"Hear me, people of Modus. You have lived in the cold darkness for 40 years. It is your choice you stay in darkness without fire, without the thing your ancestors mastered, tamed and used as they wished. Do your rulers make you endure the dark cold for your own good? Do they take most of your produce for their own larders and let you starve because it's best for you? No, they do it because they can, they cheat you and use you, they take your brightest and best to be their slaves and they give you nothing. Tell me why you serve them?"
Ian paused as awaited his audience's reply, who were receiving his speech with mixed emotions. Some were nodding, gripping their staves harder, their faces inflamed in the early morning light. Some were unsure, aloof, listening but not committing. Others were shocked, looking for someplace to hide, afraid of what lurked in the woods nearby. He didn't know whether he could rally them or not.
A young man named Claudris spoke: "Lord Incustodius is right! I've had three sisters taken by the Goat King, and this year both I and my sister Claudra face the awful fate. If we resist together, we can survive, we can be free once again, and make our lives worth living!"
"But what of the King Naaman? Will he let us defy him so?" The speaker was a middle aged man who was stocky and well fed. "I have been his viceroy for more than twenty years, and he is merciful to us beyond what we know. With a flick of his finger, we could all be dead, but he suffers us to live under his protection, keeping us safe from the peril of the forest and beyond. Without him, Modus would be desolate, unremembered. I say turn this pretender in for his just punishments!"
The crowd murmured, not committing one way or the other. Ian looked around, and said: "You have a weapon the Goat King and his servants cannot resist. Fire will protect you from them and from all other dangers from the forest. I know, I have traveled there many years in peace, living in harmony with all there. It's a harmony you could have, if you will rise together."
"I, Wardrum the Warder of Naaman, forbid it," the stocky man said. "I charge you on your obedience."
"An obedience gotten how?" Ian wheeled around and pointed at him dramatically, accusingly. "Did Wardrum do anything to earn your loyalty? Did the Goat King show you any great kindness other than letting you live? An obedience earned by conquest, by force, by evil. I say, undo the conquest and choose your own lord!" There were some shouts and cheering until all but Wardrum were alive with the fever.
"Very well, pretender. I will test your mettle and show the people of Modus what a fraud you are!" He whistled, and a baying came from deep in the woods. A crashing of undergrowth and howling drew closer until a pack of wolves appeared in the center of town. The people screamed and fled back to their hovels, but Ian stood firm against them, a blue glow coming from the broach that held his cloak around his neck. "This one," Wardrum shouted, "this one preaches rebellion against our lord the Goat King. Give him now his well deserved fate and teach these vermin where real power lies!"
The wolves circled Ian, who held his staff up defensively against them. One darted forward, testing him, but he clubbed it over the head and sent it crying back to the pack. Three came from different directions, but quicker than the eye could perceive the young man was like a whirlwind and had all three of them down, whining in pain. The leader of the pack looked at him intently and howled long and horribly, making the distant mountains reverberate with the sound and all surged forward at once, seeking to overcome him. Fire came from his staff, and as each one's fur was caught by the blaze, that wolf was engulfed in blue flame and consumed in a few dreadful seconds. When they were all gone, Ian looked around. "So perish all the Goat King's servants. Now you know his weakness, people of Modus, by fire you can protect yourselves. What say you?"
They surged out into the center of the village and mobbed him, calling their loyalty and promising to serve his cause. Wardrum, watched in horror, sliding away gradually, hoping to slip away into the trees, but Ian caught him and made him kneel before him. "I'm afraid we can't let you go right now, Viceroy Wardrum. There is much to do before the Goat King comes and your defection would rob us of time. I'm afraid you'll have to stay here, out of touch."
Smiling sardonically, Wardrum shrugged. "You speak of freedom, but freedom should include freedom to stand aside. I want no part of your war, Incustodius, and I want to be away from here. How can you rightfully deny my desire?"
"You will go after we've dealt with the Goat King, Wardrum. Bind him!" He said, turning away, but before the villagers could grasp him, the Viceroy produced a club and swung it at the back of Ian's head. Like lightning, his staff blocked and shattered it, and when it touched Wardrum's head, his eyes rolled back in his head and he turned blue, falling over cold.
"We have a chance! We have a chance! What is your bidding, my Lord?" Claudris shouted, almost beside himself with joy.
"Gather as much wood as you can and bring it to the center of town. Make torches until the Goatmen arrive. Come with me, Claudris, I have something special to teach you and your sister." They left the others to venture into the forest while they returned to Claudris and Claudra's dwelling. "You will make arrows for me, I will teach you how. They will be special, the only offensive weapon we have, but they will do. Watch me and learn."
Ian taught them the art of fletching and soon they were proficient. Claudra wondered what kind of teacher he could be, to get them to do something that skilled in such a short time. Before long they had a pile on the floor and Ian called the day's work over, and time for food and rest.
Tired from making arrows, they were happy to eat a little and lie down on their bed. As they had for three weeks, Claudris lay in the middle while Claura and Ian were on opposite sides of him. Ian fell into a deep sleep, and his grandfather Eliezer appeared to him. "Remember how you will defeat the Goat King, Ian. Do not kill him, but make him submit."
"Easier said than done, Grandfather. Is my plan going to work?"
"As long as you have their trust, it will, Ian. It will be ten days before they reach you, so as long as you continue your preparations, you will be ready."