An Italian name with a Scottish accent . . .

   Bazil walked quickly, a spring to his step. He was still happy about that decent fight against Julian. That was one down, now he just had to find Balanthalus. Something caught his vision, something barely noticeable in the corner of his eye. A flash of sunlight in the grass to his left.
   Looking down, he spied a small discarded fiddle string laying by the wayside.
   Hmmmm. He thought. The bard has been here.
Working a small spell of location, Baz found the one who had dropped the string. It was recent, and the bard was just over that next rise! The end was at hand! Gripping his staff in both hands, and bringing a Firebolt spell to the forefront of his mind, Bazil quickened his pace to a run. As he crested the hill though, his hopes were dashed. Sitting in a hammock strung between two errant trees was indeed a bard, but not the one he was hoping for. This one had a straggly goatee, was fairly old/decrepit,  and his overall appearance was...shall we say...not altogether savory.    At Bazils sudden intrusion, the roguish bard reached clumsily for a small knife thrust into a stump beside him.
   "What be the meaning of this! Ye be a dirty ruffian, ain't ye!" The bard said hoarsely.
   Calming his anger, Bazil responded. "I think YOU are the ruffian, old man!"
    The bard drew himself up, almost as if preening.
   "Begging your pardon, young laddie, but Master Cordicello is NO ruffian. I'll have you know that I was once High Bard of Rivenrock! Second in power to the King himself!"
   Since when is a bard second to a king? Baz wondered.
   "Ok, Master *stifles a laugh at this* Cordicello...my apologies for interuppting your....fine....camp. I mistook you for one of mine enemies"
   The bard dismissed it with a wave of his hand and offered the young mage a sip from his bulging wineskin. "No matter lad, the doesna mean we can nae become friends!
   Aye?"
One drink can't hurt....
   Chuckling, Bazil accepted and took a big swig from the skin. The stuff burned the whole way down.
 
   Suddenly, as if a bolt from the blue had struck him, Baz realized where his lone remaining enemy had gone! The dirty little music-maker had gone to water trying to escape his wrath! Baz didn't know HOW exactly he knew this, but that didn't change the insight.
 
    Cordicello had already launched into a grandiose, somewhat fabricate tale about how he alone had retrieve the mighty Amulet from the clutches of evil. Bazil interuppted with a raised.
 
    "Again, my apologies, noble, masterful bard, but I am in grave need of a boat. You wouldn't happen to have one, would you?"
 
    The tottering old bard looked up from his memories, his eyes glinting with an ancient knowledge, and a stunning insanity. Bazil was nearly frightened, then the moment passed.
    "It just so happens that I do have a sea-going craft, Bazil. I will loan it to you, but after your mission is complete, I want it returned? Good enough?"
    At the young mages nod, Cordicello handed him a small box. "Merely place this in water and speak the command word, and the craft shall appear."
 
    Consumed with gratitude, Baz grinned, gave his thanks, and ran off to the northeast, and the coast of the mighty lake. The bard would not escape THAT easily.
 
    It wasn't until later that he realized that Cordicello hadn't spoken with an accent at the last. Something was strange about that old man....

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