Malum in se
Glade XX, 123
When Karmordi awoke, he began immediately to test the limits of the directives for rest and recuperation laid upon him. Whatever the precise nature of the curse which the Great Witch had levied against him during her trial, its effects on his spirit were fleeting- within a day he was defying his order for bedrest to walk about the ward. By the end of the week, the doctor overseeing the infirmary had chosen to eject him, just to keep him from annoying the other patients.
("He's strong as a king lizard anyway." she'd added, completing his chart, "Never seen anything like it, where a patient comes in so... softened up, I suppose, then just recovers over a few days.")
Shortly afterwards, he met with Finn. The drillmaster of the Dratheran plateau was made of sterner stuff than the doctor, and absolutely refused to permit the young man to return to sparring until Innogen's three week time period had passed. As a result, Karmordi was forced to join the senators and curious citizens of the city in the spectator's booths, watching his fellows compete with obvious avarice in his eyes.
It was there, once again at the side of the field, that Karmordi first discussed the payment the Great and Ancient Witch had demanded.
"The tongue of a liar beast..."
It had been slight work to determine that the Liar Beasts were some sort of legendary monster of the southwestern jungles, but most sources spoke of them in mythical or quasi-religious terms, rather than as game. The general consensus was that they were some kind of unholy thing left over from the days when Malgar himself strode the land, pouring the Wine of Suffering over the earth, some hideous test he'd laid for his new race of Orkhan. Some few people claimed that they were the result of an evil god-king who had opposed Raxen's Conquest, and created them as living weapons to bedevil the faithful. Some few suggested that they were just particularly weird animals. Many agreed that they weren't real, per se.
"Those people have spent too long in the city." Karmordi observed, "The villages know the truth of it. The liar-beasts are rare, thankfully, but they're real enough that in my own home, nobody was ever to pass more than twenty miles from the village alone. I was told that Uncle Tehool's great-uncle met a liar-beast in the woods once, and had to seek healing of the mind from the Greens, so we knew at least one was in the area."
"They hunt Orkhan, though I've heard they'll hunt dragons or elves, too, but only if you're alone. They never approach if there are two or more people. According to the legends, they stalk you from the darkness, and they speak to you in your own voice until you go mad." Karmordi shrugged, "Whatever that means. There is a taxidermy model of one in the Library, I saw it once- it was twice as tall as me, with thick furry skin and two mouths."
The berserker shook his head, looking unconvinced. "Not a trivial monster, by any means, but far, far smaller than the lizard kings, let alone a Primal. I could probably take two or three, if I had to. Perhaps I could just plug my ears with beeswax to protect myself from their magic words?"

