By Zylmoc Golge
By the time she was sixteen, Minevah Iolos had been
an unwelcome guest in every shop and manor in Balmora.
Sometimes, she would take everything of value within;
other times, it was enough to experience the pure pleasure
of finding a way past the locks and traps. In either
situation, she would leave a pair of dice in a prominent
location as her calling card to let the owners know
who had burgled them. The mysterious ghost became known
to the locals as Chance.
A typical conversation in Balmora at this time:
"My dear, whatever happened to that marvelous
necklace of yours?"
"My dear, it was taken by Chance."
The only time when Chance disliked her hobby was when
she miscalculated, and she came upon an owner or a guard.
So far, she had never been caught, or even seen, but
dozens of times she had uncomfortably close encounters.
There came a day when she felt it was time to expand
her reach. She considered going to Vivec or Gnisis,
but one night at the Eight Plates, she heard a tale
of the Heran Ancestral Tomb, an ancient tomb filled
with traps and possessing hundreds of years of the Heran
family treasures.
The idea of breaking the spell of the Heran Tomb and
gaining the fortune within appealed to Chance, but facing
the guardians was outside of her experience. While she
was considering her options, she saw Ulstyr Moresby
sitting at a table nearby, by himself as usual. He was
huge brute of a Breton who had a reputation as a gentle
eccentric, a great warrior who had gone mad and paid
more attention to the voices in his head than to the
world around him.
If she must have a partner in this enterprise, Chance
decided, this man would be perfect. He would not demand
or understand the concept of getting an equal share
of the booty. If worse came to worse, he would not be
missed if the inhabitants of the Heran Tomb were too
much for him. Or if Chance found his company tiresome
and elected to leave him behind.
"Ulstyr, I don't think we've ever met, but my
name is Minevah," she said, approaching the table.
"I'm fancying a trip to the Heran Ancestral Tomb.
If you think you could handle the monsters, I could
take care of unlocking doors and popping traps. What
do you think?"
The Breton took a moment to reply, as if considering
the counsel of the voices in his head. Finally he nodded
his head in the affirmative, mumbling, "Yes, yes,
yes, prop a rock, hot steel. Chitin. Walls beyond doors.
Fifty-three. Two months and back."
"Splendid," said Chance, not the least put
off by his rambling. "We'll leave early tomorrow." |