The Girl of the Sun

OOC: RP info here

IC:

Arbia had never met Salroth. As a child she wanted to until she met the vampires in her family's hut one night and felt a primal fear deeper than any she'd ever known.
The Prophet of Salroth who tasked her with killing Arlowyn had merely reaffirmed Arbia's fear of him.

That was why she didn't turn to fight her brother. Even if she did kill Cail she'd fight Salroth and...could she kill him? Even with the power she now felt flowing through her she didn't know. And she would be condemning her people to extinction if she fought Salroth alone and failed. It was better to seek allies. Now that she was committed to this reckless course of action.

But though she'd never met Salroth... he came to her in her dream. She was running. Through the rain and mud. Terrified. The golden aura she'd mastered flickering away ash he moved with steady, heavy steps through the rain and caught up to Arbia as she tripped over a rock. He grabbed her by her hair and yanked her limp body up.

Arbia felt utterly terrified as he held her, sure she could never defeat him. But...

but

She felt something. It was a dream... it just came from her...

"Everything is fixed," she said defiantly.
"And you can't change it."

She shot up in a cold sweat next to the low embers of her fire... alone in her tent...

"Why did I say that?" she asked softly.




Arlowyn tossed in her sleep. Her body was sore. Being well used to the hard work of a farm was nothing compared to the training of a knight. Her body just felt nothing but relief to rest without the weight of armour.

But as he mind drifted from relief to deep sleep...

"Arlowyn..."

"Arlowyn..."

She tossed as if she was waking up but gasped as she sat up in a void.

"Arlowyn..." she heard the voice again. She seemed to move... slowly in this void.

"You can hear me..."

It was to her left.

"...because you are the harbinger of death. You will lead them to their destruction."

She turned and fell, jolted awake when she hit the wooden floor, crying out in shock.

The door opened and Arlowyn, dazed at first, took a moment to realize it was Geoffrey. And promptly blushed pulling some blankets from the bed to cover herself.

Geoffrey, blushing too, looked up and way.

"Are you ok?"

"I... yes... I was just startled. I fell out of bed."

"Well the Chaplain wants to see you. So... wash up and get dressed."

"It's the middle of the night."

"Girl, it's sunup. You've been asleep for eight hours."

Arlowyn collapsed back on the floor, pulling the blanket over her. The dream from last night still hung in the back of her head. And she definitely didn't feel like she'd slept for eight hours.




She marched down the central path of the monastery, glancing out to the other walls. The refugee camp was growing bigger with knights barely able to keep law and order. She stopped and watched, her heart going out to them. She was, after all, one of them. Or would be if it wasn't for the sword...
She continued on her way though. She had a summons to answer.

"Chaplain?" she asked as she opened the heavy oaken door.

"Aye, Arlowyn," he waved her in. She entered, slowly. She was always in awe of his office. Bookshelves lining almost every wall, holding tomes upon tomes. And as she entered the Chaplain stood slowly. He was old but he didn't seem frail. Still he moved like a man whose faster years were behind him.

"I've heard that you're doing well. Sir Geoffrey and Abbo tell me you've adapted well to soldier life."

"It's... I suppose... I don't have much choice."

"Is that so?"

"My home's gone, I have no one left..." she said softly, looking down.

"I suppose it's good motivation."

"And the sword, the summons from the Sun God, these aren't?" he asked.

Arlowyn looked up, worried she'd perhaps offended him, only to him smiling slightly. And she broke into a slight grin herself.

"I still don't know why me..." she said softly.
"I'd never picked up a weapon before that sword. Arno could have picked one of your knights."

"No doubt they'd have preferred that..." the
Chaplain remarked as he sat on the edge of his desk.
"People assume because of who I am I must know his will... but... all I know really is not to question it. You were chosen, my little peasant girl."

"But I'm still learning how to fight. The refugees... more arrive daily. Salroth's armies are..."

"Do you know what happened the last time Salroth's armies marched south?" he asked.

"He smashed the Empire. The Thirteen Realms were broken."

"Yes, and Arkian warriors tour through knights like a knife through fresh bread. You're the first human to fight an Arkian in three centuries. And you let it helpless at your mercy. I can think of worse people the Sun God could have put faith in."

Arlowyn nodded. Before she'd have lashed out that this choice meant the Arkian had killed her family and town. But she'd come to terms with that with the Chaplain. Good was not responsible for evil being evil.
Still, she had some remaining qualms with the Chaplain.

"I only defeated the Arkian huntress because of the sword. She was... like a wild animal. I felt like prey. If it wasn't for the sword..."

"The sword Arno chose you to carry. Not even my bravest knight can hold the thing wearing the thickest gauntlet without feeling scorching pain. It falls to you. So your skills, your favour... they're all parts of you Arlowyn. It seems academic to argue over the difference."

Arlowyn nodded as the Chaplain sat back down behind his desk.
"As for the Arkian, she was a wild animal. You bested her. And now you're being trained as a warrior. Honed into a Knight with holy purpose. You'll best her and the rest of that feral pack."

"I hope I can be worthy of your expectations, Chaplain."

"We'll be meeting with the Imperial City in a month's time. We hope that news of your discovery and training, a gift of the Sun God himself, can rally our disparate forces.

"Be mindful of the fact that even now as Salroth marches on our realms there are dark whispers coming from our most vulnerable spaces."

"My dream," Arlowyn thought to herself.

"Just... be aware," the Chaplain continued, "that the Imperial City is a den of wolves in more ways than one. You may return to your teachings and training."

"Chaplain?"

"Yes?"

"The refugees..."

"We're doing what we can, Arowyn. But the more arrive... I fear what will happen when we no longer have enough Knights to keep order."

"May I suggest... not being afraid?"

The Chaplain looked up, raising an eyebrow.

"They're afraid... and they have every right to be. They're here looking for your kindness, for charity. Don't be afraid... be charitable."

The Chaplain smiled and shrugged.
"I can't argue with that, lass. But sooner or later..."

"I'd like permission to help feed them."

Arlowyn didn't know why she blurted it out. It was more a notion than a thought.

The Chaplain cocked his head.
"I'm afraid you need to focus on your studies and combat training and..."

"I'm not going to abandon either but... my studies say that charity is a holy virtue."

The Chaplain smirked and nodded.
"Ah yes. Yes it is," he said knowing what was coming.

"So if I..."

"You can cook?"

"My mother taught me how."

"During your hours designated for free study you maybe aid the kitchens in making and providing food for the refugee camp. If you wish."

Arlowyn smiled, and bowed her head.
"Thank you, Chaplain."

"Now be on your way, and may you have a long life and good health."

"And to you," she answered back before leaving. She felt good... it felt... right, finally getting the idea that had been dwelling with her for weeks off her chest. And yet as she was preparing to begin the day's training...

"You will lead them to destruction."

The whisper from her dream. Faint. It barely registered as she put on her plate armour.

But it lingered on her consciousness.
 
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Von Rammstein and the other Vampires were on the hunt. They had been on the tail of the Human girl for weeks. She had joined a group of wandering knights, and she was learning.

A twig snapped somewhere in the woods around them. The Vampires quickly took cover. One of these wandering knights was on lookout. The knight kept walking, his torch illuminating the forest in the night.

The other two vampires looked at Von Rammstein, they pleaded with their eyes. They wanted this kill. Von Rammstein simply shot a look back. The others backed down. Von Rammstein was the Lord of the Hunt to Von Der Drache, his expertise in the matter was not to be questioned.

As the sentry walked off, Von Rammstein saw his opportunity. He motioned for the other vampires to follow him. The trio made for the city that the wandering knights were camped in and jumped onto the rooftops. The trio could sense where the girl was, her blood's smell had a uniqueness to it.

“Rammstein!” Von Morrison said.

“Yes, Von Morrison?” The Lord of the Hunt responded.

“I know the girl has the sword, and she is clearly special. But don’t you think our talents are wasted on someone who will likely die in the fighting? The girl is unremarkable. Would our skills not be best used to kill the leader of these knights? A true warrior!” Von Morrison protested to his commander.

“We will do as our lord has commanded. Salroth is not one to be toyed with, you know this.” Von Rammstein replied.

“Very well.” Von Morrison had a glare in his eyes.

The trio moved across the roofs of the town until they arrived at an inn. The knights stayed there, and men were enjoying life as they are known to. The knights were drinking heavily. The vampires could sense their opportunity. A group of knights stumbled out of the inn. They made their way down an alley to relieve themselves. The group was laughing and talking to each other, it was too easy.

Out of the five, only one was able to turn to see the attackers before it was over. The vampires quickly took the knight's gear, and hid the bodies. Despite the Knights not being a massive threat, it's still best to not piss off a hive of bees.

The Vampires entered the inn and the knights were everywhere, as were women. The Vampires split up in an effort to try and find the girl. The scent was off in the confined area. The farmer was close yet they could not pin down exactly where she was. Knights tried to get their three new comrades to drink with them, but the Vampires remained resolute. That was until Jager heard a group of knights talking about a new find.

“I don’t get it, what does the grand master see in this girl?” One of the knights said.

“As if you’re complaining about more women being here!” His partner responded.

Jager sat down next to the men.

“I haven’t heard about this girl. Tell me about her.” Jager responded, mimicking their accent perfectly.

“Well she’s this peasant, I heard she had a special sword.” The knight said.

“Where is she? I’d like to see this special sword.” Jager was nearly on the edge of his seat.

“I think shes in her room.”

“Thank you sir.” Jager got up from the table.

Jager motioned for his allies to follow him up the stairs. As the trio got to the second floor, they could smell the girl's blood clearly again. They followed the smell and got to her door.

The trio broke in and the girl screamed. She reached for her sword, but before she could grab it Von Morrison kicked it away. The sound of the sword clamoring to the ground created a beat of silence.

“It is about time girl.” Von Rammstein smiled as he reached for Arloywn.

The vampire grabbed the girl, he pulled her close enough to smell his breath.

“You are nothing. To think that you could challenge a god is an insult.”

The Vampire opened his mouth and started to go for a bite on the throat. A blast of light smacked into the Vampire and he dropped the girl.

The Grand Master stood in the doorway. The Vampires turned to look at their assailant. The Vampires lunged at the knight. Arlowyn, seeing her chance, reached for her sword. A blast of light caused the Vampires to jump out of the window into the night.

“That damned Sun Magic is a problem Von Rammstein!” Von Morrison yelled at his commander.

“I am aware.” I just need to think.

As the trio was arguing a fourth figure walked out of the shadows.

“I see that your mission goes poorly.” The figure said.

“Mistress Ember, I see Lord Salroth let you off of your leash for a moment.” Von Rammstein responded.

“You’ve always been such a charmer, Wilhelm.” But I have a mission for you strapping young men.” Ember said, putting her hand on the Vampires chest plate.

“I want you to kill the Arkian who is leading the rebellious monkeys. I have taken the liberty of sending some of my own assassins after the Girl in this town. After all sun magic complicates this for you.” Ember flicked the Vampires long hair.

“What of Von Der Drache and Lord Salroths orders?” Von Rammstein asked.

“Drache will obey me, and I have… ways to convince lord Salroth.” Ember smirked.
 
As he ascended from the interior of the galley, Marek could hear the seagulls chirping overhead and the light waves slapping against the side of the hull. As he emerged onto the deck of the ship, he glanced around. Sailors and soldiers on the galley barked orders at each other back and forth, as they hauled sacks of supplies into rowboats. Other soldiers, adorned in their armor, made their way into the small boats with the sacks, the crew hoisting them down off the edge and into the water below out of sight.

Marek himself walked across the deck and over to the railing, leaning onto it as he looked outward to their surroundings. The nearby beachhead was filled with soldiers, the incoming rowboats coming ashore, with some footmen disappearing into the treeline in the distance to scout ahead. He could see their chainmail and helmets glinting in the dappled sunlight, brief flashes before they vanished into the shadows of the forest.

He turned his head towards the ocean, feeling a slight gust of wind from the water onto his face, as he saw their armada of ships dotting the bay and the increasing number of them approaching from further out at sea. Each one in the bay was like his, soldiers disembarking with their supplies and making their way towards the mainland. He tried to count them but lost track as his eyes wandered along the horizon; there had to be at least seventy, if not a hundred. Their sails colored white with the display of a dragon coiling with a lion, the sigil of their mercenary company, Erdan’s Raiders. An army of misfits, he thought to himself, full of humans, elves, goblins, and whatever else had the stomach to fight under this banner.

As he continued watching, he saw the hull of one of the galleys open up, the large square-sized chunk of it making a loud reeling sound as it came down, barreling towards the water until it crashed on top of it, forming a platform and leaving a large, gaping visible dark hole into the interior of the galley. The noise reverberated across the bay, causing some of the rowers to glance up nervously.

Marek watched intently, seeing a massive green creature barrel out of the darkness and onto the platform, and then swiftly into the water. It had to have been at least twelve feet tall. Its skin was slick and mottled, a sickly green like the underside of rotting kelp, and it moved with a lumbering, awkward gait. It was carrying something, though, that he couldn’t quite make out; a huge black cage covered in an equally dark mesh with what appeared to be large creatures with six legs crawling around inside of it. He focused on the silhouettes of the creatures, watching their movements intently. Then, suddenly, the realization hit him. Spiders, he thought to himself with a shudder. Each one the size of a small dog, their legs bristling with thick hairs, mandibles clicking even through the mesh. But then behind him, he heard a voice.

“Marek,” the mysterious speaker called out.

“And I was just having such a good time by myself,” Marek said in response, not turning his head to meet the speaker.

“You lazy son of a bitch, you’re just standing around while everyone else does all of the work.” The man walked beside him and leaned by him on the railing.

“Well, Jorin, I figured I could save my energy for when the actual fighting happens. Not wasting it on this,” Marek responded, a stream of air blowing his brown hair into his face briefly. He glanced over at Jorin, taking in his friend's typical smirk and the unkempt beard that looked like it hadn’t seen a razor in weeks.

“So what? You think because you were assigned to the General’s guard that you’re better than the rest of us lowly sellswords?” Jorin said, looking at Marek with a grin.

Marek met his grin with a chuckle of his own. “Yeah, that’s pretty much it.” His eyes flicked back to the water, following the path of the ogre. Dozens more of the green beasts had followed the first, splashing through the surf like massive bulls charging through a field. The rowboats and their crews trying to row hurriedly to get out of their way as the waves from their movements threatened to capsize them. Marek couldn't help but feel a chill run down his spine. He’d seen ogres in battle before, and the damage they could cause. Seeing so many at once, though, that was something else.

“Boy, those ogres sure are ugly. Reminds me of this one girl I slept with the last time we were in one of the cities. She had a real nasty mole on her face, like that one there,” Jorin said, pointing to one of the ogres wading through the water towards the beach.

“It is comforting to know that whenever I feel bad for myself, I always have you to show me that things could be far worse.” Marek said as he shook his head in disbelief. He nodded towards one of the ogres carrying the spider-cages. “How do you think they’ll react to seeing those?”

Jorin snorted. “I halfway shit myself seeing them when we’re fighting with them. These poor sods in Ollania have no idea what they’re in for. Demons and Arkians in the North, and then us lot hitting them in the South for Salroth, it's a nasty combination.”

Marek thought about that for a moment. He knew the people of Ollania had likely never seen anything like this—a horde of ogres and cages full of monstrous spiders. What chance did they have? This was no mere raid. It was a spectacle of terror.

Then, they heard a random voice, “General on deck,” the voice shouted. In an instant, Jorin and Marek turned around to face the deck and saluted just in time as General Erdan passed in front of them. Erdan was a tall man adorned in bronze-colored plate armor, with a stern face, and while his ears would indicate that he was an elf, his silver beard would mean the opposite, for he was a half-elf. His eyes, however, were as sharp as any full-blooded elf's, glinting with intelligence and a hint of cruelty. Following him at his side was his hulking bodyguard, a nine-feet-tall snow-colored Ux with a majestic, shaggy mane, in plate armor with a large warhammer hanging off of his back that was the size of Marek.

“At ease,” Erdan said in a gruff, authoritative tone, and the crew went back to their activities. Marek felt a ripple of tension release from the men as Erdan passed, though they remained watchful. The stories of Erdan’s ruthless discipline were well known. Disobedience was not tolerated, not even a little.

Jorin looked at Marek. “I can never shake the sight of that monster beside him. You know they call him ‘the Beast’? Saw him turn a man’s head into paste with one swing of that warhammer, I did.”

Marek agreed. “I think those spiders might be the least of their worries.” His eyes followed the Ux, the creature's muscles rippling under its armor with every step. Marek had seen what those massive hands could do in battle, and it wasn’t pretty.

Another voice called out to the crew, “General’s guard to the boats.”

Marek looked at Jorin. “Looks like we’re on the move.” And so Marek and Jorin approached one of the boats with their comrades in arms and got into it, and they were hoisted down into the water where they made their way to land. As the boat swayed beneath them, Marek tightened his grip on the sides. He knew the real fight was about to begin.
 
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"Did you ever learn to read?" Peirsil asked.

"No," Arbia replied matter of factly as she led the renegade Arkians south, riding at the front of the army by horse.
"Mama tried, but Cail and I were too headstrong for it. Eventually she gave up and let father train us was warriors."

"Heh..." Peirsil replied.
"I can, you know."

"How fortunate for you, cousin," Arbia chuckled.
"Any poems to read on the battlefield?"

"I'd thought you'd have a bit more of an open mind," Peirsil replied with a smile.
"Sometimes not everything fits into neat roles. Warrior, gatherer, shaman, healer, why be one thing only?"

Arbia just shrugged.
"That's fine, but I like my role."

"Warrior or War Chief?"

Arbia shot her cousin a look.
"It would have been better if this all never happened. My child would have a father. And a grandfather."

"And both of us a father..."

"Tha*..." Arbia replied, feeling the lingering guilt over killing her uncle, Peirsil's father. Maybe she should change the topic... but... her spine was tingling. She could feel the small hairs on the back of her neck, covered by her wild black mane, standing up. Even her tail wrapped around her waist was uncomfortable, stiff and nervous in its bent state. She knew what was out there. Her ability to sense souls weren't confined to hunters' game and human peasant girls.

"Did you ever question Salroth, before all of this started?" she asked.

"My clan's a bit more spiritual than yours," Peirsil replied. Arbia nodded. Indeed, her mother- Peirsil's aunt- was a spiritual sort and slightly out of place in her clan, which tended towards more practical matters.

"And," Peirsil continued, "we were taught about dualities. The ancestors and the living, nature and death. Salroth was the death. A supreme lord, and necessary to counter life."

"Well did you believe it?"

"I did, for a bit. I take it you didn't?"

"No," Arbia muttered.

"How long?"

Arbia thought... she was nineteen summers old...
"About eleven years?"

Peirsil laughed and Arbia scowled at her cousin.
"What?" she growled and Peirsil stopped with a smirk.

"I should keep my amusements to myself I think, lest I bring out the golden you that wasted father."

Arbia smirked and sighed.
"It's so strange that I'd have doubts as a small child?"

"I barely knew what or who Salroth was at that age," Peirsil replied.

"Neither did I," Arbia shot back, "until one night. Father had important guests. Salorth's delegates wished to meet with him as the chief if the westernlands. Mama had told Cail and I to stay with the other children at the communal hearth that night..."

"But I suppose childhood curiosity got the better of you?"

Arbia smirked and nodded before her smirk vanished.
"I saw them, Peirsil. I saw the Vampire Lords. Salroth's delegates. I saw them.... and I was terrified..."

"At only eight... yes that makes sense."

"You don't understand," Arbia continued.
"This wasn't childhood fear. I knew that by then. The fear that came from sparing with Cail, who even at that age was bigger and stronger, or the fear that came from exploring the woods and having to avoid falling into a stone pit. I knew fear, and I thought I was the bravest for not being intimdated by it. But I saw those vampires and....and I was afraid because they shouldn't be."

"Shouldn't be?"

"When you fight, Peirsil, you've specialized water magic tha?"

"I have."

"I'm jealous," Arbia muttered. "Too much concentration."

"Well I'm a focused sort," Peirsil said softly.
"But what does that have to..."

"Because water, fire... my focus...wind, lightning, it comes from nature. We come from nature. Like the world around us, but Salroth's Vampires were terrifying because they weren't alive."

"Well they taught us that Salroth was the embodiment of death, to counter life and..."

"Dead things rot in the ground," Arbia muttered.
"They don't walk amongst the living. Or shouldn't."

"And this bothered you at eight?" Peirsil asked.

"It bothers me know, because they're tracking us," Arbia replied.
"And unlike the girl I'm seeking, no one here has the power of sunlight."

"Except you do..." Peirsil replied.
"That power..."

"I'd rather never see a vampire again," Arbia shot back, "then fight one to find out."



*Tha- Arkian for "yes"
 
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The Light Will be Lost

“Who goes there?” the demon snarled. The sun was setting against the mountains. The daylight reduced to a red sliver of fire along the spot where the mountains and sky kissed.

Arlowyn trembled. The Arkian was one thing. Maybe it had given her the wrong idea. That savage was nowhere near as terrifying as the spawns of darkness that she saw. Demons. An army carrying the banners of Salroth. She gripped the sword. Even as the night began to overtake them… the blade felt warm. Made her feel warm. She glanced at Chaplain Acfrid….

“My name is Acfrid of the House of Baux,” the Chaplain, glad in white and gold armour, declared. His older frame seemed bolstered by the armour.

“The old fool shouldn’t have come,” Geoffrey muttered, but Arlowyn couldn’t respond. Her teeth wouldn’t stop chattering.

“I am a Chaplain of Arno, God of Light and provider of Mankind. And you will march no further, demon. Return to your realm of shadows and your master.”

The demon army was terrifying in how it varied. The knights that had accompanied them were uniform. They, the footmen, the archers, wearing the livery of their order.

But aside from the banners, nothing was uniform in Salroth’s forces. Some were ghouls who almost looked human, black metal armour clinging to their rotting forms. Others seemed like goblins, trolls… the one who spoke for the army crossed the field. He was ten feet tall it seemed, towering over the Chaplain, his face alight with purple flame.

“The time of the Deceiver Arno is at an end. You are at an end,” the demon declared, bringing a powerful claw down….

Acfrid was no fool. Maybe some thought him such for taking in Arlowyn and training her, a woman, in the ways of knightly combat, but she had the blade of Arno. A blade thought lost for three hundred years. Could she have found it by chance? His faith didn’t give him the luxury of that belief, but he believed in her. It was why he was here. Against Geoffrey’s wishes, against Abbo’s… maybe they were right and he was here to ride to his death. Just not to this demon.

He drew his sword as the demon raised its claw, and the thin red line of sunlight between the sky and mountains glared red. Man and demon alike were blinded in an instant as the red light engulfed Acfrid’s blade! A pittance of the power he knew Arlowyn was capable of but…

The blade cut through the demon’s arm, reducing its claw to ash, the light engulfing the hellish beast. It screamed, the purple flame that burned through its eyes and mouth flaming gold and red, it screamed and shrieked as it was burned from the inside by holy light, and crumbled to smoldering ash.

“Salorth’s desecration of the Thirteen Realms ends!” Acfrid bellowed in a voice that seemed beyond his old frame.
“Turn back now, or face this fate!”

A spindly creature, a bat of hell with gnarled wings, approached.
“Are you an angel?”

“Nay, I am but a man,” Acfrid replied. The horde of demons before them erupted in a vicious unholy choir. Arlowyn felt her heart pounding in her breastplate and then… Acfrid looked behind him at her and nodded before he charged the incoming demonic army.

“TO THE CHAPLAIN!” Geoffrey called out, and Arlowyn felt her horse driving her forward, and she gripped the reins. She’d been trained and she couldn’t let fear overtake her, feeling the steed gallop as she drew her sword….

Chaos.

Battle was chaotic. The paintings she’d seen at the monastery, of armies nobly lined up facing one and other… that ideal vanished as quickly as the sun did, and in the darkness the army of knights met an army of demons. Blades, bodies. Arlowyn was tossed from her horse in short order, feeling herself trampled under the hordes of both sides as she struggled to get up, just barely managing to miss a scythe! A scythe? Like on the farm?

No. No, this was a creature of hell. A monstrous being of rotting green flesh with long scythes for arms.

“CHAPLAIN!” she called out, and swung the blade, crashing it into the demon’s limb… the bladed arm shattering! As if by divine providence a spear of light shot up… a light as strong as the sun vanquishing the freshly arrived night as the demon burned to ash!

“ARLOWYN!” Geoffrey called out, pulling a fallen Acfrid to his feet.

Arlowyn saw them and pointed the blade at the next creature before her…

Chaos.

Arlowyn remembered why she’d been so scared when that Arkian girl had come for her. It was because as a young girl her father had told her about Arkians.

“They’re barbarous creatures. More monkey than man, who live in the northern woodlands. They’ve pledged their lives to Salroth.”

Arlowyn’s mother had chided her father for scaring her with such stories, but Arlowyn secretly loved them. When her mother was out of earshot he’d continue.

“But why do they serve Salroth? Are they demons?”

“Perhaps of a sort, but most say they’re living beings like you or I. Still, they have a battle lust. A terrible drive to kill. It’s all they can think of and Salroth allows them to indulge it.”

Arlowyn had seen that lust for carnage in the Arkian girl’s eyes when she tried to kill her. And it had driven the barbarous beast to slay her village.

And yet at this moment… was that what she felt? The light that her blade had erupted from the demon that had tried to kill her had sent Salroth’s forces back some. A pillar of light greater than Chaplain Acfrid’s had come at her behest. And as she led the knights and footmen in pushing into the demonic lines… was this excitement she felt… like that of the Arkian girl Arlowlyn had feared? Was she… no better?

Arlowyn shook her head as she battled her way through Salroth’s hordes. Intrusive thoughts. Acfrid had taught her about those…

“Sometimes I wonder if my faith isn’t strong enough.”

“We all have our doubts, child. Even when we rationally deal with them, they return. Often when we least expect them. The mind is beyond what any of us can fully understand, but every doubt and belief you’ve ever had rests inside of yours. Trust in your faith. When doubt makes itself known, know what it is, and pay it no mind.”

The spear of light held firm and Arlowyn heard Geoffrey call out.

“If we can push them to the banks of the river…”

He was swatted aside. Demons had separated him from the Chaplain, but Acfrid still fought on.

“CHAPLAIN!” Arlowyn called out, tryig to carve a path towards him.

“PUSH ON!” Acfrid called out.
“MIND ME NOT, TRACK THE LIGHT!”

Arlowyn nodded. She needed to trust in what she was doing, what she’d been trained for. And so she swung her blade, a trail of fire scouring the demonic forces before her. She smiled and glanced over at Acfrid and then…

Darkness… it was as if a dark hand had leapt from the mountains and snuffed out the pillar of light. A mountain of shadow appeared before them, the demons crying out in terrifying ecstasy! And then the dark pillar took the shape of black, spired armour, a hand that was a spear of darkness… it pierced Acfrid’s breast plate. The old man tried to call out… but no sound escaped him.

“Your soul is mine…” the dark figure growled.

“CHAPLAIN!” Arlowyn called out, rushing towards the new demonic beast. She brandished her sword, glowing with sunlight… and the new demon removed its black helm… Arlowyn was stopped dead in her tracks. Even through the new darkness that enveloped them she saw… his resplendent beauty.

Arlowyn was nineteen. Her father had begun to field offers for her hand in marriage… and truth be told some of the suitors were not objectionable. She had noticed boys for a few years now but this….

This creature…

This man…

His raven black hair, his perfect face. He looked soulful and rugged at once, a face she could only have conjured in her most self indulgent teenage fantasies…

“There is no one but us, Arlowyn,” he said. Arlowlyn stopped. She looked around… the scene of the battle was frozen. Even the splashes of water of demons forced into the river were frozen in mid air…

“What… who… are you?”

“I am the ruler of the world, the one true god, I am your saviour,” the man said, as he approached her.

“You’re Salorth…”

“My name, aye, but what I said is not untrue…”

Arlowyn was taken aback. The demons at his command all around them were hideous. Undead. Monsters. Bats. Lizards. Rodents. Yet Salorth stood before her, baring his face to her. And she had to fight every instinct to just be enraptured by him.

“I see my Arkian did not finish her task. I never thought I’d be so happy to see one of my soldiers fail.”

“You… you are happy I’m alive?” Arlowyn asked.

“I see you now, how can I not be? A woman of such beauty,” Salroth replied as he walked towards her.
“Time here has stopped, and yet I cannot look away from you.”

Arlowyn felt her heart leap. This man, this man who was almost picked from her fantasies… said SHE was beautiful? She felt butterflies in her stomach.

“You make war on my lands…”

“No,” Salroth nodded, looking hurt. Dejected.
“I come to liberate. Arno, the deceiving sun god, holds you back from what you could be. I wish to liberate mankind. Under my rule, they will be masters of their own domain. Not held down by my petty siblings. I was banished from their realm, you know. Banished here. They consider your world a prison. And if it is, then I rather reign here then serve in their heaven. Won’t you join me? Uplift your kind, Arlowyn. Give me the sword. Help me uplift your people.”

Arlowyn felt her fingers on her sword’s hilt… the sword Arno had led her to… weaken. She began to hold it out…

The Arkian! Salorth had said the Arkian was his soldier. The Arkian girl had tried to stop her from… from getting this sword. She hesitated, looking at the glowing blade in her hand.

“Give it to me Arlowyn,” Salroth said softly.
“Give it to me, and I can unite this world. A liberated realm, free from the shackles of my self righteous peers.”
The Arkian had tried to stop her because… if she got this sword…

“IT CAN KILL HIM! HE’S TRYING TO TRICK YOU!” a voice in the back of her mind yelled. She knew it was true. She knew it… but his soulful eyes. The way he beckoned her…

Her arm trembled. She held the sword out, letting it go blade down. Salroth approached, his presence closing in, and she felt his presence. It was… intoxicating. And then…

A smirk. He was smirking.

“No!” she pulled back, and Salorth growled.

“You foolish girl! I’ll…” he charged her and then an explosion rocked Arlowyn to the ground. The sounds of hooves, boots, and demonic feet clanging about, across the field and in the river overwhelmed her, the sound of the blast throwing everything into chaos.

Salroth rose over her, a pillar of shadow.

“I will NOT be denied my destiny!” Arlowyn froze. She couldn’t even raise her hand when more explosions blasted Salroth back.

“NY'Holek!” he growled. He’d recognize her magics anywhere. And between her and that sword… he would not risk himself here. Time was on his side, his forces were infinite and he could deal with these enemies on his own time. With a flip of his cape he vanished into the shadows along the horizon…

“The demons retreat!” Geoffrey called out, rallying the order’s forces, pressing their advantage. As Arlowlyn pulled herself up, she was offered a hand.

And when she saw her, she knew.

“Miasa.”

“Yes. Now let’s talk about how you almost doomed the world.”

OOC note: post approved by @Ianmey7, @North Timistania, and @Arc
 
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"BRAVE SHINE!"

A pillar of flame engulfed the demon as Arbia's hair, now glowing golden, fluttered in the wind. The Arkians at her command cried out in triumph, their leader's display of this long lost power spurring them on. The blast of golden fire had carved a path through the demonic forces. Wretched creatures, half burned by the purifying fire, cried for mercy as she walked forward.

"Where is he?" Arbia asked. The creature before her- a skeleton lich adorned in purple flame and wearing marks of command of Salroth himself- collapsed to all fours... or mostly all fours. His right arm had been burned off, and the fire Arbia had unleashed on him and his army was slowly burning away the corrupting purple flame that had powered his unholy form.

Still, despite being brought to heel, his army rendered helpless, and he himself facing the agonizing prospect of a purifying death... he laughed. Part of it was this monkey who wielded this power... but clearly didn't understand it. She was like a child who had discovered fire, unable to comprehend the force she now controlled.

Arbia, however, was not amused. She wrinkled her nose and grabbed the lich by the neck, pulling him up to his knees. That seemed to affect him. He growled as the golden fire from Arbia's body seemed to consume his own unholy essence.

"Where. Is. My. Brother?" Arbia growled back.

The lich though, through the pain, just laughed again.

"He is empowered by the Lord and Master of the World," the Lich replied.
"He will not face you or your rabble when you demand it. Like all servants of the Lord, he faces you when HE deems it."

Arbia bared her fangs. She had grown up hearing these vague pretensions from Salroth's followers, but wouldn't put up with it anymore.

"Cail ran from me in defiance of the rights of succession, and now you tell me he will only face me when he wants to?"

"You foolish monkey, you don't understa....AHHHHHH!" the lich screamed as Arbia tightened her grip, the golden fire that seemed to emanate from her growing stronger.

Even then though, the lich's screams turned to laughter.
"Your primitive rituals mean little to him anymore. And his followers will see the truth he's seen. Your foolish pride, your codes, they mean nothing! SALROTH IS EVERYTHING. HE IS ETERNITY!"

Arbia just looked at the lich and, in a moment, an explosion of golden fire encompassed both of them. When it settled, Arbia was standing alone, the lich reduced to ash.

"My warriors!" she cried out.
"Put the demon scum to the sword."

The Arkians rallied fiercely, and those demons who had not been fully killed by Arbia's earlier attack wish they had, as Arkian blades descended upon them.

Only Peirsil stood back. He watched, as his cousin had unleashed their army and approached her, slowly at first, only picking his pace up as Arbia's hair returned to its natural black, and the golden fire emanating from her vanished.

"We need to talk about this plan of yours."

Arbia said nothing, watching her army brutally cut down demons.

"Arbi? What makes you think she'll even want to talk to you?"

"I have no idea," she muttered.
"But I really don't have any other plan. Do you?"

Peirsil shook his head. They were all traitors. Whatever they did... they were as good as dead if they didn't pull something off. Salroth would see them all dead- if they were lucky- if they failed. It was only his cousin's remarkable power that kept him grounded, that this course of action had any chance of success.




"Do you even know what that sword is?" Miasa asked.

"It's a holy relic," Arlowyn replied.
"I was chosen. Arno, lord of light and god of the sun..."

Miasa rolled her eyes, and put an arm around Arlowyn's shoulder.

"Look out there," she said as Arlowyn overlooked the camp of the victorious army.
"They all believe in you because of the sword. Do you get it? There's what the sword is...and what it is."

Arlowyn looked at Miasa, unamused.
"I know I'm a knight now, and I'm not supposed to say this, but that sounds like some overly educated noble bullshit."

Miasa wasn't phased and just laughed for a moment.

"Peasant messiah! Oh... that's good. I suppose I should have expected that."

Arlowyn, however, was getting annoyed.
"Well if you expect it now, you'd get I don't like word games. Just say what you meant to say."

Miasa shrugged and entered Arlowyn's tent in the encampment, helping herself to the makeshift cot.

"Yes, make yourself comfortable," Arlowyn sighed.

"No one knows why the gods do what they do," Miasa continued as Arlowyn began to discard her plate armour, taking a seat across from her.
"Well except Salroth. His motives are almost insultingly base. But other than that, they operate on a different level. My point is Arno chose you, a peasant girl. No one knows why! But the knights of this order believe. And already whispers echo through the Thirteen Realms. That sword can kill Salroth. You almost gave it away. But more importantly you almost gave away the one thing that makes noble knights kneel to a peasant girl."

Arlowyn signed.
"I've been told stories of Salroth all my life," she said softly.
"I always imagined him as this devil, with red or green skin, goat's horns, and a tail! He was so..."

"Handsome?" Miasa asked.

Arlowyn blushed.

"It's ok to admit it," Miasa added.
"But he's a deceiver, among other things. Did you think a ghoul cackling in a black cloak could cause the righteous to turn on their own kind? No."

"And I almost fell for it," Arlowyn said as she grit her teeth. What Miasa had said seemed so obvious in retrospect that her earlier stupidity just fed some creeping doubt about just what Arno expected of her.

"I should have known but next time..."

"Yes, yes, next time you won't be swayed by the raven haired god. I'm glad."

Arlowyn frowned, but Miasa rolled her eyes.
"Oh come on. That's hardly the issue."

"Then what is?"

"Your army of knights rides against a dark tidal wave. Salroth's armies pour out of the north. The Thirteen Realm's armies are scattered and isolated from each other. You've provided the only effective show of resistance... well... one of them."

Arlowyn raised an eyebrow.

"Is there another army having success? Maybe one of the other orders. I heard the Hospitallers..."

"It's not the Hospitallers," Miasa shook her head.
"Your sword. Arno led you to it, but there was an obstacle aside from the search, wasn't there?"

"Yes," Arlwoyn answered with a nod.
"There was an agent of Salroth there. An Arkian huntress, who... Arno was with me that day. I was able to best her."

"Well," Miasa mused.
"Fate can be funny sometimes."




"Is... is that thing you do, healthy for your baby?"

Arbia pressed her hand against her abdomen. She still wasn't showing. And wouldn't for a while. But she could feel the child inside of her.
"He's just fine," she said with a grin.
"I think he likes the warmth."

"I'm just worried," Peirsil replied.

"So you're psychic now?" Arbia asked.

"Maybe. You can sense souls, after all. Maybe I can see the future? Maybe it runs in the family," he chuckled.
"And maybe I'm worried for my..." he paused.
"What would your kid be to me? Cousins... again?"

"Let's call him your nephew and leave it at that," Arbia said as they sat around a bonfire to celebrate the victory. Arbia was a bit subdued. She used to love dancing with the others at celebrations like this, but Cluaran was dead and she just didn't feel the pull.

"You're sure it's a boy?" Peirsil asked.
"As sure as those stars move across the sky," she pointed upwards. Peirsil looked up. Indeed, there was a cascade of shooting stars.

"An omen?"

"I never had it in me to read the will of the ancestors," Arbia muttered.

"We really do need to talk about how you plan to do this. You killed her family."

"It was war, she should understand."

"Humans don't see it that way."

"Oh you're Peirsil the Human Whisperer?" Arbia shot back with a faint smile.

"Just imagine the most sentimental reaction to anything, and that's what a human would do," Peirsil chuckled.

Arbia growled and shook her head.
"The mushroom humans...used to spend days watchin' em. Spent days watchin' her and her family too. Such soft creatures."

"Yeah but you gotta convince this girl. How you gonna do it?"

"I never... um... told you..." Arbia said softly. Peirsil looked around. The camp was awash with dancing and songs and chants... the two of them could speak in relative privacy even in the open like this.

"What?"

"She could have killed me."

"What?!"




"No! Absolutely not!" Arlowyn insisted as Miasa got up from the cot.

"You need to see the bigger picture," Miasa insisted, but Arlowyn was having none of it.

"That monkey demon killed my entire town!"

"Well I feel the need to point out that Arkians aren't demons. Technically they're actually pretty closely related to humans, the differences tend to come down a branched evolution..."

Miasa could see this wasn't swaying Arlowyn so she changed tracks.

"The Arkian who hunted you has paid for her crimes against your home. Fate can sometimes be swift, and it was here. It still might be."

"I don't care," Arlowyn insisted
"She murdered. My. Parents!"

"And you'll defame everything they believed in, if you refuse the aid of the only other army that's bloodied Salroth's nose!"

"My parents were among the faithful," Arlowyn insisted. "They lived their lives by Arno's example..."

"... and it may be for naught!" Miasa insisted.
"Arno may have chosen you, but Arno is not the only god. Salroth, for all of his corruption, is a god as well. Listen to me girl, he can and will subdue this entire world under his foot if we are not careful! There is no reason he cannot prevail!"

"He won't because I- we- have faith," Arlowyn insisted.

"If you believe in Arno, and the rest of the gods, then believe that they've sent you this Arkian to help. She's rejected Salorth's darkness, has power of her own as well as an army, and has defeated an army of demons."

"I don't care," Arlowyn shot back.
"She killed my mother and father."

"You stupid, stupid girl!"

"What?"

Arlowyn grabbed her sword and stood to defiantly get in Miasa's way.

"Go. Kill me, Chosen of Arno! Prove what a fool the old sun god was to choose you! You've rejected the aid of a friendly army, why not kill me? Rid yourself of allies against the force of a god bent on your destruction!"

"I..." Arlowyn muttered, "cannot ally with an Arkian who has..." she began to tear up. And it took all she had to hold back the urge to cry.
"...murdered my family."

"Your town, against every soul in the Thirteen Realms. Your town, against every soul on this world. What will it be, Arlowyn?"

Miasa's tone had gone soft, yet dark as she laid it out. Arlowyn bit her lip. She knew the answer.

She just hated it.




Brave Shine by Sapphire, 3:51
 
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The Throne Room of Schattenreich.


The throne room was flooded with moans of pleasure, screams of pain, the sounds of demons and humans eating until their stomachs exploded. Demons whose bodies were used as instruments danced around creating a symphony of noise that mortal ears would find offensive, yet alluring.

Ember and Salroth were at the throne, bodies pulsing into each other. The flurry of the other courtiers engaging in hedonistic pursuits around them. The walls of the throne room were covered with the faces of souls that Salroth had killed. The faces bubbled to the surface of the wall looking at those who were in the room with a pained expression. They had no lower jaw, preventing them from expressing the mix of feelings that floods over them every microsecond.

Salroth and Ember went faster, and faster. The room started to shift, what had once been a wild mess of hedonism became an almost organized mass seeking the most base carnal pleasures. The screams of ecstasy made the whole of the palace shake.

“Let this be something that Arno’s girl won’t be able to keep her hands off of.” Ember's Sucubi carried her up to the Dark Lord's room.

Salroth draped himself with a black robe.





Thirteen Realms fortress
Two Weeks march from the Capital


Cities burned in the path of the demonic host. The captains of Salroth’s push for the capital of the Thirteen Realms left no room for quarter or mercy, women were cut down as they ran, men butchered and their bodies were made into monuments to the Dark Lord's glory. Children were taken and shipped back to Schattenreich.

The False Prophet had accepted the surrender of cities who were merely in the expected path of Salroth’s vengeance. Salt and flowers were laid at the feet of this Demon Prince. The centuries of patience had paid as the mortal realms had rested on their laurels for too long.

The armies of Salroth were laying siege to a hillside fortress when a message from Salroth’s second in command, Galmash, came through.

A pillar of fire descended from the Heavens to signal Galmash’s arrival. The Erheguarde bowed in the presence of such a powerful being. Galmash moved towards the command tent, his hooves leaving scorch marks in the soil with every step he took.

“Phrophet.” He snarled.

“Lord Galmash, to what do we owe this pleasure?” The Prophet said.

The Vampire commanders all bowed to the Demon Prince, the False Prophet did not extend the show of humility. The tension between the two entities grew as Galmash broke the silence.

“Clear the room.”

The Vampires were quick to comply with the Demons commands, they ran like roaches in a lit room.

“Our master is expecting an heir.” Galmash said.

The Prophet paused for a moment. He knew Ember was making a play at court, ever since the war began the Court of Schattenreich had lost some of its staple players leaving those who remained at the Teufelpunkt to gain influence.

“If that is the case then what are we to do? Ember is attempting to gain Masters sole attention.” The Prophet couldn’t believe that despite his victories the Queen of Succubi just needed to open her legs to the Dark Lord to get his favor.

“Worry not for I have come to help you.” Galmash said.

Galmash was the Most powerful of all of Salroth’s creations, his position in the Dark court could not be threatened, except if there was a Mistress.

“Prophet, despite your jealousy, I will bring down the walls of this fortress. I need the Dark Lord to turn his attention to you as opposed to Ember.” Galmash left the tent and moved, alone to the walls of the Fortress.

The Demon Prince stood at the front trenches, his battered wings folded behind him as he reached to his waist and retrieved a horn. Galmash paused and took a deep breath, the world seemed to freeze for that split moment. Then, the horn of hell sounded and the walls of the fortress came crumbling down. The Demonic host flocked to their standards and lunged forward.

The defenders hadn’t even had time to form up when the forces of Darkness crashed into them. Galmash relished in the sweet sound of slaughter.

The Chapel of the Sun God’s spire stretched high into the night’s sky, in defiance of the Demonic army. The remaining defenders fled to it in a last ditched attempt to find salvation, Galmash strode forward laughing.

With each step his hooves shot embers into the air, the smell of sulfur and brimstone followed this most powerful of Salroth’s creations. The sound echoed in the chapel, until it stopped. Knights drew their swords, pews had been thrown up against the door to give the ancient oak some additional sturdiness.

One knock.


Two knocks.


Three knocks.

The door flew off its hinges.

Demons did not surge forward, one massive hand reached through the door and green flames shot out at one of the knights. His screams echoed through the sanctuary, the remaining men prepared for the entity that was about to cross the threshold.
The fight was quick, there was the sound of clashing weapons, then silence.

The door to the wine cellar was thrown open, women screamed, children huddled into their mothers dresses. Old men raised spears and pitch forks. The men died without a sound, and the remainders looked on at the unholy visage of the second in command of the forces of Schattenreich.

“You are now the property of the Dark Lord Salroth. Come with me, we are going back to our master so you may receive your assignments.”

A young woman, no older than twenty three yelled back at the Demon.

“What makes you think that we will live our lives in slavery?”

“My dear.” The demon hissed.

“It’s not like you have much of a choice.” A different voice was heard behind the Demon.

As the second entity stepped out of the shadows Galmash fell to his knees.

The girl who was once defiant stood frozen, but this was not fear. This being’s red and orange eyes gave her a different feeling.

“I think you would make a lovely addition to the court of the Teufelpunkt.” Salroth said, his voice mellow, inviting even.

The woman’s face turned red.

“M-me?” She said.

Salroth outstretched his hand.

“You and the prophet did well, Galmash, come home with me. We have much to discuss.

The cellar was cleared as the Demon Prince, the Dark Lord, and the humans were taken back to Schattenreich.


Trailing Arbia

The Vampires sat on rooftops, they had been stalking the sweet smell of blood for miles. They had given up the chase of the human, Ember wanted them to kill the Arkian. Ember had a score to settle, and so did the Vampires.

“I can’t wait to feast on that little monkey.” Von Morrison said.

“We need to lure her out of the camp.” Von Rammstein replied, his eyes peering at the Arkain camp. It was nighttime. The Arkians had been increasing their patrols, Arbia must have known the vampires were approaching.

“What’s the plan Von Rammstein?" Von Morrison asked.

“The girl is so focused on us, she lost track of where she set camp. I can smell the sweet scent of death, we must be near a human graveyard.” Von Rammstein smiled, his teeth seeming to shine in the moonlight.

When the Vampires reached the graveyard they began to start a ritual. Green fire flew from the icon of Salroth they drew in blood. It swirled around, then made for the graves of the dead humans.

“She can sense souls eh, we’ll see if she can sense our new friends.” Von Rammstein smiled as hands began to reach up from the ground.
 
A Dark Place

Miasa sat in the darkness and tried to focus, normally the silence of such places was enough to still the chaos in her mind, there was no such luck. She felt a rising current of frustration fill her soul, a disgusting emotion that she would normally have been immune to, she was spending too much time around mortals and now their petty emotions were corrupting her.

“Inches! Mere inches!” she hissed unable to contain her anger

That stupid peasant girl had allowed herself to be tempted, stood mere inches, almost face to face with the enemy, had he chosen to Salroth could have decapitated her right there and then. Only two things had ultimately spared them the ineffable arrogance of demons and their moronic tendency to toy with their victims and the timely intervention of Miasa’s mother.

Another foolish moment like that one and the entire resistance would be extinguished, Salroth had the dominant hand, and he knew it, where his enemies were divided and of limited strength, he possessed armies and powers with which to level the world. The demon lord possessed one weakness and one alone, he didn’t believe he could lose, and it made him arrogant to the point of complacency.

The demons were after all, creatures formed from the most terrible extremes of mortal nature, they fed off the fear, anger and raw emotion that flooded the world daily. Salroth wasn’t simply arrogant, his nature largely rendered him incapable of recognizing his own weaknesses and shortcomings, a solitary chink in otherwise impenetrable armour that a wise foe could exploit.

There was the problem, Arlowyn was not wise, the girl was adrift, too prone to anger and grief to see that she was losing the greater game. Humans were a disgusting species, cattle that were ruled over by the same herd instinct that defined all such lowly beings. Miasa knew what she needed to do, the herd must be united, only with numbers and shared purpose could the human’s win. She would need to shepherd Arlowyn a little further, provide the necessary stimulus to ensure the girl survived long enough to become a leader.

But that would be a task that Miasa would have to achieve largely without help, the Boreans were still not ready to go to war and the other realms of Sorras were either too far away or locked in their own struggles to understand the greater risk. And then there was mother, Miasa tried to reach out with her shadow form….nothing happened.

“Mother…where are you” she said her tone weak and a chill flowing across her body

The goddess of whispers dwelled in darkness and near silence, but now there was nothing at all, only the absence of that great and terrible presence. Challenging Salroth directly had saved Arlowyn’s life, it had also weakened the Ny'Holek, a deity that thrived upon the absence of presence could not long sustain the open conflict that Miasa had drawn her into. It was not the way of whispers to become loud, Ny’Holek would need to rest and while she did, Miasa was alone.

“Stupid, Stupid, thick-headed peasant!” Miasa hissed

There would be no more divine interventions, no more tricks or misdirections, either they united with the Arkian rebels now, or the world burned without resistance. As much as Miasa despised working with mortals, now they were all she had.
 
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She just couldn’t sleep.

Arlowyn lay back on her cot with her hands clasped together over her abdomen. She had been tossing and turning for a few hours now. A lone candle on a small nightstand illuminated the interior whilst a rain storm had rolled in outside. She laid there alone with her thoughts, listening to the soft pattering of rain drops landing atop her tent. She always felt calmed by the gentle rain and the ambience of a night-time storm. But it hadn’t been of any help this time.

She found what Miasa had suggested to be frankly insulting. The thought of allying with the same wild-haired berserker that murdered her parents pierced her heart and churned her gut more so than what she had seen of warring against demons. Never in a hundred lifetimes could she bring herself to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with her parents’ murderer…

Arlowyn could still see it when she closed her eyes. Her village in ruins, her home scorched, her parents butchered; her whole world taken and broken while she ran off looking for a sword. That arkian’s eyes burning with purpose in the cave as she–it fought to kill her. That look of fear it had when the tide of that duel turned.

She spared it. She shouldn’t have. She should have killed it right then and there; the barbarian, the butcher, the stupid damned monkey

The only other army that’s bloodied Salroth’s nose.

What Miasa had said stuck in the back of her mind. She thought it was ridiculous that the ape who had burned her whole world to ash would rebel against the master who, by its own admission, had given it the task–much less so that it might do so with any success.

“Damn shadow witch,” she cursed beneath her breath.

“Arlowyn. Are you awake?”

Geoffrey. One of the other knights. He was right outside the tent.

“Yes, what is it?”

“May I come in? We should talk,” he asked. He sounded like he had something serious to say and Arlowyn was certain she already knew what it would be.

“I have a feeling it’s about what the witch said?”

He didn’t respond at first. “Let me in, Arlowyn.”

She sighed defeatedly. “Fine.”

Geoffrey lifted the flap and walked in, taking his seat on a chair facing Arlowyn’s cot. His short curly hair was damp from the rain, as were his tunic and trousers. He bent over and clasped his hands together like he was about to give her some lecture or bad news. She didn’t get up, only glancing over to him and staring back up to the ceiling of her tent. There they just sat in silence for a moment.

“I know,” Geoffrey began, “that you have your reservations about reaching out to these arkian rebels.”

“Where is this going, Geoffrey?” Arlowyn didn’t even try to hide how annoyed she was at what he was trying to say.

“Arlowyn, we’re going to need their help to even have a chance to win this war. Whether you like it or not, that’s the reality of the situation we’re facing–”

“Reality?” Arlowyn snapped back. “The reality is that it killed my family!”

Geoffrey tried to continue. “I understand but the war is bigger than–”
“Than what?”

“Than your grief!” Geoffrey shifted his tone, out of patience. Arlowyn had to see reason and if laying it out like this meant a chance to win, it wasn’t a choice. He felt like he was talking to a bratty child more than any military leader.

“Do not think that just because you found a sacred sword and lost people you cared about means that the world owes you favorable terms, Arlowyn. Do not think that you can get whisked away on some great crusade from a life of feeding chickens and churning butter and suddenly understand how things work. Yes, your parents were killed by an arkian working as Salroth’s agent. Yes, that same arkian tried to kill you. Yes, you’re grieving and you’re angry, and you’re holding it against her. You have every right to. But that same arkian has split one of the Dark Lord’s greatest armies into civil war; to refuse that ally is foolish regardless of grievances!”

He sat there for a moment, letting what he had said to her sink in.

“We are not fighting some enemy kingdom or province in revolt, Arlowyn; we are fighting the assembled powers of all of hell. You do not turn down allies when facing odds like that. You’re not the only person who’s lost people in this war. You might have been among the first, but I promise you that you will be far and away from the last if you let your hatred of this monkey doom us all.”

Arlowyn just laid there in silence. She had heard it from Miasa and now Geoffrey. She was reluctant with Miasa. She didn’t want to see things the way they were with her. But Geoffrey? He saw her village. He found her there. That he was saying these things now too just hit her.

As for Geoffrey he sat quietly now too, unsure if she was actually listening to him or just letting everything go in one ear and out the other.

“If you’ve made up your mind already, I won’t waste your time.” He stood up from his seat and went to leave the tent. “But then don’t waste mine by acting like you actually want to win this war.”

“How far away is it– is she camped out from us?” Geoffrey stopped just before lifting the flap as Arlowyn sat up from her cot.

“A few days’ ride on horseback. We can have rangers dispatched to make contact with them and arrange a meeting.”

Arlowyn bit her tongue. The monkey killed her parents. She shouldn’t even be considering it. She should have just killed the damn thing.

“No one is asking that you make her your best friend, Arlowyn. But war demands difficult decisions and this is one of them. Ally with her and we might have a chance at victory. Don’t, and we’re that much closer to damnation.”

“Okay,” she gave in, caving under her breath and finally swallowed some of her stubbornness. “I’ll meet with her.”

Geoffrey nodded and turned to leave. Arlowyn was again left alone with her thoughts. She laid back again, staring up to the top of her tent as the rain gently pattered away outside. The lone candle dimly illuminated the inside.

“Gods damn it all.”

Still though, she just couldn’t sleep.
 
To Harald, the cheerful chirping of the birds and the insistent crow of the rooster were merely the sounds of a clock he wasn’t ready to abide by. He stirred under the heavy, coarse wool sheets, seeking one last pocket of warmth. When the sun finally pierced the window pane, he gave up. He let out a jaw-cracking yawn and stretched until his spine popped, bracing himself for the weight of the day.

Beside him, Velea remained a soft, rhythmic mound under the blankets. He moved with a practiced, silent grace, sliding out of bed so as not to break the spell of her sleep. He wanted her to stay in those "peaceful dreams" just a few minutes longer. The North was a world away; here, at least, the air still smelled of damp earth and lavender instead of smoke.

He pulled his linen shirt over his head, it was thin and frayed at the cuffs, and layered it with his heavy wool tunic. After tugging on his trousers and lacing his mud-caked leather shoes, he stepped to the ceramic basin. The water was bone-chillingly cold, snapping his mind into focus. As he patted his face dry, he heard the bedframe creak. Velea was awake, her hair a messy halo in the morning light, her eyes heavy with the grogginess that always accompanied the first tolling of the chapel bells.

Once the children had been shaken from their pallets, the family gathered at the small alcove in the corner of the hovel. The wooden icon of Arno, Lord of Light, stared back at them with unblinking sun-disk eyes.

"For the bounty we hold," Harald murmured, his voice husky.

They placed a small strip of dried salt-pork and a handful of grain onto the offering bowl. To a lord, it was nothing; to Harald, it was a meal he wouldn’t eat later. But as the smoke rose, thin and blue, he felt a sense of armor settling over his soul. As long as the Sun God looked south, they were safe.

"And for the favor he shows," the children chimed in unison.

The breakfast table was a rare triumph. Velea had outdone herself. Usually, it was pottage so thin you could see the bottom of the bowl and a crust of rye bread hard enough to chip a tooth. Today, the smell of sharp, pungent onions wafted from the steam.

Harald took a slow, deliberate spoonful. The flavor exploded on his tongue, sweet, sharp, and earthy. "Velea... are these onions?"

"They are," she said, watching him with a playful glimmer in her eye as she sliced a wedge of yellow cheese.

Harald’s spoon paused mid-air. "And the cheese? Velea, we can’t afford the Tithe, let alone these delicacies."

"Hush, you," she chuckled. "Father Crulex sent them. He said the meat we gave the temple last week was 'fit for a king.' It’s a gift, Harald. Not a debt."

Harald chewed slowly, the cheese coating his tongue in a rich, creamy film. His pride chafed. His family had been in this Ollanian village since the first stones of the chapel were laid, helping to lay those stones themselves; they were a family that provided, not one that took hand-outs like the hollow-eyed refugees clogging the roads. Yet, he couldn't bring himself to stop eating. The guilt tasted almost as good as the cheese.

The walk to the fields was a parade of misery that Harald tried to ignore. Caravans piled high with salvaged chairs and crying infants rolled past. These people had fled the "monsters" of the North, the monkey-beasts and the demon-legions of Salroth. Harald looked at the massive stone chapel on the hill, its spire catching the morning light like a golden finger.

Arno is here, he told himself. The Dark Lord is a shadow, and shadows die in the light.

Soon, he was mid-swing with his hoe when the world changed.

It wasn't a sound at first; it was a feeling in the soles of his feet. A low, rhythmic thrum that made the water in the irrigation ditches ripple. It sounded like a stampede of animals coming their way. Then came the birds, thousands of them, a black, screaming cloud erupting from the northern treeline near the edges of the fields that they toiled in.

"Look!" a voice in the distance shouted.

Harald straightened his back, wiping the sweat from his brow. The forest at the edge of the valley was... moving. Massive oaks, centuries old, were being snapped like dry kindling. Thump. Thump. Thump.

Then, the scream: "RAIDERS!"

Armored riders burst from the tree line, their horses churning the soil into a brown spray. They carried banners that made Harald’s blood run cold, a dragon coiling around a lion, this was heraldry that Harald was unfamiliar with, belonging to a noble house that he did not recognize.

But it was what followed them that stole the breath from his lungs. A creature, lime-green and slick with a foul-smelling ichor, heaved itself from the woods. It stood as tall as five men, its arms thick as tree trunks .Harald had heard tales of such creatures existing oceans away, in lands so far they felt like myths. To see one here, in the South of Ollania, was unthinkable. It was a nightmare made real.

"Run!" Harald screamed, but his own legs felt like they were made of lead.

He saw Nostor, his neighbor of twenty years, raise a heavy iron plough in a desperate, futile stance. A rider didn't even slow down; a flash of steel, a sickening thwack, and Nostor was a heap of red and grey in the dirt.

Harald turned, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He ran toward the village, toward Velea and the children, but the thunder of hooves was already behind him. His lungs burned. The air felt like hot sand.

He looked up one last time at the stone chapel. It looked so small now. So fragile.

He realized he wouldn't make it. He stopped, his chest heaving, and closed his eyes. He didn't see the rider's blade. He only saw his mother’s face, and the warm, golden light of Arno’s hall. He whispered a final plea for his family to be hidden from the shadow, took one last breath of the Southern air, and waited for the end.

The rider’s horse roared past, the wind of its passage nearly knocking him over. Harald opened his eyes, trembling. The raider hadn't even looked at him. They weren't there to kill peasants in the field. They were heading for the village.



Acrid smoke from the burning village still hung thick in the air as Marek and Jorin looked out over the smoldering ruins of hovels and storage sheds. Their horses chafed and shifted uneasily beneath them, ears twitching as armored soldiers swarmed the area like locusts. These were the infantrymen, men with soot-stained faces and hungry eyes, looting the buildings and scouring the surrounding fields for any valuables, information, or scraps of food. Among the human sellswords were grey-skinned orcs with jutting tusks and thick-set shoulders, hauling heavy furniture into the streets. Marek watched as several Arkians, men of fierce, muscular build, moved with a predatory grace, their brown, furred monkey tails wrapped tightly around their waists like belts. They were busy looting the buildings and scouring the fields for valuables, their tails twitching with a restless energy as they burst from a larder, hauling out strings of dried meat to be carted back to the main camp.

Near the old stone chapel, the work was more deliberate. Soldiers were busy fastening thick, oily ropes around the structural pillars and the arched doorway. They hitched the other ends to the massive green ogre who had journeyed in their company. The beast let out a low, wet grunt as he began to lean forward, the ropes groaning under the tension as he tugged away from the ancient stone.

“Did you see that ol’ shit who tried taking me down with his rusty plough?” Jorin said, wiping a smear of dark blood off his sword with a ragged cloth. “Blimey, these fuckin’ farmers are getting more fierce with each village we go to. Did you know that Arlus’ horse was taken down yesterday by some potato farmer with a bow? A fuckin’ potato farmer, ya hear me?”

“Aye, I hear ya,” Marek said. He couldn't take his eyes off the scene, the jewelry being stripped from the necks of weeping peasants who remained in the village and tossed onto wooden carriages. “Can’t really blame them, though. They’re only defending their homes. It’s admirable enough.”

“Can’t blame them? Admirable?” Jorin let out a loud scowl, followed by a harsh howl of a laugh. “I can blame them when they’re trying to kill me with a rusty ass plough.” He went back to scrubbing his blade, but the blood had already begun to tack up, running down the fuller of the steel and staining the bottom of his surcoat. “Shit.”

An armored rider approached on a white horse, his steel plate glinting even through the haze of smoke. His surcoat was halved: one side bore the white field and green dragon of General Erdan’s Pale Company, while the other was a black field featuring a white skull wearing a jeweled, golden crown. He was a league taller than Marek or Jorin, and his frame was broad enough to be imposing even under his heavy plate. As the rider drew near, Marek wiped the sweat from his brow, just beneath the opened visor of his helmet.

“Lo, Captain,” Marek hailed the man.

The rider reached up and flipped open his own visor, revealing the sharp, severe face of a Vastan elf. A long, jagged scar ran over his right eye, a stark contrast to his noble, defined features. Fastened to his breastplate was a small, exquisite carving of a Halloth, the sacred white stag of the Tavnar forests. To a Vastan elf, the Halloth was more than an animal; it was a guide for souls and a servant of the Old Gods, as taught by the Temple of the Sacred Blood. Even the ivory of the carving would have been harvested only from a stag that had died naturally, as killing one was a grave sin.

“Lo, Ishtan,” the elf hailed back, the slur for non-elves sliding off his tongue with practiced venom.

Marek noticed the way Amuril’s eyes flicked between him and Jorin with a sharp, wary unease.

“Come now, Amuril. I thought we were more acquainted than that,” Marek responded with a slight frown.

“We are acquainted by necessity,” Amuril said, his face unmoving.

“Aye, and it’s by necessity that I don’t take this sword and jam it up your bung-hole,” Jorin chimed in, sliding his blade back into its sheath with a metallic snick.

“Come now, Ishtan. You are more than welcome to try,” Amuril said, looking down at Jorin. “You will find I am harder to kill than the peasants you enjoy brutalizing.”

“I doubt that,” Jorin said, spitting a glob of phlegm into the dirt.

Amuril looked at him, utterly unimpressed. One hand rested casually on the reins while the other sat on the pommel of his sword. “You’re lucky the General prefers you here, or else I’d have you whipped for your crude words. Maybe more, if I were so lucky.” He flicked his gaze toward Marek. “And you, I’d expect you to keep better company than this… filth.”

Marek shook his head and gave a small shrug. “He’s entertaining, what can I say?”

Jorin snorted. “Ya hear that, ya salty shit? I’m entertaining!” He flashed a toothy, yellowed grin. “Besides, we wouldn’t be here if your little group hadn't violated the General’s orders one too many times since the fall of Rohlen. Too many peasants bein’ raped and murdered on your account.” Jorin shook his head in mock disappointment. “The General was clear: burn the villages and take the food. Let ‘em flee to the cities to crowd ‘em out. We only kill in self-defense.”

Amuril’s lip curled, and he finally cracked a thin, mocking smile.

“Smile all ya want, it’s the truth,” Jorin continued, spitting again, this time narrowly missing the hoof of Amuril’s white horse. “And not only have your men been killin’ more than necessary, but the men haven’t been disciplined. This isn’t back home. All ya fancy knife-eared shits don’t get to sit here and do whatever ya damn well please, ya hear me?”

“And back home, degenerates like you would still be in chains, serving their betters and knowing their place,” Amuril countered. “Yet, for someone like you, I figure you’re more savage than a farmer. The fighting pits would be more to your liking… or I could have kept you as a bed slave. Either one works, though you’re much less pretty than what I’m used to. Hmpf.” He spat back at the ground near Jorin’s feet, then turned his horse, prancing off to oversee the grain carriages.

“Don’t know what the fuck his problem always is,” Jorin snorted.

“He doesn’t like authority, or accountability,” Marek replied. “Those elves and their damn pride. They don't like being told what to do by people they think are 'beneath' them.” He shook his head. “He forgets we’re not in Vasthornu anymore. The elves have no seniority here. The only one who decides things is the General.”The Captain and his fellow elven officers were clearly on edge, their movements stiff with a tension that went beyond the heat of battle. Every time Amuril looked at them, he was reminded that he was being policed, his every command scrutinized to ensure he didn't violate the General's strict standing orders. It was a visible blow to his Vastan pride, the weight of the "Ishtan" leash tightening around his neck.

Jorin nodded, but Marek’s gaze drifted back to the chapel. “I don’t understand why I’m even here. Why not send someone more senior to make sure the officers are doing what they’re told? It clearly has Amuril furious.”

“It’s a sign of trust, boy-o,” Jorin said. He watched as the ogre’s muscles rippled, the heavy ropes biting into the creature's green skin. “You’s movin’ up in the world. The General sees promise in ya. Nothin’s wrong with it, just the way it is. Take some pride in it.”

“I guess. I just hope our contract with this ‘Dark Lord’ pans out,” Marek said quietly. “A lot of labor has gone into this. A lot of manpower. Be a shame if it falls apart or if he doesn’t hold up his end of the bargain.”

Jorin let out a barking laugh. “Greedy as ever, aren’t ya? Don’t worry your pretty lil’ head. Accordin’ to the General, payment has already been received. We’re gonna be wealthy men, Marek. Apparently, that ‘dark’ bastard knows money talks, and he knows we’re worth every pound. No other company could’a taken that walled city, Rohlen, as fast as we did.”

Marek nodded, but his words were drowned out by a deafening crack. He watched as the first stones of the chapel, the stones laid centuries ago by Harald's ancestors, gave way. The ancient structure groaned, the spirit of the village breaking alongside the masonry, and then it collapsed into a heap of dust and rubble. The ogre let out a furious, triumphant roar that shook the air, and the surrounding soldiers erupted into cheers.



Marek sat cross-legged on the dirt outside the towering walls of Edin. The rhythmic shriek of his whetstone against his sword filled the air, a sharp sound that occasionally drew his eyes toward the campfire where Jorin and the Beast were stationed. Across the landscape, the fires of dozens of surrounding camps cast an ominous, flickering orange glow against the stone walls of the free city. Through the still night air, the faint, wretched sounds of shuffling feet and the distant groans of refugees within the city were barely audible.

The plan had worked perfectly. By sparing the peasants, burning their villages, and driving them toward the city, Erdan had guaranteed a city filled to the brim with mouths to feed and hearts overflowing with fear. For several days, they had sat outside the city, their forces tightening the noose. Edin was holding out longer than Rohlen had, the capital of Ollania, but Marek knew the General wouldn’t allow them to be bogged down. As Erdan had told him before, “War is decided before the first horn is blown.”

The Beast’s eyes remained glazed, staring into the crackling fire as sparks spiraled upward and the logs shifted. He was silent, eerily silent, in a way that made Marek feel uneasy. Despite his years of service to the General and his recent promotion to the personal guard, Marek had never spoken more than a handful of words to the giant creature.

The Beast was a Leonin, a humanoid feline with the massive head and mane of a lion and the body of a man, if you could even call it that. His paws were equipped with claws as sharp as razors that could shred a steel plate like parchment. He stood at a towering eight feet tall, and Marek estimated he weighed as much as a mountain bear. His fur was a striking snow-white, resembling an albino lion, and his bright yellow eyes featured large, dark vertical slits that seemed to swallow the firelight. Strapped to his hips were weapons of staggering size: a giant morning star on one side and a double-edged battleaxe on the other. Either one was heavy enough to require a normal man to use two hands, yet the Beast wielded them effortlessly in one. He was a mountain of muscle beneath his bronze chest plate; the armor didn't even cover his thick arms, as his hide was strong enough to be impervious to most slashes and cuts. He was a force of nature, hence his name.

To break the heavy silence, Marek glanced over at the giant. “So… how did you come to work for the General?” Marek asked.

The Beast’s eyes remained on the fire, the sunset plunging the world into shadows as darkness crept over the siege lines. “I’m not interested in small-talk, human,” he rumbled.

Marek nodded and looked back to his fire, sliding the stone down the edge of his blade.

“Aye, the big cat here isn’t fond of chattin’,” Jorin said with a snort. “Have you not figured that out yet, lad?”

Marek shrugged, his focus back on his steel. “I just figured I would ask since we all serve in the General’s guard. I would like to know my brethren a little better if I am to potentially be dying with them someday. I'd like to know if I am supposed to charge them with protecting me, or if they want me to protect them. Brotherly love, if you will.”

The Beast let out a cackle of a laugh, a sound that was half-amusement and half-predatory purr. He threw his head back, his white mane catching the light. “You think I need you to protect me, human?” His voice was a deep, guttural rumble. “Think again.”

“Probably not, but you might need to save me,” Marek said with a smirk of his own.

The Beast let out a heavy sigh. His nature was that of a solitary creature, but he sensed the boy would only continue to pester him. He gave in.

“I hail from the Tribe Dawntale in the land of Ux Martivir, a land close to here,” the Beast began. “A people of great warriors and renown. Our tribesmen were known throughout the ages for their martial feats. However, I found the Tribe in its current state to be beyond my tastes, they had lost their way. So I joined the Legion and served for several years. I grew tired of the lack of challenges, similar to my life in the tribe, and so I became a mercenary.”

Marek looked at the Beast with wide eyes. He was amazed that this silent lion had finally said more words in a few moments than Marek had heard in years of service. He looked over at Jorin, who had a similar reaction; the veteran’s mouth was almost agape, his yellow teeth on full display. The Beast, however, went back to staring at the fire.

“So then, how did you find yourself in the employ of the General?” Marek asked.

The Beast finally broke his gaze from the flames and looked at Marek. “I was serving as a mercenary for the Guild on a ship, protecting the cargo. Like before, I was bored. I dared any man on the ship to challenge me, and Erdan came forward.” The Beast looked toward the General’s large, command tent, in which he met with his marshals for the coming battle. “That was the first day I ever lost a fight. I offered to serve him, but he said he didn’t take slaves. And so, I became his soldier of fortune, bound by my own free-will.”

Marek looked at the Beast in awe, as did Jorin. “How the fuck did that grizzly ol’ half-elf best a killin’ machine like you?”



The next morning, Erdan’s host had assembled around the walled city, like a tightening noose. Thousands upon thousands of soldiers surrounded it by land, while their fleet blockaded it by sea and up the river to its north. In the bay, hundreds of ships flew the sails of the dragon and lion, vessels provided by Salroth himself to bolster the Pale Company’s already formidable navy. On land, the morning wind whipped the same standards above a massed army preparing for the slaughter. Today was the day the Free City of Edin would be stormed.

This host was a grim mosaic of races. There were infantry blocks of humans in seasoned leather and plate; orcs in their heavy, crudely forged iron; and Arkians with their powerful, furred tails either hanging loose or wrapped tightly around their waists. They stood at the edge of the treeline, just beyond the reach of the city’s longbowmen. In front of the ranks stood the towering siege towers, winched forward into position. Beside them, hundreds of green-skinned ogres were spread throughout the cohorts of man, beastfolk, and elf, their massive frames casting long, dark shadows over their comrades. Next to the ogres sat the ammunition for the day’s work: "boulders" made of crushed brick, stone, and mortar, the remains of the very buildings they had raided on the march here.

Up on a nearby hill, General Erdan monitored the field. He sat atop a magnificent chestnut steed, his bronze plate shimmering over a fine weave of chainmail. His thick silver beard moved in the wind as he surveyed the city. He was surrounded by his mounted guard, including Marek and the grizzly Jorin, both with their visors raised..

The suspense was deafening. Marek had fought many times, but never on a scale like this. He was used to the blood-slicked sand of the fighting pits, or guarding Guild ships against pirate boarders. He had fought in small skirmishes in faraway lands, but a full-scale siege was a different beast entirely. Luckily, his General was not as green as he. Erdan was a half-elf with decades of martial experience, and Marek placed his complete trust in the man's cold calculations.

Marek’s eyes scanned the mass of soldiers, armed, armored, and ready, yet the General gave no order. It was unlike Erdan to allow the enemy time to prepare. From their vantage point, Marek could see the archers on the battlements nocking arrows, the boiling pots of oil being heated, and the heavy ballistae being cranked into position. Every minute that passed allowed the defenders to bolster their resolve. Yet, Erdan sat like a statue.

The orcs began to grow restless, a low growl rippling through their ranks, followed by the Arkians and the human cohorts. Then, Marek noticed a gap in the formation. Where were the goblins? The spider-cages he had seen on the ships were nowhere to be found. He had assumed they were out scouting, but as he scanned the treeline, they were nowhere in sight.

Then, he heard it.

The distant clang of bells echoed from within the city walls, not in a call to prayer but in a frantic alarm, followed immediately by screams and the unmistakable, wet sound of blades meeting meat. Marek’s eyes widened as he saw flashes of movement beyond the battlements. Soldiers were running haphazardly across the walls, fleeing something inside. He looked at the General, whose face remained as solid as stone, then at the Beast, who stood taller than the men on horseback. Marek pranced his horse over to Jorin.

“What is happening?” he asked.

Jorin shrugged, his armor clinking. “I have no idea, kiddo. You’re just as surprised as me. I wasn’t in that war council last night.”

The screams intensified. Then, a nightmare erupted onto the battlements. Goblins on their massive spider mounts crawled over the lip of the walls, hundreds of the little creatures giggling and howling. The furry, multi-legged horrors used their fangs to rip into the defenders, flinging armored men over the battlements like dolls. The spiders moved with terrifying speed, their sticky legs grabbing soldiers and slamming them against the stone. As the archers tried to retaliate, the spiders would simply scuttle over the side of the wall or onto the ceilings of the towers, reaching places the infantry couldn't touch. One jockey spurred his spider up a tower; the desperate archers inside fired point-blank, but the spider’s weight and the goblin's frenzy brought the wooden structure crashing down, crushing everyone within. The spiders scuttled with terrifying speed, their hairy legs clicking against the stone.

“War is decided before the first horn is blown,” Marek muttered to himself, remembering the General’s words. He felt his stomach churn as he watched the spiders trap men in the narrow walkways, the goblins cackling as their mounts began to feed.

General Erdan motioned to a mounted soldier with a large bone-horn. He raised his hand, holding it until the chaos on the walls reached a fever pitch.

“Elves to the front,” Erdan said plainly.

The horn sounded, a deep, haunting blast that was answered by dozens of others around the city. From the ranks, the few Vastan elves stepped forward in unison. They marched until they stood behind the massive boulders of recycled rubble. Marek recognized the jagged stone of the chapel they had torn down days ago among the heaps.

Marek gripped the pommel of his sword, watching the elves and the chaos on the walls. The goblin jockeys weren't just killing; they were herding. They were using the spiders’ speed to cluster the defenders into tight circles near the main gates and towers. The defenders were in complete disarray, throwing pikes and arrows at the scuttling monsters in a blind panic.

“Prepare!” Erdan ordered.

A horn rang out. The Vastan elves moved their hands in a wide, sweeping motion, aiming toward the base of the walls.

“Begin!”

The elves moved their arms as if ripping a heavy cloth in half. Marek heard a deep, subterranean rumble, like a bell cracking deep underground. The mortar at the base of the city walls suddenly ripped at the seams, as fissures spread all over it. Stones shifted. Cracks raced upward through the masonry faster than a man could point. The towers began to lurch and tip, needing only one final push.

“Ready!”

Another sharp horn blast. The Vastan elves raised their hands upward, their faces tight with the strain of lifting something immense. In front of them, the massive boulders of brick and stone began to levitate, casting huge, circular shadows over the grass as they rose higher and higher.

Marek’s eyes lit up. The sorcery of the Vastan elves never ceased to amaze him. Their ability to manipulate the earth was a point of awe, a skill he sometimes envied.

“Fire!”

A high-pitched scream erupted from the horns. Each elf, including Captain Amuril, hurled their boulders at the weakened walls. The projectiles flew with the intensity of a catapult, smashing into the softened mortar and the clustered soldiers. The towers came crashing down. The men on the walls screamed as the stone folded inward, the wall "bowing its head" as it collapsed.

The sound was a tectonic roar. Where the towers had stood, there were now jagged slopes of rubble, settling into perfect ramps for the infantry. Most of the Vastan elves retreated, exhausted by the display, though Amuril remained at his post, his eyes fixed on the breach.

“Advance!”

A deep, rumbling horn sounded. The "Forlorn Hope", a mix of humans, orcs, and dwarves, charged from the treeline. They sprinted across the open field toward the breaches. They disappeared into the choking, caustic white fog. Marek watched as they scrambled up the "talus slope", the jagged ramp of rubble the collapse had created. Inside, the defenders had built "retrenchments", secondary barricades made of flipped wagons and heavy furniture. But the Arkians were already over them, using their tails to anchor themselves to the jagged stone and leaping over the defenders' pikes with predatory grace. They poured over the rubble, stomping over the fallen stones and the flailing limbs of those buried beneath the collapse. Inside, the bloodbath was instantaneous.

Marek watched the carnage through the dust. He could see the shadows of the horror inside, the Arkians leaping onto the battlements, their tails lashing as they cleared the remnants of the guard, fire and other magic shooting out of their fists while cutting down foes with their sword-hands. The enemy knights and men-at-arms were routed, their morale shattered by the sight of monsters and magic.

“Send in the heavy infantry,” Erdan commanded.

The senior colonels dismounted and led the shielded infantry into the breach, expanding the foothold. The city was a chorus of steel on steel and the screams of the dying. From the water, trebuchets began firing at the main keep, the heavy stones arcing through the smoky sky to weaken the Duke’s final refuge.

“Quicker than expected,” Erdan said, his face as statuesque as ever. “Ogres to the front.”

Three deep rumbles from the horns sent the ogres into a stampede. The ground shook as the twelve-foot monsters crossed the killing field in seconds, their massive oak clubs smashing into the inner gates with a sound like thunder.

The General looked at the Beast. “Join them. Clear the path for me and secure the outside of the keep.”

The Beast simply nodded. He lunged forward, sprinting at first, then dropping onto all fours like a great white predator. He surpassed the ogres in seconds, his speed inhuman. He disappeared into the city, followed by the green pestilence of the ogres.

As the sun began to wane, Erdan called for his guard to follow him to the citadel. They rode through streets slicked with blood and littered with broken bodies. Marek watched the Beast at work; the Leonin tore through the remaining ranks, grabbing a man by the head and ripping it clean off with a wet, sickening pop before moving to the next.

“Can you imagine being them?” Jorin asked, his usual humor replaced by a grim stare. “These poor bastards grew up on stories about ogres and goblins. Nightmares to scare children. And now…”

“Now the nightmares are real,” Marek finished.

To their right, Marek saw Captain Amuril. The elf was levitating above a circle of quivering soldiers. He descended like an angel of death, hovering in the center of their formation. He unsheathed his curved falconier blade, a shimmering, deadly arc of steel. As the soldiers charged, Amuril moved with a grace that only centuries of practice could produce. He cut them down in a blur of motion, one after the other, until he rose into the air again, seeking more blood.

They reached the heart of Edin to find the citadel gates already open. The Duke’s own guards had betrayed him.

Erdan dismounted, removing his helmet to reveal his cold, intelligent face. A captain of the city guard dropped to one knee. “Sir, we’ve secured the ducal family… for you. The Duke awaits—”

“Where is the Duke?” Erdan’s voice was dangerously soft.

“In the throne room, sir. We… we overthrew him for you. For Salroth.”

Silence fell like an executioner’s axe.

“You betrayed your sworn lord?” Erdan asked.

“We thought the city was lost anyway, and—”

“Hang them,” Erdan said, turning to the Beast. “All of them. I don’t tolerate traitors. A man who betrays one master will betray another.”

The Beast’s massive hand closed around the captain’s throat. Within minutes, the conspirators dangled from the citadel walls.

Inside the throne room, maps were already being spread across tables. Erdan had the Duke and his family placed under house arrest, powerless, but alive.

“General,” a captain interrupted as Erdan inspected the grand hall. “We have a problem. A group of our men killed civilians in the merchant quarter. About two dozen.”

The room went silent.

“Were they resisting?” Erdan asked, not looking up from his maps.

“No, General. The soldiers were… celebrating.”

“Hang them too,” Erdan said, his voice a deadly calm. “Make sure the rest of the men see it. We’re professionals, not savages. The innocent die only when necessary, never for sport.”



As the last of the chaos subsided and the soldiers finished the grim work of securing the city, Erdan summoned his commanders to a war council within the citadel’s throne room. The hall was massive and drafty, the high, vaulted ceilings echoing with the distant sounds of the occupation. Erdan did not sit in the ducal throne himself; he left it vacant, a silent statement that he was a conqueror for hire, not a king. Instead, the heavy banners of the Pale Company, the dragon and the lion, were draped from the interior balconies, casting long, predatory shadows over the room.

Erdan sat at the head of a large, dark oaken table arranged in a horseshoe. Arrayed down the table were the colonels, the veteran leadership of the Company, a diverse assembly of humans, orcs, Arkians, and an elf that served as the backbone of Erdan's multi-racial host. Marek found a place at the back of the room, the Beast standing beside him like a silent, towering sentinel. Both listened intently as Erdan prepared to lay out the next phase of the campaign. Across the hall, Jorin stood near the massive, closed wooden doors near the entrance of the chamber, his thumb hooked into his belt.

However, there was a presence in the room that made Marek’s skin crawl. In the far corner, draped in shadow, stood a man in robes as black as an oil slick. The hood fell just low enough to shroud his eyes, leaving only a glimpse of a pale, sickly jawline. He was short and wiry, his frame so thin that the heavy robes seemed to swallow him. Marek saw the flash of dark, rotted brown teeth as the man let out a silent grin at a colonel’s comment, yet no one dared speak to him.

The man’s mouth and jaw were a map of ink, covered in tattoos of shifting sigils and odd, geometric symbols that Marek didn't recognize. His clasped hands bore the same markings, the ink dark against his pale, seemingly translucent skin. Beside that pallor, the only bit of color was an amulet: a blood-crimson ring of flame that dangled from his neck. Marek tried to look away, but his gaze kept drifting back to the tattooed stranger; the man never paid him any heed in return.

Marek glanced at Jorin, who seemed remarkably unbothered, haphazardly tearing into a piece of salted meat with his bare hands. But the Beast noticed. The Leonin's bright yellow eyes remained locked on the robed figure, watching him with a predatory distrust that Marek had never seen in him before. It wasn't the gaze of a hunter; it was the gaze of a creature sensing something "wrong" in the natural order.

As the colonels ate, bread, roasted vegetables, and ale were spread across the table. They discussed the strategy of the breach, critiquing the morning’s work.

“It was a brilliant move, General,” said a colonel near the center of the table, the human commander of Amuril’s unit, his dark skin contrasted by long, braided blonde hair. “Finding the entrance to the sewers days before we arrived gave the goblins the perfect staging ground. The infiltration was flawless.”

“Hear, hear!” an orc colonel added, raising a sloshing flagon of ale. Erdan simply nodded, his face as stoic and unmoving as the stone walls around them. He was not a man prone to flattery.

After a few moments, Erdan cleared his throat, and the room went instantly silent. “While we have discussed matters of importance tonight and eaten well, as you ferocious bastards deserve—”

“Hear, hear!” Jorin called out, drawing a few dry chuckles.

Erdan continued, ignoring the interruption. “It is vital that you understand the plan for our future here in the Thirteen Realms. As I have stated, His Lordship, Salroth, has already provided substantial payment. It is already secured in our vaults on Tash Lemnvar. I made certain of this before we accepted the contract, given the… unique nature of this work.” The colonels nodded solemnly; they knew the risks of working for a Dark Lord. “If you fall in combat, your contracts remain honored. Your families will receive your share; otherwise, the funds remain with the Company.”

“Salroth has also funded the expansion of our armada,” Erdan continued, his voice cold and measured. “This will allow us to ship men further and faster, pacifying any resistance across the Realms.” At this, the tattooed man in the corner snarled a smile, causing the Beast to let out a low, vibrating growl.

“Furthermore, these ships will ferry in additional companies to reinforce the South, meat for the slaughter, if you will,” Erdan said bluntly. “We will lay siege to the smaller southern cities. Salroth’s forces are pressing from the North; we are the lower half of the pincer. We will use the same tactics: goblin riders in the sewers, elves at the walls, ogres at the gates. Take them from within and without.”

Erdan’s eyes narrowed as he looked at a lanky, burly human colonel. “Torahor, you will lead our forces here in the South in my absence. I will take the majority of the army and push North to Korhal. From there, we join Salroth’s main host to storm the Imperial City. Once the capital falls, we mop up the stragglers and head home.”

Erdan’s expression turned stony. “Torahor, remember: we are here to break armies, not butcher innocents. If I hear of your men celebrating with civilian blood again, I will return to oversee the hangings personally.”

Marek felt a chill. This was conquest by terror, but tempered by Erdan's rigid, unforgiving code.

Erdan paused, then looked over his shoulder at the robed figure. “I almost forgot. Gentlemen, this is an emissary of Salroth, courtesy of the Dark Lord himself. He will be our… point of communication.”

The Messenger stepped forward, gliding out of the shadows. His grotesque, brown-toothed smile widened as the colonels recoiled in visible disgust.

“Hello… distinguished warriors,” the Messenger said. His voice was coarse, sounding like dry parchment rubbing together. “I have a gift from my master that I will bestow upon you.”

He glided past Erdan, who remained statuesque and unbothered, his robes flowing like liquid smoke. He stopped beside Torahor, leaning over the colonel’s shoulder.

“A gift… for you… good sir,” the Messenger hissed, laying a dark glass orb on the table. He bowed low before stepping back. “A means of communication. It will allow us to discuss matters across vast distances… almost as if I am actually there!”

The Messenger let out a loud, coarse laugh that seemed to suck the warmth out of the room. He then slithered back into his dark corner, the eyes of every officer following him like he was a venomous snake.

“Well… I think that’s everything,” Erdan said, his voice cutting through the tension. “Good work, men. Dismissed.”

As the council broke, Marek made his way back into the night air, breathing deeply to clear the smell of the Messenger from his lungs. He looked over the broken, smoldering ruin of Edin. The nightmare was far from over; if Erdan’s plan held, the South would fall like dominoes while they marched toward the heart of the world to meet their dark employer.
 
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