cleft point be?'
'A cleft point-' Wencit began, then paused. He rode in silence for a few seconds, scratching his own beard thoughtfully, then looked around at his audience. 'How many of you are familiar with the works of Yanahir of Trofrolantha?' he asked.
Brandark started slightly, but the others only looked blank. The Bloody Sword waited to see if anyone else would speak, then shrugged. 'I've come across the name,' he said cautiously. 'I've never seen any of his actual writings, but I've seen some older works cite him as a secondary source. He's supposed to have been a historian and philosopher from the time of the First Wizard Wars, isn't he? Frankly, I always thought he was a myth.'
'He wasn't,' Wencit assured him. 'And you're right about when he lived. In fact, he was court historian for Ottovar the Great and Gwynytha the Wise.'
Brandark's weren't the only eyes that went wide and round at that. Ottovar the Great had lived over ten thousand years ago, and the wizard smiled wryly as he saw the unvoiced thought behind their eyes.
'No, I
His voice trailed off, and he gazed into space, looking at something no one else could see. The others glanced at one another, waiting for him to resume, but over a full minute dragged past without his saying another word, and Bahzell cleared his throat.
'I'm sure that's all very well, Wencit, but would you be so very kind as to be getting on with whatever it was you were telling
The wizard twitched, then grinned at the hradani's acerbic tone.
'Forgive me, Bahzell. When you have as many memories as I do, you sometimes get a bit lost sorting through them. As for what I was about to say, Yanahir was a wizard himself, as well as a historian, and he was fascinated by the Races of Man. Of course, there were only three then: humans, dwarves, and hradani.'
'Three?' Brandark looked up sharply. 'What about the elves?'
'Oh, they didn't even exist until after the First Wizard Wars,' Wencit told him. 'In fact, it was watching them come into existence that started Yanahir wondering about the original three races.'
'The elves '
'Of course. Ottovar and Gwynytha created them.'
'
'I see I
'Not that I can remember,' Kaeritha said after several seconds of frowning thought. 'She did describe
'Oh, dear.' Wencit rubbed a hand over his eyes, and as their glow disappeared behind his hand, he looked every year of his unthinkable age for just an instant. Then he lowered his hand and smiled crookedly. 'Let this be a lesson to you, my friends. Never assume that just because something was once common knowledge it must be still.'
'I'm thinking it's likely you're after having a bit more opportunity for that than such as we do,' Bahzell said dryly, and Wencit chuckled.
'No doubt,' he agreed, then shook himself. 'All right. Basically, Yanahir was curious about how the different Races of Man came into existence-or, to be more precise, about how the differences
'But weren't they always different?' Vaijon asked, brow creased in confusion.
'No.' Wencit shook his head firmly. 'I'm not privy to all of the techniques Yanahir used in his investigations. Remember, he'd studied directly under Ottovar, and many of his techniques had been lost long before even the Fall. I do know some wizards are actually capable of traveling through time, though there aren't many who can do it, thank Orr. And only a madman would do so willingly, given that one can only travel backwards, not forward, and that a careless act on the wizard's part would be entirely capable of… um,
'And those findings were?' Brandark asked, and his eyes were almost as bright as Wencit's with the knowledge-hunger at his core.
'Originally, there was only a single Race of Man,' Wencit said simply. 'Humans.'
'But that's-' Vaijon began, then stopped.
'But that's ridiculous,' Wencit finished for him, and shrugged. 'No doubt it seems that way, but Yanahir insisted the evidence was there. According to his studies, the three 'original' Races of Man had all diverged from one another during what he called 'the Cleaving,' when the 'cleft points' that distinguish them drove them apart. As support, he pointed to the emergence of the elves. For that matter, we've had evidence of our own to support the same theory in the halflings. All the tales and histories agree that there
'So what were the cleft points?' Kaeritha asked.
'Well, for the dwarves, it was
'The most obvious one, of course, was their shorter stature, but there were others. Their life spans increased considerably, but their fertility declined. And there were no dwarvish wizards. Yanahir's conclusion was that
'And the hradani?' Brandark demanded.
'Oh, yes. The hradani.' Wencit smiled sadly. 'Do any of you know where the word 'hradani' comes from?' His listeners shook their heads. 'It's a shortened version of the original word '
'Calm?' Brandark repeated very carefully. 'Did you say
'I did. And before the Fall, it was exactly the right word.' He looked at the two hradani. 'I know your people's tales of what the Carnadosans did to you during the Wizard Wars, Bahzell, Brandark. But even the darkest of them don't tell it all. For thousands upon thousands of years in Kontovar, the hradahnahin were considered the calmest, sanest of all the Races of Man.'
'I don't believe it,' Brandark said flatly. 'I
'I'm not surprised,' Wencit told him. 'How could you, given the curse the Fall left your people? But it's true nonetheless. Your people were always bigger, stronger, tougher than the other Races of Man, but there was no