with them for accusing an innocent girl of witchcraft (not to mention trying to burn a visiting French princess). That and the impending destruction of their homes reduced the attraction of witch burning, and invoked a driving interest in the merits of firefighting. Of the two priests, nothing could be found. Only a couple of melted silver crosses and two piles of ash suggested what might have happened to them. Most people were too busy to worry about them.

“What was that spell, anyway?” asked Jollyrei.

“Oh, just a little something I picked up in my travels in eastern lands,” said Wragg. “It’s an esoteric Sanskrit or Hindu thing, roughly translated as “Buggre alle thys for aye Larke”, although scholars debate the actual meaning. It’s unimportant. You just need some good words, preferably in a foreign language, and a strong sense of desperation. I could have said anything really and the place would still have gone up.”

“Could I do it?” asked Jollyrei.

“Heavens no,” said Wragg. “You aren’t a sorcerer, are you? Takes natural talent and years of training.”

“And that’s why the whole village started on fire?” asked Jollyrei.

“Well, my years of training weren’t in attacking villages,” said Wragg, “but I’m very good with pastries.”

Rodentsov proved adept at lock picking and very soon there were two naked women shivering in the early morning air, a bit soot stained, but the overall effect of Messaline and Thessela standing wreathed in the wispy smoke of the burning town created a picture that had Jollyrei and Wragg stopped in their tracks. The picture was finally spoiled when Messaline put her hand on her very lovely hip.

“And are we going to freeze to death here, or will someone provide something to wear?” she asked. Thessela nodded vigorously in agreement through chattering teeth.

Jollyrei snapped out of his reverie and gave Thessela his embroidered coat. Wragg managed to find a blanket for Messaline, and they all decided to go back to Thessela’s cottage. Once there, Wragg rummaged around in the chest he had brought on his carpet, and found Messaline a wizard’s robe that worked reasonably well as a dress if you tied a rope around it as a belt. Then they all sat down in the sunshine on Thessela’s lawn where it was warmer and had some breakfast. Everyone agreed that Grud’ was, if not a good place to stay, an excellent place to leave.

“Could I have another jelly doughnut?” asked Messaline. Wragg absently waved his hand and a platter of fresh pastries materialized.

“These are very good,” said Thessela. She was sitting beside Messaline, still wearing Jollyrei’s coat. “You conjure very good pastries.”

“Do you think so?” asked Wragg, beaming. “I’ve spent a good deal of study on baking spells. Speaking of magical things, have those elves shown up at all?”

“They’re probably embarrassed and lying low,” said Rodentsov. “I would be if I’d cocked up a Trojan boot plan like that.”

“It all sounded good in theory,” said Wragg. “In practice, however…”

“Well,” said Thessela, “I think you were all very brave and it worked in the end.” She wasn’t quite sure where she stood with this group. As an orphaned village shoemaker, she didn’t really get invited out by sorcerers, royalty, and whatever Rodentsov was. She sighed at the prospect of having to stay in the village. Girls like her didn’t get choices.

“You’ll probably need your coat back,” she said to Jollyrei. “I’ll go find a dress.” She went into the cottage. A moment later, her voice came through the window. “You can come in and get your coat, if you like.”

Jollyrei went into the cottage. A moment later there was an exclamation of “Oh my…!” from Jollyrei, followed by some shuffling noises.

Wragg picked up a pastry and examined it. Messaline looked at Rodentsov, who shrugged.

There were some more noises inside the cottage. Wragg took a keen interest in the colour of jam in his doughnut. Messaline and the Squirrel exchanged a knowing look.

A soft feminine voice in the cottage said, “oh!” in a happy sort of way, followed by some rhythmic creaking sounds.

“Not very good construction, these cottages,” said Rodentsov, making sure to stare out at the middle distance of the road.

“Very poor sound proofing,” agreed Wragg evenly, contemplatively taking a bite of his doughnut.

“I did not think this sort of thing happened in fairy tales,” said Messaline

Eulalia arrived from the village at that point. “What sort of thing?” she asked. “Where’s Jollyrei and the shoe girl?”

“They are, um,” said Rodentsov.

“…looking for a dress for Thessela,” said Messaline.

Wragg suddenly had a coughing fit. Eulalia jumped to his aid and pounded on his back until the choking subsided.

“Bit of pastry went down the wrong way,” he said. Jollyrei emerged from the cottage, looking reasonably well dressed, and wearing his coat. His hair was a bit dishevelled.

“Thessela is, er, you know…finding her dress,” he said.

“Good,” said Messaline. “Lucky girl.” She started to laugh. Rodentsov rolled his eyes.

“She’ll be coming with us,” said Jollyrei, sitting down in the grass.

“I thought she might,” said Wragg.

“Incidentally, has anyone seen my horse?” asked Jollyrei.

It turned out that the horses were gone. There was a small note attached to Wragg’s carpet that said simply “Sorry”. Readers will be pleased to know, however that the horses went on to find gainful employment with two adventurers who, having failed to find anything more interesting than a few balalaika players, and no dancing girls, had decided on a career change. The elves had sold them the horses, and they went off to seek their fortunes in St. Petersburg. So that’s alright.

Thessela emerged from the cottage looking fresh, and perhaps a bit self-conscious, in a summer dress, which in Russia means a full white blouse with flowers embroidered on the shoulders, and a colourful wool skirt. She looked puzzled as she saw Wragg and Jollyrei unrolling a large Persian rug on her lawn.

“Just making final travel arrangements,” said Jollyrei cheerfully, as if that would help her make sense of things.

Chairs from the cottage were arranged on the carpet in two rows with an aisle down the middle. The chest of gear and provisions was set beside Wragg’s armchair at the front. Wragg put on his helmet and goggles and asked everyone to find a seat.

Thessela didn’t see what sitting on the carpet would accomplish, but Messaline seemed quite happy with the directions, so she shrugged her shoulders and played along.

“I am glad our prince was able to help you find such a lovely dress,” said Messaline, winking at Thessela.

Thessela blushed and Wragg suddenly had another coughing fit. Eulalia thumped him on the back again.

“Thank you,” said Wragg. “I seem to keep doing that today for some reason.” He glared at Jollyrei, who made a point of not looking at anyone.

“Never mind,” said Messaline cheerfully. “This time, we go in style, hey Thessela? I hope there will be good food on this carpet.” She laughed at Thessela’s puzzled look.

As far as Thessela was concerned, nobody was making much sense. They all acted like they were preparing to leave, but all they did was this incomprehensible pantomime. “Nobody ever lets me in on the joke,” muttered Thessela.

“I think I will fly with you this time,” said Eulalia. “I still feel tired from yesterday.” She took a seat behind Messaline. Rodentsov climbed onto the chair beside her. Wragg handed everyone a length of rope and instructed them to tie themselves into their seats around the waist. Then he went back to the front.

“You just need to repeat what I say, “ he said to Jollyrei, “and then wave your arms in a circle as you yell “Contact” as loud as you can. Then jump on, and we’ll be off.”

“If you say so,” said Jollyrei.

Wragg pulled his goggles down over his eyes and peered out at Jollyrei, stainding just off the carpet a few feet in front of him. He put on some leather gloves and a scarf, and gave a thumbs up.

“Chocks away,” he called out.

“Chocks away, aye!” yelled Jollyrei.

“Contact!” said Wragg.

Jollyrei frantically waved his arms in a circle and yelled “Contact!” as loudly as he could. His arms suddenly felt some resistance, which suddenly gave way and the carpet started to rumble. There was a puff of black smoke out of nowhere.

“Jump on,” said Wragg, As Jollyrei got into his seat, Wragg said, “Welcome aboard Wragg Carpetlines flight to St. Petersburg. I am Vasili Wragg, and I will be your captain today. Please ensure all carryon baggage is safely stowed under the seat in front of you, your ropes are securely fastened, your seats are all in an upright position, and all smoking materials are extinguished.”

Thessela gave a shriek of surprise as the carpet rose off her lawn and sailed up into the sky.

Messaline took her hand. “I take it you don’t fly very often.” she said.

“What are “chocks” anyway?” asked Jollyrei. And so they left Grud’.

Meanwhile, quite a number of miles away, vaguely to the northwest, but certainly not anywhere near where the carpet is going, Phlebas and Barb were riding down a highway through the bleak steppes of one of the Russias toward St. Petersburg. Phlebas was worrying about Eulalia and Barb was watching the scenery. She was watching how it was the same all the way along the road. Scrubby trees, dry grass, rocks. It had been that way since they left the snow. She had not expected the world outside her ice kingdom to be this boring.

“Are we there yet?” she asked for the fourteenth time.

“No,” said Phlebas. “Maybe tomorrow. We’re going as fast as we can. I don’t want to kill the horse.”

“This place is boring,” said Barb. “And you want to be Tsar of all this?”

“It’s not all like this in all the Russias,” said Phlebas. “Some parts are quite lovely.”

“You should definitely just dump these bits,” said Barb. “When you’re Tsar.”

“Says the Queen of a land of ice and snow,” said Phlebas.

“Snow can be quite pretty,” said Barb.

“I notice that you were not that keen on staying there. Anyway,” said Phlebas, “I couldn’t break up the Russias. Wouldn’t feel right to say ‘all the Russias’ if there were only two of them. I’d end up being Tsar of both the Russias, which sounds ridiculous.”

“Like bear,” added Barb, and giggled.

“Hang on, now. What’s that ahead?” asked Phlebas.

Barb shielded her eyes from the sun and stared up the road. There was a dust cloud with two black shapes in it.

“It looks like two riders,” she said, “coming this way. Maybe they know where this dull country ends.”

The riders continued to get closer. As they came into view, it was apparent that they were up to no good. Both of them wore black masks and were holding small crossbows. Phlebas reined in his horse and pulled out his sword, while Barb slipped off the side and jumped to the ground.

“Stand and deliver,” said the first highwayman. “Let’s have your gold.”

“Right,” said the second highwayman, “ and your fine clothes as well. Strip off those things.”

“I’ve had enough of this,” said Barb, “All day riding through this until I'm completely sick of these stairs…”

“Steppes,” said Phlebas.

“Right,” said Barb, “and now you two twits are wasting my time. I’m just done.” She waved her hand and her blue wand appeared.

“Oh shit! A witch!” said the first highwayman, just before he and his comrade, still on their horses, were turned into lifesized ice sculptures, entitled “Russian Highwaymen #1 and #2”.

“Come on,” said Barb getting back on the horse. “Let’s go.”

“What about…” said Phlebas.

“Them? Don’t worry about them. The sun’s out. They’ll thaw soon enough.”

“Remind me not to annoy you too much,” said Phlebas.

“You’re sweet,” said Barb. “Eulalia is lucky.”

The next day they finally reached the end of the steppes and descended into the fertile countryside around St. Petersburg. An hour later they were riding along an avenue between two wheat fields bordered by tall trees that formed a canopy of leaves overhead. Picture an idyllic and bucolic summer afternoon, warm, with dappled sunlight coming through the leaves. It’s enough to make anyone feel that things will be alright in the world. In short, even Phlebas began to relax a bit.

“Now, this is better,” said Barb. “Will your father be happy to see you without the Firebird?”

“Oh,” said Phlebas, “I don’t think we should expect him to be happy.”

“Because your dad is evil and probably mad?” asked Barb.

“Hey, it explains a lot,” he answered. “Still, I am his son. What’s he going to do? Throw me in a dungeon? I don’t even think we have a dungeon in the palace.”

Given that conversation, the net which fell onto them and dragged them from Phlebas’ horse a moment later was quite a surprise. They hit the ground with a thud, with Phlebas unfortunately landing on Barb, knocking the wind out of her. Soldiers dressed in purple gold and black livery immediately rushed in and bound their hands behind their backs.

“No ice sculpting?” Phlebas asked Barb.

“Sorry,” said Barb. “I need my hands free to conjure up the wand. It’s a bit inconvenient.”

“Good morning,” said Repertorevitch genially. Apparently he was a guard officer now. “Sorry, to waylay you like this, but unfortunately…”

“Not you again,” said Phlebas.

“Hey,” said Windarsky, now apparently a captain in the Tsar’s guard, “it’s the prince from the snow kingdom.”

“Oh yeah!” said Repertorevitch. “Always nice to meet old friends. You know, we met another prince further south. Travelling with an old wizard colleague of mine.”

“You met Jollyrei?” asked Phlebas. “Is he alright? Was there a fiery bird or a woman wearing a fire gown with him?”

“What interesting questions,” said Repertorevitch. “No, there was no burning bird or woman. He was with a princess, and my colleague. He has a new carpet. Very smart, and it looks like a more efficient model than the last one he had.”

Phlebas wondered how a carpet could be more efficient than another carpet. Did it lie on the floor more flatly than other carpets?

“What is the meaning of this, Captain?” demanded Phlebas. “I am your prince. I demand you untie us immediately.”

“My regrets, highness,” said Windarsky, “but his Majesty has commanded that you be brought to him in chains.”

“You asked what he’s going to do?” asked Barb, rolling her eyes. “Your father is evil, remember?”

“And probably mad,” said Phlebas.

“It explains a lot,” agreed Windarsky. “Anyway, we must go. Someone fetch the prince’s horse.”

“These aren’t chains,” said Barb helpfully to Repertorevitch. He shrugged.

And so Phlebas arrived back in St. Petersburg, at the palace where he had grown up, and where this story started. Upon arrival, the guards took him and Barb immediately below the palace and left them side by side in a dungeon cell, their arms chained above their heads.

“So,” said Barb, testing her chains, “happy to be home?”

“Yes,” said Phlebas doubtfully. “You know, it struck me when we were coming down the stairs…”

“Steps,” corrected Barb.

“What?” asked Phlebas. “Anyway, it struck me that I’ve never been down here before.”

“It looks a lot like my dungeons,” said Barb, “only warmer.”

“I hope Eulalia is alright,” Phlebas said.

“You’re sweet,” said Barb. “When she comes, maybe we can all live happily ever after.”

“So,” said a pompous voice, “you decided to return without the Firebird. I told you not to do that. Didn’t I promise to execute you for that?” The Tsar entered the dungeon, flanked by guards.

“Or maybe we’ll just live miserably for a short period,” said Phlebas to Barb.

“Oh, come on,” said Barb sardonically. “You’re his son. What’s he going to do?”

to be continued...
 
“Are we there yet?” she asked for the fourteenth time

I do get impatient and am prone to complain ... Just a little bit :rolleyes:

Why are we crossing steps? ... I mean steppes ... On our way to St. Pete? Shouldn't it be forests and rocks? Canadians should know that! ;)

Why am I stuck with phlebas? I want a carpet ride too! :D

On the other hand I got to be sardonic at the end of the chapter. That's pretty cool. :p

 
“Are we there yet?” she asked for the fourteenth time

I do get impatient and am prone to complain ... Just a little bit :rolleyes:

Why are we crossing steps? ... I mean steppes ... On our way to St. Pete? Shouldn't it be forests and rocks? Canadians should know that! ;)

Why am I stuck with phlebas? I want a carpet ride too! :D

On the other hand I got to be sardonic at the end of the chapter. That's pretty cool. :p
It was no good, Barb, I went downsteppes this morning, saw a new Firebird, and sat and read it. :)

I'll probably be late for work now. :(

But it was worth it. :) Jollyrei is a genius, isn't he? :)

I'd like you to know that I'm resolved to be nice to you from now on. ;)

Demerits I can live with. Being turned into an ice sculpture of Chronicler of Crux #1 is definitely not on my agenda! :eek:
 
Why am I stuck with phlebas? I want a carpet ride too! :D

Well, that's not very nice from my travelling companion. Stuck with me, eh? Wait until my father hear's that, he'll teach you proper respect for a prince of all the Russias.
My father, the mad Tsar.
The fella who currently has us chained and imprisoned in the not-a-dungeon

Hmm . . . . .

Eulailiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!
 
Well, that's not very nice from my travelling companion. Stuck with me, eh? Wait until my father hear's that, he'll teach you proper respect for a prince of all the Russias.
My father, the mad Tsar.
The fella who currently has us chained and imprisoned in the not-a-dungeon

Hmm . . . . .

Eulailiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!
Shushhhhh

Keep quiet or I will ice you over

I'm trying to get some sleep here

Go read some political news or something!

Your Tsar isn't such a bad guy

He hasn't even tried to grope me yet!
 
Surely the Prince could try the line that Ice Witches™ are much more fashionable this year and also...well a good Tsar can hope for a Firebird for Christmas and then he'd have the set! Fire and Ice!

Also no one could stand in his way....no more being laughed at by German princes because they have cool stuff and he does not.
 
“Hey,” said Windarsky, now apparently a captain in the Tsar’s guard,

Wow! A promotion! Or maybe not. Working for that crazy Tsar doesn't seem like it will be such a picnic. The peasants may be revolting. Pee-eew, they sure are revolting!

Why are we crossing steps? ... I mean steppes ... On our way to St. Pete? Shouldn't it be forests and rocks? Canadians should know that! ;)

Hey Canada has steppes; they just call them prairies.

Your Tsar isn't such a bad guy

He hasn't even tried to grope me yet!

You sound disappointed.;) Ducking the demerits now...
 
“Are we there yet?” she asked for the fourteenth time
Why are we crossing steps? ... I mean steppes ... On our way to St. Pete? Shouldn't it be forests and rocks? Canadians should know that! ;)
Um, because... geography is hard, like bear.:oops:
Wow! A promotion! Or maybe not. Working for that crazy Tsar doesn't seem like it will be such a picnic.
It may not be a completely secure career move. :p
 
Thessela emerged from the cottage looking fresh, and perhaps a bit self-conscious

Mmmmmm, Thessala is so cute !:rolleyes:

sr-ukrainian-dress-1115-2 (1).jpg

Thessela gave a shriek of surprise as the carpet rose off her lawn and sailed up into the sky.
Messaline took her hand. “I take it you don’t fly very often.” she said.

For me, I prefer the dragon : all women will know well why ...:rolleyes::rolleyes:

dragon_rider tinted.jpg ... though that his tongue is so much hot too !:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes: imZHe3Y.jpg

But an unicorn could also be rather pleasant !:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes: Boris_Vallejo_-_Erotic_Fantasy_-_Black_Unicorn_(1995).jpg

Is your, hum, Jollyrey also was ?:D

138.gif




 
Chapter 11:

The Tsar was a large angry man in a fur trimmed coat that covered most of him in a cascade of red and blue velvet trimmed in fur. His round head stuck out the top of the tentlike coat, seemingly supported on his huge gray beard. He also had bushy gray eyebrows. He stopped in front of his chained up son and glared at him, ignoring Barbaria for the moment.

“I told you,” said the Tsar, poking Phlebas in the chest with a puffy finger, “that the driving purpose of your life was to find the Firebird, and bring it to me. I also believe I said that bad things would happen if you returned without it.”

“I am sorry to be a disappointment,” said Phlebas. “What did you want the Firebird for agan?”

“That is really none of your business,” said the Tsar. “I am the Tsar, and your business is mainly to do what I ask. However, in the interests of plot exposition within the established parameters of the fairy tale structure, I will tell you.”

“Is this where you tell us what your evil plans are, because you’re going to kill us in a needlessly elaborate way?” asked Barb.

“Ah,” said the Tsar, moving to stand in front of Barb, chained beside Phlebas. “The Ice Queen. Such a waste. You would have been a great ally. We could have become friends. But no, you had to fall in with my son, a man who can’t even fulfill the smallest quest.”

“I decided that there was more to life than sitting around in an ice cube,” said Barb. “I gave up being upset with my life, and turned over a new leaf. I’m reformed. From now on, I’m using my powers for…well, I don’t know if for good, but there’s got to be more than just making more snow.”

“Really,” said the Tsar. “I wonder. You don’t know the power of the dark side, said the Tsar, clenching a fist.”

“I know it nearly destroyed my mother,” said Barb, “before she escaped. We’re not like you,” she growled out the last word. Phlebas was impressed by the venom in her voice.

“Your mother never told you about your real father, did she,” said the Tsar.

“She told me he was dead,” said Barb, “and good riddance.”

“No,” said the Tsar. “I am your father.”

“That’s not possible,” said Barb, appalled, partly by the prospect of this mountain of beard and coat being her dad, but mostly because she felt this overwhelming sense of deja-vu where it seemed she was suddenly in a different story.

“Search your feelings,” said the Tsar. “You know this to be true.”

“Oh shut up,” said Barb irritably. “How are my feelings supposed to tell me things that can only be verified through fact checking and possibly a paternity test?”

“So,” said Phlebas, “does that mean she’s my sister?”

“Half-sister, really,” said the Tsar. “Her mother’s a bit of an Ice Queen.”

“And what about my mother?” asked Phlebas.

“No idea,” said the Tsar. “I know I was married to her, but I can’t remember her face. She’s not really important to the story, except as an oblique reference.”

“Your lack of memory might be due to you being evil, or possibly mad,” said Phlebas.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” said the Tsar. “Anyway, you remind me, I was going to tell you my plans, for no apparently good reason, but you might appreciate them. You see, my new guard officers, who seem to have some grudge against you,” he added to Barb, grabbing her face with one hand and smiling mirthlessly at her, “overheard you talking to each other, and are of the opinion that the Firebird will come to you, given the right incentive.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Phlebas.

“No?” asked the Tsar. “We’ll see. I must have the Firebird, or her fire really. I believe that fire is enchanted by a great sorcerer, and a source of great power. Once I have the firebird’s fiery feathers, I will be able to make Russia a superpower and expand across Europe and then the world.”

“Why would you do that?” asked Barb.

“I’m a Russian absolute monarch,” said the Tsar. “Expansionism is part of the job. If I’m supposed to be Tsar of all the Russias, I want a lot of Russias.”

“You’re a monster,” said Barb.

“Anyway, I don’t believe your little story about how you have no knowledge of the Firebird. I think it will come looking for you. So what I’m going to do is set a little trap. I’m going to imprison you high up on the battlements of the north tower…”

“Why?” asked Phlebas.

“You’ll be visible up there,” said the Tsar. “You’ll be able to look out at what could have been your kingdom, and…look, I’m the Tsar. I get to chain you to a post on the north tower if I wish.”

“What about Barb?” asked Phlebas.

“I shall turn her over to my guards,” said the Tsar. “Sadly, they will have to torture her until she either agrees to help me conquer the world, or she dies. Can’t have her waving ice wands at me all the time. It may be better if she just dies.”

“I’m not afraid,” said Barb.

“Ah, young Ice Queen,” said the Tsar. “You will be. You will be.”

He spun around, which was really quite spectacular, and a lot more ponderous than it sounds. Picture the Queen Mary, spinning around, only instead of being a ship, it’s more shaped like a beach ball covered in a tent. Anyway, it’s quite something. And the Tsar left the dungeon.

Windarsky and Repertorevitch arrived and unchained Phlebas.

“Sorry, Highness,” said Windarsky. “We have to take you up to the north tower.”

“You have to stop them torturing Barb,” said Phlebas, as manacles were attached to his wrists.

“Sadly, we know nothing about that,” said Repertorevitch, “although it sounds like gratuitous excess.”

“Nothing to do with us,” said Windarsky loudly. The two newly minted guard officers pulled him out of the dungeon.

“Good luck,” yelled Barb, trying to be brave.

“Yeah,” said Phlebas. “You too.”

“You can’t do this,” said Phlebas. Repertorevitch shook his head and winked.

“That’s the way,” he said. “Keep shouting protests. It adds verisimilitude.”

Phlebas didn’t know what was going on now, but it didn’t feel like peril anymore, so every couple of minutes he let out a loud protest, expletive, or other expression of displeasure. He noticed that they were not headed for the north tower, but into a part of the palace that had always been blocked off.

“In here,” said Windarsky. They went through an ornate, cobweb covered door, and were suddenly in a sunlit sitting room.

“Where is this?” asked Phlebas.

“It’s your palace,” said Windarsky. “How would I know. I’m just an adventurer. This is an adventure, so here I am. At your service.”

“It’s your mother’s old sitting room,” said Repertorevitch, surprising both Phlebas and Windarsky. “These were her rooms before she disappeared. Well, that’s the limited back story anyway. She’s really not that important to this story. What’s important is that this part of the palace is closed off. Nobody comes here.”

“Except us, of course,” said Windarsky

“I thought you were at the service of my mad father,” said Phlebas

“That was before we found out that he’s evil and a threat to everyone around him,” said Repertorevitch. “We’re strictly freelance, on principle, and we don’t particularly like megalomaniacs.”

“Could you,” Phlebas said, raising his chained arms, “you know…”

“Oh, certainly,” said Repertorevitch. He snapped his fingers and the chains fell away.

“Nice trick,” said Phlebas.

“Look,” said Windarsky, “let’s come clean. We’re not really incompetent adventurers.”

“Yes we are,” said Repertorevitch gloomily. “As adventurers, we are abysmal. Look at the mishaps we’ve had. The only good luck was that girl with the elves that sold us new boots.”

“Okay, you’re right,” said Windarsky. “I should have said, we’re not just incompetent adventurers. That’s really just a cover.”

“We are, in fact,” said Repertorevitch, “from the secret service of a foreign power.”

“And we’re pretty good at that job,” said Windarsky.

“What foreign power?” asked Phlebas dubiously.

“Australia,” said Repertorevitch.

“Isn’t that just a myth?”

“Best you keep thinking so,” said Windarsky.

“You sound Russian. You look Russian,” said Phlebas.

“We were recruited here. We knew the Tsar was evil. We thought Barb was evil too. Glad she isn’t, by the way. It was our patriotic duty as Russians to work for a foreign power to dethrone him,” said Repertorevitch.

Phlebas tried to work out the logic to that. “Even if all this is true,” he said hesitantly, “won’t the Tsar be suspicious if I’m not chained to a post on the north tower?”

“Look out the window,” said Windarsky.

Phlebas looked out. He had a clear view to the north tower. On the top of the tower was a tall post, and chained to the post was a man that looked remarkably like him.

“It’s an illusion I created through my sorcery,” said Repertorevitch. “The Tsar won’t suspect a thing.”

“Nice one, Queue,” said Windarsky admiringly.

“Queue?” asked Phlebas.

“My code name in the secret service. Windarsky is the lead spy. He gets the license to kill and all that stuff. I provide, er, technical support. Unfortunately, my illusion will last only 24 hours, and it will attract the Firebird, I think, since you seem to have some, er, attraction for her.”

“Right,” said Windarsky. “Look, we can’t overthrow the Tsar. If a foreign power was seen to be involved, it could cause all sorts of trouble, but he has to be stopped. You have to stop him before he finds a way to steal the Firebird’s powers. It’s up to you now. We have only this one shot.”

“No pressure then,” said Phlebas.

“You’ll know what to do,” said Repertorevitch. “Here, take this.” He held out a fiery feather using tongs. Phlebas took it. It was warm, but didn’t burn him.

“There,” said Repertorevitch. “I thought I was right about you. If I had touched that, my hand would be a cinder by now. The Firebird has mysterious powers. She just often doesn’t know what they all are.”

“Okay mate,” said Windarsky, “we gotta go. Good luck. Look us up if you’re ever in Oz.”

“Cheerio,” agreed Repertorevitch. There was a puff of red smoke, girt by blue, and they were gone.

Phlebas thought that if he knew what to do, one thing he knew was that he had to get Barb out of the dungeons. He slipped out of the room and started back to the dungeons.

In the dungeons, a number of leather-clad tortures had stripped Barb of her clothing and had her bound to an upright X cross while they heated irons, and tested various torture devices.

“This is really not in keeping with the overall nature of a fairy tale,” said Barb,

She had managed to freeze one of the torturers with her wand when they unchained her. That explained the torturer shaped ice statue who was even now dripping water onto the floor as he thawed beside the brazier. That had stopped when the three other large men had manhandled her to the ground, breaking her wand. She may not have been groped by the Tsar, but the torturers had not had his restraint. Her thighs, bottom, and breasts had been poked, grabbed and abused on the way to stretching her and spreading her out on the cross.

“Just let me go and I’ll be off finding a glass slipper or something,” she said. The torturers still didn’t pay any attention to her.

Then they pulled a hot iron out of the fire. One of the torturers swaggered over to her and held it under her nose. She could feel the heat radiating off it. She began to feel panicked. She pulled at her bindings, but they were very competently tied.

“Hey,” she said in a placating but quivering voice, “you don’t have to do this. I’ll talk. I’ll tell you anything you want to know.”

“Don’t want to know anything, do I?” said the torturer. “Now we’re going to play a game.”

“What are the rules?” asked Barb.

“Simple. We do things to you,” said the torturer applying the point of the hot iron to the skin just under her left armpit. Barb screamed. It seemed to go on for some time. When she stopped, he added, “and you try to stay alive as long as you can.”

Phlebas heard the scream, from the top of the stairs. He had to stop this, he thought. That was his, not quite his sister. He realized he didn’t even have his sword. He looked around. There were a few swords actually. Unfortunately, they all were in the hands of some fairly unfriendly looking guards who were advancing up the hallway towards him. He assessed the odds.

“Get him!” shouted a guard, as Phlebas took off up a side staircase.

The torturers were blissfully unaware of Phlebas’ problems. They were applying whips to Barb’s badly burned body. After each lash, she had stopped crying out. She only whimpered now.

“Hey, girlie,” said the torturer, “don’t give up yet.” Barb chose that moment to lapse into a faint. The torturer sighed. One of his colleagues picked up a bucket of cold water to throw over her.

“Shut this down and take cover,” said a guard rushing in. “The palace is under attack! We need you to help in the defenses.”

The torturers left Barb where she was hanging and ran up the stairs. “What’s going on?” asked the lead torturer.

“I don’t really know. Somebody said something like a carpet full of enemies landing in the courtyard, but that sounds crazy.”

Phlebas barrelled up the stairs with the guards in hot pursuit. It had been a while since he had explored the palace, and he wasn’t exactly sure where he was. He made a sharp left turn and opened a door, emerging into the palace’s central courtyard in time to see a large Persian carpet land neatly on the flagstones. It had a lot of people sitting in rows eating what looked like Danish pastries.

“Phlebas!”, said Jollyrei brightly. “You made it back! Splendid.”

“Jollyrei,” said Phlebas urgently, “look, you have to get Eulalia out of here, it’s a trap!”

“We just got here,” said Jollyrei. “Anyway, wasn’t the whole idea to come back and bring the Firebird with us?”

“Yes, but father is evil, a megalomaniac, and he’s totally mad,” said Phlebas.

“I know,” said Jollyrei.

“Yeah, well he wants to kill us all and steal Eulalia’s powers to take over the world.”

“Can I do that?” asked Eulalia. Phlebas pulled her against him and inexplicably still didn’t burn up. “I don’t know half of my mysterious powers yet, it seems.”

“I don’t know,” said Phlebas. “The Australian agents seemed to think there was a chance. We have to stop it from happening. Oh, and we have a long-lost half-sister who is an Ice Witch and is also being tortured in the dungeons.”

“Australian agents?” asked Rodentsov. “Aren’t they just a…oh never mind.”

“We have dungeons?” asked Jollyrei. “Who knew, right? I say, you have been having an exciting time of it.”

“Yeah,” said Phlebas, “but Barb is probably in bad shape. We need to rescue her.”

“I’ll go,” said Wragg, grabbing his bag of potions. “I healed Messaline. I can deal with this.”

“What about the torturers and guards,” asked Messaline.

“I’m a sorcerer, remember,” said Wragg tersely. He snapped his finger and faded into a ghost form, which slipped silently out the door.”

“Okay,” said Rodentsov, drawing his sword. “Wragg will find Barb. The rest of us better look lively. Sounds like people coming.”

“This sorcerer of yours,” said Phlebas. “He’s reliable?”

“He makes great pastries,” said Jollyrei, “but he’s excellent at healing as well. Have I introduced everyone? This is Thessela. She’s a shoemaker.” He said it in a way to suggest that shoemaker rhymed with Nobel Prize Winner.

“Oh,” said Phlebas. “Nice to meet you.

“Um, Jolly,” said Thessela, pointing toward the door.

“There is a large fat velvet tent in a beard coming out here,” said Messaline, sounding puzzled.

“Great,” said Phlebas. “Father’s arrived, and he wants the Firebird.”

“I take it he’s not going to make you Tsar of all the Russias then?” asked Eulalia.

The guards with the Tsar had crossbows and they were all pointed at the group by the carpet. “Drop your weapons and surrender, or die almost immediately,” said the Tsar conversationally.

“Seems doubtful,” said Jollyrei reflectively. “Hello father. You seem well. As megalomaniacal as ever, I see. Shall I do the introductions?

to be continued...
 
Of the two priests, nothing could be found. Only a couple of melted silver crosses and two piles of ash suggested what might have happened to them.
05154c0ddadd806984322227f6c18181031049-wm.jpg
Mmmmmm, Thessala is so cute ! :rolleyes:
frontal-nude-outdoors-387.jpg Messaline doesn't look less cute with her hand on her very lovely hip 160674213.jpg

and in Wragg's wizard’s robe. Costume-Cospaly.jpg

russian_knight_by_luillo-d5ev78n-2.jpg Even Windarsky and Repertorevitch look cute as guard officers.
 
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Chapter 11:

The Tsar was a large angry man in a fur trimmed coat that covered most of him in a cascade of red and blue velvet trimmed in fur. His round head stuck out the top of the tentlike coat, seemingly supported on his huge gray beard. He also had bushy gray eyebrows. He stopped in front of his chained up son and glared at him, ignoring Barbaria for the moment.

“I told you,” said the Tsar, poking Phlebas in the chest with a puffy finger, “that the driving purpose of your life was to find the Firebird, and bring it to me. I also believe I said that bad things would happen if you returned without it.”

“I am sorry to be a disappointment,” said Phlebas. “What did you want the Firebird for agan?”

“That is really none of your business,” said the Tsar. “I am the Tsar, and your business is mainly to do what I ask. However, in the interests of plot exposition within the established parameters of the fairy tale structure, I will tell you.”

“Is this where you tell us what your evil plans are, because you’re going to kill us in a needlessly elaborate way?” asked Barb.

“Ah,” said the Tsar, moving to stand in front of Barb, chained beside Phlebas. “The Ice Queen. Such a waste. You would have been a great ally. We could have become friends. But no, you had to fall in with my son, a man who can’t even fulfill the smallest quest.”

“I decided that there was more to life than sitting around in an ice cube,” said Barb. “I gave up being upset with my life, and turned over a new leaf. I’m reformed. From now on, I’m using my powers for…well, I don’t know if for good, but there’s got to be more than just making more snow.”

“Really,” said the Tsar. “I wonder. You don’t know the power of the dark side, said the Tsar, clenching a fist.”

“I know it nearly destroyed my mother,” said Barb, “before she escaped. We’re not like you,” she growled out the last word. Phlebas was impressed by the venom in her voice.

“Your mother never told you about your real father, did she,” said the Tsar.

“She told me he was dead,” said Barb, “and good riddance.”

“No,” said the Tsar. “I am your father.”

“That’s not possible,” said Barb, appalled, partly by the prospect of this mountain of beard and coat being her dad, but mostly because she felt this overwhelming sense of deja-vu where it seemed she was suddenly in a different story.

“Search your feelings,” said the Tsar. “You know this to be true.”

“Oh shut up,” said Barb irritably. “How are my feelings supposed to tell me things that can only be verified through fact checking and possibly a paternity test?”

“So,” said Phlebas, “does that mean she’s my sister?”

“Half-sister, really,” said the Tsar. “Her mother’s a bit of an Ice Queen.”

“And what about my mother?” asked Phlebas.

“No idea,” said the Tsar. “I know I was married to her, but I can’t remember her face. She’s not really important to the story, except as an oblique reference.”

“Your lack of memory might be due to you being evil, or possibly mad,” said Phlebas.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” said the Tsar. “Anyway, you remind me, I was going to tell you my plans, for no apparently good reason, but you might appreciate them. You see, my new guard officers, who seem to have some grudge against you,” he added to Barb, grabbing her face with one hand and smiling mirthlessly at her, “overheard you talking to each other, and are of the opinion that the Firebird will come to you, given the right incentive.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Phlebas.

“No?” asked the Tsar. “We’ll see. I must have the Firebird, or her fire really. I believe that fire is enchanted by a great sorcerer, and a source of great power. Once I have the firebird’s fiery feathers, I will be able to make Russia a superpower and expand across Europe and then the world.”

“Why would you do that?” asked Barb.

“I’m a Russian absolute monarch,” said the Tsar. “Expansionism is part of the job. If I’m supposed to be Tsar of all the Russias, I want a lot of Russias.”

“You’re a monster,” said Barb.

“Anyway, I don’t believe your little story about how you have no knowledge of the Firebird. I think it will come looking for you. So what I’m going to do is set a little trap. I’m going to imprison you high up on the battlements of the north tower…”

“Why?” asked Phlebas.

“You’ll be visible up there,” said the Tsar. “You’ll be able to look out at what could have been your kingdom, and…look, I’m the Tsar. I get to chain you to a post on the north tower if I wish.”

“What about Barb?” asked Phlebas.

“I shall turn her over to my guards,” said the Tsar. “Sadly, they will have to torture her until she either agrees to help me conquer the world, or she dies. Can’t have her waving ice wands at me all the time. It may be better if she just dies.”

“I’m not afraid,” said Barb.

“Ah, young Ice Queen,” said the Tsar. “You will be. You will be.”

He spun around, which was really quite spectacular, and a lot more ponderous than it sounds. Picture the Queen Mary, spinning around, only instead of being a ship, it’s more shaped like a beach ball covered in a tent. Anyway, it’s quite something. And the Tsar left the dungeon.

Windarsky and Repertorevitch arrived and unchained Phlebas.

“Sorry, Highness,” said Windarsky. “We have to take you up to the north tower.”

“You have to stop them torturing Barb,” said Phlebas, as manacles were attached to his wrists.

“Sadly, we know nothing about that,” said Repertorevitch, “although it sounds like gratuitous excess.”

“Nothing to do with us,” said Windarsky loudly. The two newly minted guard officers pulled him out of the dungeon.

“Good luck,” yelled Barb, trying to be brave.

“Yeah,” said Phlebas. “You too.”

“You can’t do this,” said Phlebas. Repertorevitch shook his head and winked.

“That’s the way,” he said. “Keep shouting protests. It adds verisimilitude.”

Phlebas didn’t know what was going on now, but it didn’t feel like peril anymore, so every couple of minutes he let out a loud protest, expletive, or other expression of displeasure. He noticed that they were not headed for the north tower, but into a part of the palace that had always been blocked off.

“In here,” said Windarsky. They went through an ornate, cobweb covered door, and were suddenly in a sunlit sitting room.

“Where is this?” asked Phlebas.

“It’s your palace,” said Windarsky. “How would I know. I’m just an adventurer. This is an adventure, so here I am. At your service.”

“It’s your mother’s old sitting room,” said Repertorevitch, surprising both Phlebas and Windarsky. “These were her rooms before she disappeared. Well, that’s the limited back story anyway. She’s really not that important to this story. What’s important is that this part of the palace is closed off. Nobody comes here.”

“Except us, of course,” said Windarsky

“I thought you were at the service of my mad father,” said Phlebas

“That was before we found out that he’s evil and a threat to everyone around him,” said Repertorevitch. “We’re strictly freelance, on principle, and we don’t particularly like megalomaniacs.”

“Could you,” Phlebas said, raising his chained arms, “you know…”

“Oh, certainly,” said Repertorevitch. He snapped his fingers and the chains fell away.

“Nice trick,” said Phlebas.

“Look,” said Windarsky, “let’s come clean. We’re not really incompetent adventurers.”

“Yes we are,” said Repertorevitch gloomily. “As adventurers, we are abysmal. Look at the mishaps we’ve had. The only good luck was that girl with the elves that sold us new boots.”

“Okay, you’re right,” said Windarsky. “I should have said, we’re not just incompetent adventurers. That’s really just a cover.”

“We are, in fact,” said Repertorevitch, “from the secret service of a foreign power.”

“And we’re pretty good at that job,” said Windarsky.

“What foreign power?” asked Phlebas dubiously.

“Australia,” said Repertorevitch.

“Isn’t that just a myth?”

“Best you keep thinking so,” said Windarsky.

“You sound Russian. You look Russian,” said Phlebas.

“We were recruited here. We knew the Tsar was evil. We thought Barb was evil too. Glad she isn’t, by the way. It was our patriotic duty as Russians to work for a foreign power to dethrone him,” said Repertorevitch.

Phlebas tried to work out the logic to that. “Even if all this is true,” he said hesitantly, “won’t the Tsar be suspicious if I’m not chained to a post on the north tower?”

“Look out the window,” said Windarsky.

Phlebas looked out. He had a clear view to the north tower. On the top of the tower was a tall post, and chained to the post was a man that looked remarkably like him.

“It’s an illusion I created through my sorcery,” said Repertorevitch. “The Tsar won’t suspect a thing.”

“Nice one, Queue,” said Windarsky admiringly.

“Queue?” asked Phlebas.

“My code name in the secret service. Windarsky is the lead spy. He gets the license to kill and all that stuff. I provide, er, technical support. Unfortunately, my illusion will last only 24 hours, and it will attract the Firebird, I think, since you seem to have some, er, attraction for her.”

“Right,” said Windarsky. “Look, we can’t overthrow the Tsar. If a foreign power was seen to be involved, it could cause all sorts of trouble, but he has to be stopped. You have to stop him before he finds a way to steal the Firebird’s powers. It’s up to you now. We have only this one shot.”

“No pressure then,” said Phlebas.

“You’ll know what to do,” said Repertorevitch. “Here, take this.” He held out a fiery feather using tongs. Phlebas took it. It was warm, but didn’t burn him.

“There,” said Repertorevitch. “I thought I was right about you. If I had touched that, my hand would be a cinder by now. The Firebird has mysterious powers. She just often doesn’t know what they all are.”

“Okay mate,” said Windarsky, “we gotta go. Good luck. Look us up if you’re ever in Oz.”

“Cheerio,” agreed Repertorevitch. There was a puff of red smoke, girt by blue, and they were gone.

Phlebas thought that if he knew what to do, one thing he knew was that he had to get Barb out of the dungeons. He slipped out of the room and started back to the dungeons.

In the dungeons, a number of leather-clad tortures had stripped Barb of her clothing and had her bound to an upright X cross while they heated irons, and tested various torture devices.

“This is really not in keeping with the overall nature of a fairy tale,” said Barb,

She had managed to freeze one of the torturers with her wand when they unchained her. That explained the torturer shaped ice statue who was even now dripping water onto the floor as he thawed beside the brazier. That had stopped when the three other large men had manhandled her to the ground, breaking her wand. She may not have been groped by the Tsar, but the torturers had not had his restraint. Her thighs, bottom, and breasts had been poked, grabbed and abused on the way to stretching her and spreading her out on the cross.

“Just let me go and I’ll be off finding a glass slipper or something,” she said. The torturers still didn’t pay any attention to her.

Then they pulled a hot iron out of the fire. One of the torturers swaggered over to her and held it under her nose. She could feel the heat radiating off it. She began to feel panicked. She pulled at her bindings, but they were very competently tied.

“Hey,” she said in a placating but quivering voice, “you don’t have to do this. I’ll talk. I’ll tell you anything you want to know.”

“Don’t want to know anything, do I?” said the torturer. “Now we’re going to play a game.”

“What are the rules?” asked Barb.

“Simple. We do things to you,” said the torturer applying the point of the hot iron to the skin just under her left armpit. Barb screamed. It seemed to go on for some time. When she stopped, he added, “and you try to stay alive as long as you can.”

Phlebas heard the scream, from the top of the stairs. He had to stop this, he thought. That was his, not quite his sister. He realized he didn’t even have his sword. He looked around. There were a few swords actually. Unfortunately, they all were in the hands of some fairly unfriendly looking guards who were advancing up the hallway towards him. He assessed the odds.

“Get him!” shouted a guard, as Phlebas took off up a side staircase.

The torturers were blissfully unaware of Phlebas’ problems. They were applying whips to Barb’s badly burned body. After each lash, she had stopped crying out. She only whimpered now.

“Hey, girlie,” said the torturer, “don’t give up yet.” Barb chose that moment to lapse into a faint. The torturer sighed. One of his colleagues picked up a bucket of cold water to throw over her.

“Shut this down and take cover,” said a guard rushing in. “The palace is under attack! We need you to help in the defenses.”

The torturers left Barb where she was hanging and ran up the stairs. “What’s going on?” asked the lead torturer.

“I don’t really know. Somebody said something like a carpet full of enemies landing in the courtyard, but that sounds crazy.”

Phlebas barrelled up the stairs with the guards in hot pursuit. It had been a while since he had explored the palace, and he wasn’t exactly sure where he was. He made a sharp left turn and opened a door, emerging into the palace’s central courtyard in time to see a large Persian carpet land neatly on the flagstones. It had a lot of people sitting in rows eating what looked like Danish pastries.

“Phlebas!”, said Jollyrei brightly. “You made it back! Splendid.”

“Jollyrei,” said Phlebas urgently, “look, you have to get Eulalia out of here, it’s a trap!”

“We just got here,” said Jollyrei. “Anyway, wasn’t the whole idea to come back and bring the Firebird with us?”

“Yes, but father is evil, a megalomaniac, and he’s totally mad,” said Phlebas.

“I know,” said Jollyrei.

“Yeah, well he wants to kill us all and steal Eulalia’s powers to take over the world.”

“Can I do that?” asked Eulalia. Phlebas pulled her against him and inexplicably still didn’t burn up. “I don’t know half of my mysterious powers yet, it seems.”

“I don’t know,” said Phlebas. “The Australian agents seemed to think there was a chance. We have to stop it from happening. Oh, and we have a long-lost half-sister who is an Ice Witch and is also being tortured in the dungeons.”

“Australian agents?” asked Rodentsov. “Aren’t they just a…oh never mind.”

“We have dungeons?” asked Jollyrei. “Who knew, right? I say, you have been having an exciting time of it.”

“Yeah,” said Phlebas, “but Barb is probably in bad shape. We need to rescue her.”

“I’ll go,” said Wragg, grabbing his bag of potions. “I healed Messaline. I can deal with this.”

“What about the torturers and guards,” asked Messaline.

“I’m a sorcerer, remember,” said Wragg tersely. He snapped his finger and faded into a ghost form, which slipped silently out the door.”

“Okay,” said Rodentsov, drawing his sword. “Wragg will find Barb. The rest of us better look lively. Sounds like people coming.”

“This sorcerer of yours,” said Phlebas. “He’s reliable?”

“He makes great pastries,” said Jollyrei, “but he’s excellent at healing as well. Have I introduced everyone? This is Thessela. She’s a shoemaker.” He said it in a way to suggest that shoemaker rhymed with Nobel Prize Winner.

“Oh,” said Phlebas. “Nice to meet you.

“Um, Jolly,” said Thessela, pointing toward the door.

“There is a large fat velvet tent in a beard coming out here,” said Messaline, sounding puzzled.

“Great,” said Phlebas. “Father’s arrived, and he wants the Firebird.”

“I take it he’s not going to make you Tsar of all the Russias then?” asked Eulalia.

The guards with the Tsar had crossbows and they were all pointed at the group by the carpet. “Drop your weapons and surrender, or die almost immediately,” said the Tsar conversationally.

“Seems doubtful,” said Jollyrei reflectively. “Hello father. You seem well. As megalomaniacal as ever, I see. Shall I do the introductions?

to be continued...
While being tortured on the x-cross, I pondered just how much "verisimilitude" there might be in this fairy tale, and in between screams and shrieks (my god those red hot pokers do cause pain), I concluded not very much.

I did think, though, that I was appropriately sassy, questioning, and generally disrespectful in the prescence of that repulsively poor excuse for a tsar. The Queen Mary can certainly do a better pirouette than he can! But then again this isn't about trying out for the follies, is it?

In any case, the gang is all here now after a magic carpet ride and I sense this rousingly wild ride of a tale pivoting toward a conclusion (along with the U.S. election).

So bring on the pollsters. Will Jollyrei and phlebas show some guts, resolve and bravery in the final act? Will someone please rescue me? What does "verisimilitude" mean anyway? Will someone please admit that Australia exists?

All too close to call I suspect!
 
In the dungeons, a number of leather-clad tortures had stripped Barb of her clothing and had her bound to an upright X cross while they heated irons, and tested various torture devices.

“This is really not in keeping with the overall nature of a fairy tale,"said Barb,

girl-confused.jpg Who cares about that, actually ? A fairy tale could be a Devill tale, people are not astonished by this fact at CF ...


“What about the torturers and guards,” asked Messaline.

Oh, Barb was just starting to get her tortures'pleasure : so, it's not urging to free her ...:D

... Will someone please admit that Australia exists?

Yes, it exists but so far from Russia ... :(

Messaline doesn't look less cute with her hand on her very lovely hip

But so cute too with her hand ..........there ?:p:rolleyes:

tumblr_mv9xr5JfvJ1qa4bk9o1_1280.jpg
 
“No,” said the Tsar. “I am your father.”

“That’s not possible,” said Barb, appalled, partly by the prospect of this mountain of beard and coat being her dad, but mostly because she felt this overwhelming sense of deja-vu where it seemed she was suddenly in a different story.

Yes, I seem to recall that story where Barb found out who her real father was. It didn't come out well...
“So,” said Phlebas, “does that mean she’s my sister?”

“Half-sister, really,” said the Tsar. “Her mother’s a bit of an Ice Queen.

Yeah, she had a half sister there too. Barb seems to have family all over.
Once I have the firebird’s fiery feathers, I will be able to make Russia a superpower and expand across Europe and then the world.”
All you really need is a team of hackers...
“We are, in fact,” said Repertorevitch, “from the secret service of a foreign power.”

“And we’re pretty good at that job,” said Windarsky.
If I don't say so myself...
Windarsky is the lead spy. He gets the license to kill and all that stuff.
I always wanted one of those. Am I Connery, Moore, Brosnan or Craig. I guess since Barb's involved it should be Moore.
He said it in a way to suggest that shoemaker rhymed with Nobel Prize Winner.
Did Bob Dylan do that?

Well, I'm fresh out of words for this story, so maybe he can help.
 
At last Phlebas found out that the tsar's madness is a certitude. View attachment 435056

It exists in fairy tales and it even sends out secret agents.
View attachment 435055 Anyway this recent discovery gives it some verisimilitude.

Knew it! There is no Australia. It's only a mirage. Ok, so it doesn't get hot enough in northern Russia to have a mirage ... a mud hole will just have to suffice. :D
 
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