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Wulfgang's
Progress
January A. S. XXXVI (January 2002)
Wulfgang
is a wanderer, a traveler. Anyone that has met him can tell you so. From the
pilgrim’s staff, hung with tokens, clasped in his calloused hands, to the
dust on his boots, all of his appearance proclaims him to be a traveler.
Before
Wulfgang found his way to Ardchreag he would wander from place to place,
meeting new people, partaking in new experiences, but never staying anywhere
for long. One day, he found himself following a dirt trail that led towards
the great lake that separates Ealdormere from its parent Kingdom of the
Middle. Along this path he met a man heading in the opposite direction. As he
drew near the stranger’s garb declared him to be a man of importance, though
Wulfgang did not recognize his device.
When
they came face to face, Wulfgang hailed the man, who grew enraged.
“How
dare you speak to me!” he thundered. “You will address me as Your Royal
Majesty Duke Sir Master Master, and speak only when spoken to! Now kneel and
do me homage!”
Now
Wulfgang knew the man to be Peer Fear, and he laid his staff against a tree,
picking up a spoke from a wagon wheel lying by the road. With this weapon
Wulfgang chased Peer Fear through trees, up hills and down valleys, beating
him severely, until finally the man crawled away whimpering.
Collecting
his staff, Wulfgang continued on his way. Soon he met a beautiful woman
sitting in a throne by the side of the road. Her clothes were resplendent, and
her throne was studded with jewels. Sacks of gold lay spilled at her feet, and
a pile of scrolls sat on a plinth to her left.
“Hail
traveler,” she called to Wulfgang as he approached. “I greet you, and wish
you well.” She held out a ringed hand which Wulfgang kissed. She then asked
him to fetch her an apple from a tree a good distance away. Wulfgang was about
to accept her task when she added, “If you do, I’ll give you a scroll.”
She then began to recite a list of chores for him to do, and the rewards he
would get for doing so, and Wulfgang realized that this was Promise of Reward.
Wulfgang
went to the tree and found a wormy windfall apple which he brought back to the
lady. “This,” he said, “is what you get when you only do something for
the reward.” He left her as she sat rigid in her throne, sputtering in
anger.
Walking
on, he met another woman, this one dressed in an exquisite gown who, once he
had drawn near, began to criticize his clothes, his hair, his staff, and all
other aspects of his appearance. And Wulfgang knew at once that he faced
Authenticity’s evil offspring Intolerance. Calmly he asked her if that was a
watch he saw poking out from under her sleeve, at which point Intolerance
turned bright red and exploded.
Humming
a tune, Wulfgang’s feet carried him farther along the trail where he found
an old man mired in a bog, his load spilling from his back. Without a second
thought Wulfgang waded into the mud and helped the man extricate himself. Once
freed he sat the old man on a large rock and went back for the man’s load.
When
he had gathered all the man’s belonging, and repacked them in his sack, the
old man placed his gnarled hand on Wulfgang’s shoulder.
“My
name is Commoner,” he said, “and the load you help me carry are my
troubles. By your aid I know you, for you are Chivalry and Courtesy, the true
aim of all who live in these lands.”
The
man’s words pleased Wulfgang more than any other reward could, and the two
of them walked on, carrying the bundle between them.
