π–Žπ–. 𝔱π”₯𝔒 π”±π”―π”¦π”‘π”žπ”ͺ 𝔲𝔩𝔱𝔦π”ͺπ”žπ”±π”²π”ͺ (π”­π”žπ”―π”± 𝔱𝔴𝔬)

RUSELM'S BESTIARY
CHAPTER NINE ─ THE TRIDAM ULTIMATUM, PART TWO
DISCLAIMER: Much of this chapter is from Sapkowski himself, from The Last Wish, which I have edited and added my own touches to. Many Witcher fans haven't read the novels so if you like the writing in this chapter, I urge you to go give them a read! As with the last chapter, everything until Ruselm arrives is Sapkowski's work. After Ruselm's bit, it returns to Sapkowski yet again.



THERE WAS SOMEONE in Geralt's little attic room. The witcher knew it before he even reached the door, sensing it through the barely perceptible vibration of his medallion which hung faithfully around his neck. It startled an awakeness in his heart and alerted him to the presence which could only be lurking in the darkness.

He blew out the oil lamp which had lit his path up the stairs, pulled the dagger from his boot, slipped it into the back of his belt and pressed the door handle with an exaggeratedly slow movement. The room was dark. But not for a witcher.

Geralt was deliberately cautious in crossing the threshold; he closed the door behind him carefully to avoid making noise. The next second, he dived at the person sitting on his bed, crushed them into the linen, forced his forearm under their chin as he reached for his dagger.

He didn't pull it out. Something wasn't right.

"Not a bad start," she said in a muffled voice, lying motionless beneath him. "I expected something like this, but I didn't think we'd both be in bed so quickly. Take your hand from my throat please."

"It's you."

"It's me. Now there are two possibilities. The first: you get off me and we talk. The second: we stay in this position, in which case I'd like to take my boots off, at least."

The witcher released the girl, who sighed, sat up and adjusted her hair and skirt with rough hands. "Light the candle," she commanded. "I can't see in the dark, unlike you, and I like to see who I'm talking to."

Geralt obeyed silently. The flame sparked up easily and light flooded the space between them. Renfri approached the tableβ€”tall, slim, agileβ€”and sat down, stretching out her long legs in their high boots like a cat. She wasn't carrying any visible weapons. "Have you got anything to drink here?"

"No."

"Then it's a good thing I brought something," she laughed, placing a traveling wineskin and two leather tumblers on the table.

"It's nearly midnight," said Geralt coldly. "Shall we come to the point?"

"In a minute. Here, have a drink. Here's to you, Geralt."

"Likewise, Shrike."

"My name's Renfri, damnit." She raised her head. "I will permit you to omit my royal title, but stop calling me Shrike!"

"Be quiet or you'll wake the whole house." Geralt snapped. "Am I finally going to learn why you crept in here through the window?"

Renfri huffed as though she were disappointed. "You're slow-witted, witcher. I want to save Blaviken from slaughter. I crawled over the rooftops like a she-cat in March in order to talk to you about it. Appreciate my gesture."

"I do," said Geralt in a gentler voice. He relaxed slightly, genuinely pleased that there was a chance to talk this through even if he didn't believe much could be accomplished. He felt the need to say as such, "Except that I don't know what talk can achieve. The situation's clear. Stregobor is in his tower, and you'd have to lay siege to it in order to get to him. If you do that, your letter of safe conduct won't help you. Audoen won't defend you if you openly break the law. The alderman, guards, the whole of Blaviken will stand against you."

"The whole of Blaviken would regret standing up to me." Renfri smiled, revealing a predator's white teeth. It was eerie. "Did you take a look at my boys? They know their trade, I assure you. Can you imagine what would happen in a fight between them and those dimwit guards who keep tripping over their own halberds?"

Geralt, in contrast, frowned. "Do you imagine I would stand by and watch a fight like that? I'm staying at the alderman's, as you can see. If the need arises, I should stand at his side."

"I have no doubt"β€”Renfri grew seriousβ€”"that you will. But you'll probably be alone, as the rest will cower in the cellars. No warrior in the world could match seven swordsmen. So, white-hair, let's stop threatening each other. As I said: slaughter and bloodshed can be avoided. There are two people who can prevent it."

The witcher wanted to laugh at her assumption, but thought better of it. "I'm all ears."

"One," said Renfri, "is Stregobor himself. He leaves his tower voluntarily, I take him to a deserted spot, and Blaviken sinks back into blissful apathy and forgets the whole affair."

"Stregobor may seem crazy," Geralt remarked, "but he's not that crazy."

"Who knows, witcher, who knows?" Renfri shrugged nonchalantly, like his answer didn't matter. "Some arguments can't be denied, like the Tridam ultimatum. I plan to present it to the sorcerer."

His curiosity was piqued. "What is it, this ultimatum?"

Her smile grew vicious. "That's my sweet secret."

"As you wish." Geralt knew pressing her for more would only result in an endless circle. "But I doubt it'll be effective. Stregobor's teeth chatter when he speaks of you. An ultimatum which would persuade him to voluntarily surrender himself into your beautiful hands would have to be pretty good. So who's the other person? Let me guess."

"I wonder how sharp you are, white-hair."

Geralt continued without pause. "It's you, Renfri. You'll reveal a truly princelyβ€”what am I saying, royal magnanimity and renounce your revenge. Have I guessed?"

Renfri threw back her head and laughed, covering her mouth with her hand. Then she grew silent and fixed her shining eyes on the witcher. "Geralt," she said, "I used to be a princess. I had everything I could dream of. Servants at my beck and call, dresses, shoes. Cambric knickers. Jewels and trinkets, ponies, goldfish in a pond. Dolls, and a doll's house bigger than this room. That was my life until Stregobor and that whore Aridea ordered a huntsman to butcher me in the forest and bring back my heart and liver. Lovely, don't you think?"

"No. I'm pleased you evaded the huntsman, Renfri."

"Like shit I did. He took pity on me and let me go. After the son of a bitch raped me and robbed me first."

Geralt, fiddling with his medallion, looked her straight in the eyes. She didn't lower hers. There wasn't much he found he could say.

"That was the end of the princess," she continued. "The dress grew torn, the cambric grew grubby. And then there was dirt, hunger, stench, stink and abuse. Selling myself to any old bum for a bowl of soup or a roof over my head. Do you know what my hair was like? Silk. And it reached a good foot below my hips. I had it cut right to the scalp with sheep-shears when I caught lice. It's never grown back properly."

She was silent for a moment, idly brushing the uneven strands of hair from her forehead. "I stole rather than starve to death. I killed to avoid being killed myself. I was locked in prisons which stank of urine, never knowing if they would hang me in the morning, or just flog me and release me. And through it all, my stepmother and your sorcerer were hard on my heels, with their poisons and assassins and spells. And you want me to reveal my magnanimity? To forgive him royally? I'll tear his head off, royally, first."

"Aridea and Stregobor tried to poison you?" This came as news to the witcher.

With a nod, Renfri confirmed his query. "With an apple seasoned with nightshade. I was saved by a gnome, and an emetic I thought would turn my insides out. But I survived."

"Was that one of the seven gnomes?"

Renfri, pouring wine, froze holding the wineskin over the tumbler. "Ah," she said. "You do know a lot about me. Yes? Do you have something against gnomes? Or humanoids? They were better to me than most people, not that it's your business.

"Stregobor and Aridea hunted me like a wild animal as long as they could. Until I became the hunter. Aridea died in her own bed. She was lucky I didn't get to her earlierβ€”I had a special plan for her, and now I've got one for the sorcerer. Do you think he deserves to die?"

"I'm no judge. I'm a witcher."

"You are. I said that there were two people who could prevent bloodshed in Blaviken. The second is you. The sorcerer will let you into the tower. You could kill him."

"Renfri," said Geralt calmly, "did you fall from the roof onto your head on the way to my room?"

"Are you a witcher or aren't you, damnit? They say you killed a kikimora and brought it here on a donkey to get a price for it. Stregobor is worse than the kikimora. It's just a mindless beast which kills because that's how the gods made it. Stregobor is a brute, a true monster. Bring him to me on a donkey and I won't begrudge you any sum you care to mention."

"I'm not a hired thug, Shrike."

"You're not," she agreed with a smile. She leaned back on the stool and crossed her legs on the table without the slightest effort to cover her thighs with her skirt. "You're a witcher, a defender of people from evil. And evil is the steel and fire which will cause devastation here if we fight each other. Don't you think I'm proposing a lesser evil, a better solution? Even for that son of a bitch Stregobor. You can kill him mercifully, with one thrust. He'll die without knowing it. And I guarantee him quite the reverse."

Geralt remained silent. Renfri stretched, raising her arms.

"I understand your hesitation," she said. "But I need an answer now."

"Do you know why Stregobor and the king's wife wanted to kill you?"

Renfri straightened abruptly and took her legs off the table. "It's obvious," she snarled. "I am heir to the throne. Aridea's children were born out of wedlock and don't have any right toβ€”"

"No." Geralt knew the true answer, he just wanted to hear Renfri admit it.

Renfri lowered her head, but only for a moment. Her eyes flashed. She knew she was caught. "Fine. I'm supposed to be cursed. Contaminated in my mother's womb. I'm supposed to be..."

"Yes?"

"A monster."

He nods slowly. "And are you?"

For a fleeting moment she looked helpless, shattered. And very sad. While sadness was the dominant emotion, there was some measure of anger hidden behind her eyes. "I don't know, Geralt," she whispered, and then her features hardened again. "Because how am I to know, damnit? When I cut my finger, I bleed. I bleed every month, too. I get bellyache when I overeat, and a hangover when I get drunk. When I'm happy I sing and I swear when I'm sad. When I hate someone I kill them and whenβ€”But enough of this! Your answer, witcher."

"My answer is no."

"You remember what I said?" she asked after a moment's silence. "There are offers you can't refuse, the consequences are so terrible, and this is one of them. Think it over."

"I have thought carefully. And my suggestion was as serious."

Renfri was silent for some time, fiddling with a string of pearls wound three times around her shapely neck before falling teasingly between her breasts, their curves just visible through the slit of her jacket. She was beautiful, in a sad way.

"Geralt," she began, "did Stregobor ask you to kill me?"

"Yes. He believed it was the lesser evil."

"Can I believe you refused him, as you have me?"

"You can."

"Why?"

Geralt sighs softly. "Because I don't believe in a lesser evil."

Renfri smiled faintly, an ugly grimace in the yellow candlelight. "You don't believe in it, you say. Well you're right, in a way. Only Evil and Greater Evil exist and beyond them, in the shadows, lurks True Evil. True Evil, Geralt, is something you can barely imagine, even if you believe nothing can still surprise you. And sometimes True Evil seizes you by the throat and demands that you choose between it and another, slightly lesser, Evil."

"What's your goal here, Renfri?"

"Nothing. I've had a bit to drink and I'm philosophising. I'm looking for general truths. And I've found one: lesser evils exist, but we can't choose them. Only True Evil can force us to such a choice. Whether we like it or not."

"Maybe I've not had enough to drink." The witcher smiled sourly. "And in the meantime midnight's passed, the way it does. Let's speak plainly. You're not going to kill Stregobor in Blaviken because I'm not going to let you. I'm not going to let it come to a slaughter here. So, for the second time, renounce your revenge. Prove to him, to everyone, that you're not an inhuman and bloodthirsty monster. Prove he has done you great harm through his mistake."

For a moment Renfri watched the witcher's medallion spinning as he twisted the chain. "And if I tell you, witcher, that I can neither forgive Stregobor nor renounce my revenge then I admit that he is right, is that it? I'd be proving that I am a monster cursed by the gods? You know, when I was still new to this life, a freeman took me in. He took a fancy to me, even though I found him repellent. So every time he wanted to fuck me, he had to beat me so hard I could barely move, even the following day. One morning I rose while it was still dark and slashed his throat with a scythe. I wasn't yet as skilled as I am now, and a knife seemed too small. And as I listened to him gurgle and choke, watched him kicking and flailing, I felt the marks left by his feet and fists fade, and I felt, oh, so great, so great that... I left him, whistling, sprightly, feeling so joyful, so happy. And it's the same each time. If it wasn't, who'd waste time on revenge?"

"Renfri," said Geralt. "Whatever your motives, you're not going to leave here joyful and happy. But you'll leave here alive, early tomorrow morning, as the alderman ordered. You're not going to kill Stregobor in Blaviken."

Renfri's eyes glistened in the candlelight, reflecting the flame; the pearls glowed in the slit of her jacket; the wolf medallion spinning round on its chain sparkled. "I pity you," she said slowly, gazing at the medallion. "You claim a lesser evil doesn't exist. You're standing on a flagstone running with blood, alone and so very lonely because you can't choose, but you had to. And you'll never know, you'll never be sure, if you were right... And your reward will be a stoning, and a bad word. I pity you..."

"And you?" asked the witcher quietly, almost in a whisper.

"I can't choose, either."

"What are you?"

"I am what I am."

"Where are you?"

"I'm... cold..."

"Renfri!" Geralt squeezed the medallion tightly in his hand. She tossed her head as if waking up, and blinked several times, surprised. For a very brief moment she looked frightened.

"You've won," she said sharply. "You win, witcher. Tomorrow morning I'll leave Blaviken and never return to this rotten town. Never. Now pass me the wineskin." Her usual derisive smile returned as she put her empty tumbler back on the table. "Geralt?"

"I'm here."

"That bloody roof is steep. I'd prefer to leave at dawn than fall and hurt myself in the dark. I'm a princess and my body's delicate. I can feel a pea under a mattressβ€”as long as it's not well-stuffed with straw, obviously. How about it?"

"Renfri"β€”Geralt smiled despite himselfβ€”"is that really befitting of a princess?"

"What do you know about princesses, damnit? I've lived as one and the joy of it is being able to do what you like. Do I have to tell you straight out what I want?"

Geralt, still smiling, didn't reply.

"I can't believe you don't find me attractive." Renfri grimaced. "Are you afraid you'll meet the freeman's sticky fate? Eh, white-hair, I haven't got anything sharp on me. Have a look for yourself."

She put her legs on his knees. "Pull my boots off. A high boot is the best place to hide a knife." Barefoot, she got up, tore at the buckle of her belt. "I'm not hiding anything here, either. Or here, as you can see. Put that bloody candle out."

Outside, in the darkness, a cat yawled.

"Renfri?"

"What?"

"Is this cambric?"

"Of course it is, damnit. Am I a princess or not?"





EARLIER THAT NIGHT...

"HAVE YOU EVER heard of the Curse of the Black Sun?"

"The Mania of Mad Eltibald," Ruselm nodded and mused as he looked across the space to Renfri. "I've read about it in depth, yes. Several times. I like to refer to it as Eltibald's Eclipse because, excuse me for pointing it out, but the whole 'Black Sun' ordeal really isn't everything it's cracked out to be."

Renfri, who the young author was beginning to see in a new light since he could see where this conversation was heading, had a sparkle in her eye. It was malicious but astute, and he didn't like it at all. The beautiful blue of her eyes should have been enough to distract him from their intent, though he could not help but feel a sense of impending doom.

"A rather innocuous name," she pointed out. "Not harmful to Eltibald's reputation and not mired with superstition and madness."

Ruselm shrugged, taking the last bite of the meat he held in his palm. It was good. He swallowed and announced, "Jurrens are educated men. I have learned all I can about the matter, and other matters, too. It would be a mistake for me to live in ignorance. Eltibald was not entirely mad, mind you, but you girls are not cursed, either."

"Do explain."

"I will." He nodded and began in a quiet voice, aware of the people around them. The innkeeper continued to mind his own business and other customers were either too busy drinking or singing to care about what was happening around them. "Eltibald studied and did his research, yes. What he interpreted about the girls did, in fact, come to pass. Of the girls that were autopsied, there were unexplained mutations found within them that could allow them to do things never seen before. That is all very true.

"However, it seems to me that this foretelling is something that has been caused by the very people who were trying to avoid it. If these sorcerers had instead done nothing, then I would see no reason to have fear or assume you're some kind of monster, Renfri. A large majority of the girls that escaped their towers went on to inflict pain onto others for the suffering that they had endured. An eye for an eye, as it were."

Renfri's blue eyes narrowed slightly, but she continued to listen on in silence.

"Instead of calling yourself cursed, I would say that you have begun to ascend the evolutionary scale. People are born with connections to magic all the time. Why then should it be impossible for any of you girls to have the same connectionβ€”a stronger connection, in factβ€”just as has been happening for years now? So I circle back around to the beginning of our conversation, Renfri; no, I do not believe you are some witch or monster. You're simply a woman who can do things, there's nothing more to it."

As he finished, Ruselm waited almost anxiously for Renfri to respond to him. To say anything, really. Her lack of a reaction was eerie and it brought forth feelings of ill intent.

She waited a long moment. Her voice was sharp and commanding when she spoke, face twisted into a scowl. Something about the way she spoke gave Ruselm a glimpse into the future; one filled with blood and death and decay. "You're full of shit. You like to pretend you know things about the world, and you'll sit here and posture about your books but I have a reality for you, Ruselm: your precious books and your precious authors who wrote them know nothing about the curse. You know nothing about what I went through because of it, or what the others went through. And back to our earlier conversation? I change my answer. Perhaps I am a monster. I don't know, but your opinion does nothing to change my situation."

Renfri suddenly stood up very quickly and Ruselm flinched before he could stop himself. She noticed.

"Stand up." Renfri demanded.

Ruselm immediately stood up, control of his limbs lost to the power of her voice. He understood what was happening to him now, why he couldn't control himself. It made sense that Renfri's control had grown over him in the time that they had been talking. His answers had displeased her, though the Nazairian believed them wholeheartedly to be true.

He tried to open his mouth to speak.

"Shut up," she snapped coldly, seeing his lip quiver. Ruselm's jaw became locked in place. "And stand still."

For the first time since the she-warg and even before, Ruselm felt completely helpless. No matter how hard he tried to move his limbs, he was stuck rooted in place just as Renfri commanded. Fear gripped his heart with its cold hands, tightening around his lifeblood and chilling his veins. Darkness clouded his vision.

The innkeeper's presence felt foreign now. His back was turned. Ruselm wanted to call out to him, but couldn't. The inability to do anything left him with the only option but to watch what was happening to him without any say in the situation. He could only pray that Renfri would come to her senses soon enough.

Renfri leaned her face close to his, her enchanting blue eyes so deceiving for what was happening. "Tomorrow morning, just before market, I'm going to the tower where the sorcerer Stregobor resides. You're going to come with me, understand?"

He couldn't speak.

"And when we go to Stregobor, you know what we're going to do?"

He still couldn't speak.

"We're going to force him from his tower. If it takes me holding a blade to your throat, then I will not hesitate. If it takes your intervention, you're going to do as I say, do you understand?"

Ruselm couldn't form words.

Renfri's smile was dark. "You're allowed to answer me."

"I understand," he managed the words, then opened his mouth to continue but his voice was cut off. The things he wanted to say weren't an answer to her question. Ruselm couldn't help but fear the coming day. This wizard should be scared.





THE NEXT MORNING was lively with birds singing outside and Caldemeyn in a somewhat brighter mood for breakfast as Libushe was busy in the kitchen. Marilka, the alderman's only daughter, sat beside them at the table, already finished eating as she contented herself to playing with a small doll in her hands.

"Daddy," Marilka nagged monotonously, completely uninterested in the witcher's presence as she smoothed the doll's red hair slowly, "when are we going to the market? To the market, Daddy!"

"Quiet, Marilka," grunted Caldemeyn, wiping his plate with his bread. He looked up to Geralt, peering across the table as though he couldn't discern what information had just been relayed to him. "So, what were you saying, Geralt? They're leaving?"

"Yes." Geralt nodded, glancing out of the corner of his eye at Marilka. Children were sometimes fascinating but they were mostly annoying. He couldn't imagine having one of his own and was slightly grateful in that moment that the Trials had made him sterile.

"I never thought it would end so peacefully!" Caldemeyn remarked. "They had me by the throat with that letter from Audoen. I put on a brave face but, to tell you the truth, I couldn't do a thing to them no matter how much I want to."

The witcher found this troubling. "Even if they openly broke the law? Started a fight?"

"Even if they did." The alderman nodded morosely. "Audoen's a very touchy king. He sends people to the scaffold on a whim. I've got a wife, a daughter, and I'm happy with my office. I don't have to worry where the bacon will come from tomorrow. It's good news that they're leaving. But how, and why, did it happen?"

Marilka, tired of the conversation, interrupted once more. "Daddy, I want to go to the market!"

Caldemeyn looked as if he wanted to strangle himself. With a call over his shoulder, he shouted, "Libushe! Take Marilka away!" And then turned back to the witcher once more, "Geralt, I asked Centurion, the Golden Court's innkeeper, about that Novigradian company. They're quite a gang. Some of them were recognized."

"Yes?"

"The one with the gash across his face is Nohorn, Abergard's old adjutant from the so-called Free Angren Companyβ€”you'll have heard of them. That hulk they call Fifteen was one of theirs too and I don't think his nickname comes from fifteen good deeds. The half-elf is Civril, a brigand and professional murderer. Apparently, he had something to do with the massacre at Tridam."

A chord of familiarity struck somewhere within Geralt.

His heart nearly stopped. "Where?"

"Tridam." Caldemeyn shrugged. "Didn't you hear of it? Everyone was talking about it three... Yes, three years ago. The Baron of Tridam was holding some brigands in the dungeons. Their comradesβ€”one of whom was that half-blood Civrilβ€”seized a river ferry full of pilgrims during the Feast of Nis. They demanded the baron set those others free. The baron refused, so they began murdering pilgrims, one after another. By the time the baron released his prisoners they'd thrown a dozen pilgrims overboard to drift with the currentβ€”and following the deaths the baron was in danger of exile, or even of execution. Some blamed him for waiting so long to give in, and others claimed he'd committed a great evil in releasing the men, in setting a preβ€”precedent or something. The gang should have been shot from the banks, together with the hostages, or attacked on the boats; he shouldn't have given an inch. At the tribunal the baron argued he'd had no choice, he'd chosen the lesser evil to save more than twenty-five peopleβ€”women and childrenβ€”on the ferry."

"The Tridam ultimatum," whispered the witcher. "Renfriβ€”"

"What?" His friend was entirely clueless.

"Caldemeyn," Geralt began, "the marketplace."

"What?"

"She's deceived us!" Geralt growled. "They're not leaving. They'll force Stregobor out of his tower as they forced the Baron of Tridam's hand. Or they'll force me to... They're going to start murdering people at the market; it's a real trap!"

"By all the godsβ€”Where are you going? Sit down!"

Marilka, terrified by the shouting, huddled, keening in the corner of the kitchen.

"I told you!" Libushe shouted, pointing to the witcher. "I told you he only brings trouble!"

Caldemeyn waved her off. "Silence, woman! Geralt? Sit down!"

The witcher did not listen. "We have to stop them. Right now, before people go to the market. And call the guards. As the gang leaves the inn, seize them and hold them."

"Be reasonable!" Caldemeyn cried. "We can't. We can't touch a hair of their heads if they've done nothing wrong. They'll defend themselves and there'll be bloodshed. They're professionals; they'll slaughter my people, and it'll be my head for it if word gets to Audoen. I'll gather the guards, go to the market and keep an eye on them thereβ€”"

"That won't achieve anything, Caldemeyn! If the crowd's already in the square, you can't prevent panic and slaughter." Geralt shook his head. "No. Renfri has to be stopped right now, while the marketplace is empty."

"It's illegal. I can't permit it. It's only a rumor the half-elf was at Tridam. You could be wrong, and Audoen would flay me alive."

"We have to take the lesser evil!"

"Geralt, I forbid it! As Alderman, I forbid it! Leave your sword! Stop!"

He did not stop.

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