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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 18:16
END OF CHAPTER 4
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Nov 2011 at 16:28
This, Urgho thought as he flew through the icy air, this is how Orcs were meant to ride. With blood and fang, and glory to follow. He could feel the powerful muscles of his wolf moving beneath his thighs as they plunged swiftly through the dense snow,  lupine grace transformed into predatory instinct. 

He did not need to look to either side to know that other wolves and other riders shared the forest with him, did not need to look behind to see the hundreds of torches that followed. He could hear the drums in the wind, could feel the ceaseless march of a thousand iron boots.

He rode bareback as was his custom, as his father before him had done. He refused to saddle such a beautiful creature, though most of his men did. When he thought of the beauty of the wolves he felt something akin to pity for humans, who had made their lot with weaker cousins of the domesticated kind. How sad, to have bred the ferocity of the wolves out.

Urgho Split-Skull, his men called him. He had earned the name twice. By birth, when his mother had been taken as a prize during a skirmish with the Marauders, and by battle when a Dwarven axe had nearly clove his brow in twain. 

He shuddered from the impact as his wolf emerged from the snow onto the frozen clay. Behind him he could hear the ragged breaths of his kin, and he knew his Horde-Mother must be close behind. 

The lights of the city ahead were slowly dying out.  Good; that meant that they too were preparing for battle.

His rebirth in battle had interpreted by the priests as a sign that he was destined for greatness, and when he had proven himself the master of wolves his place in the clan had been assured. But I was different than the others, he remembered, and like our Mother, I must prove myself.  He had proven himself a survivor; not it was up to him to prove that it was in him to lead.

He directed his wolf towards a large ridge that would give them a wide view over the battle plain below. His wolf kicked up great clumps of snow that clung wetly to its fur as they charged up an incline.
A single horn blast sounded to slow the vanguard; a single touch at the base of his wolf's muzzle was enough to make it draw short at the summit. His wolf moved restlessly beneath him, every fiber vibrating with the need for battle.

Another wolf clambered up next to his, acknowledging his brother with a small whine.

Urgho point to a moving line of light a small distance from the village. "They are trying to send the weak away."

He was pleased to see his Horde-Mother did not hide her face from the cold. "There is a monastery in between the mountains there," she said, pointing to a pair of shadows, "They will try to hide." 

Urgho had ridden through these hills many times on patrols; he knew the terrain as well as she did. "They will have to cross the river at the bridge," he said. 

A look of understanding passed between them. Urgho smiled. "It could be done, with perhaps a dozen of my riders..." he said.

"Do it," Lashka ordered, "and join us at the village when you are finished."

Another tug of his mount's fur. He growled softly into its ear. The wolf let out a long anguished howl, which was taken up by half a dozen voices on either side. 

He nodded in satisfaction, "To the hunt, Mother."

"To the Hunt," Lashka replied, smiling.




 

 

    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Nov 2011 at 20:11
Very well done!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Nov 2011 at 21:40
An exceptional read.

First contribution in this part of the forum that I've ever read in full infact. I'll be sure to check for more. ^^
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 26 Nov 2011 at 21:54
Orm Tullim cradled his ruined hand to his chest to keep the uneven canter of his horse from jolting it, but the poor thing trembled so badly that his hand rocked against his chest, sending fresh waves of pain up into his chest. The wounds were still fresh enough that the cold caused them to ache.

The uruk had done their best to tie him upright, but they had neglected to account for the abject terror that the company of their wolves would inspire in the horse; he counted every sway, note the creaking of the dessicated rope, and fervently hoped he might topple off to be lost in the snow. 

He felt bitterness that had little to do with the cold or the snow that threatened to topple him from his saddle. I've failed my flock. I've led the legions of hell right to their doorstep. Death would be a blessing when compared to the shame he felt.

Rhaga pulled up next to him. "You will see your people soon, Orm Tullim."

Tullim gave a bitter laugh as he looked at the streaming columns of orcs on other side. "Is that supposed to cheer me? I bring only death and sorrow. Tell me, orc; why should that please me?"

Rhaga rode in silence for a moment. Finally he said: "The weak will die. This is true. But your people will grow stronger from your loss. Those that we take as slaves will have a purpose. You will find that your human ughlak is burned away; what remains is harder and honed to a purpose. I have seen your religions. This is not unfamiliar to you."

"Ughlak?" Tullim asked.

Rhaga growled. "Shame and failure. Putting self above the needs of the horde. One who is unable to stand and fight, who does not test themselves."

"Indulgence," a familiar voice said, "The word you are look for is indulgence, Rhaga." A powerful wolf took up pace on the other side of his horse, who paradoxically seemed calmed by its presence. It snorted and stopped trembling by half.

"The horse knows that when the alpha is near it, it has nothing to fear from the others." Lashka said, straightening in her saddle. She seemed to be unaware of the way frost coated her face and the way that her furs were frozen in clumps in places. "It recognizes that there is an order, even among predators."

"And you?" Tullim said, "What does that make you, Horde-Mother?" His missing fingers suddenly itched as the pain in his chest moved northward into his skull to flare into seething hatred there. He wanted nothing more that a knife to plunge into her calm, yellow eyes.

"Something to be feared and respected," Lashka replied. "You should heed Rhaga's words, Orm Tullim. There is a saying among orcs. What we do not eat-"

"-we use..." Tullim said bitterly, "I have been told."

"I have eaten of you," Lashka said, nodding towards his ruined hand, "and now I would have use of you. She pointed towards the column that marched besides them. "My orcs want blood and glory. And they will have it." She paused. "...but I need slaves as well, who can travel where orcs cannot."

Tullim laughed bitterly. "You want me to give my people up to you." His laughter swiftly turned into a cough, which took a few minutes to subside. "Why, by the Lady," he finally managed, "would we ever serve you?"

Lashka stared at him. "Because you will die otherwise. Serve me, and I will make sure that only your weakest are culled; the rest will be placed as servants, and I will let you keep your precious monastery if you like. The city will be mine," she said, "and anyone who resists us will be taken as a blood-price, as is our custom."

"How generous of you," he snarled, "and how am I to get the consent of the village?"

Lashka nodded towards Rhaga. "He will escort you to the river; Urgho will have stopped them there. When you have their answer, you will return to me."

"And if I refuse?"

Lashka unsheathed a wicked-looking knife. "Then I will cut of your fingers and feed them to you before I take your tongue. I will make you listen to the wailing of mothers as I cut their children down in front of them, and their misery will haunt you to the end of your days," Lashka said, "and I will make sure you live a very long time."

Orm Tullim looked into her eyes, and knew she meant it, saw things in her that shook his faith at its very root. They are truly not human, he thought, there is nothing familiar in those eyes. He looked up at the Lady, who shone bright above them, following her radiance downward towards the multitude of torches.

So many... he thought. He thought about all the lives in the village, and the vows he had taken when his chain was much longer. His ruined fingers rubbed idly against the chain.

"Very well;" he said wearily, "I will carry your message."


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 28 Nov 2011 at 18:08

It's cold, Mylmo thought, and the wind will blow the lanterns out if we're not careful. He looked up ahead at his brother, who held one of the lamps aloft like one of the sea watchmen of their childhood. For his part, Emmit seemed immune to the elements, carved out of the same hardness that had been their father. 

Emmit swayed with a mariner's grace as the wagons heaved across the wintry steppe. He might have made a good fisherman, if it hadn't been for me. But those days lay behind him, with their ancestors and the kings of Tal.

 

They had given much of their seafaring roots. But they had kept the lanterns, despite the prohibitive cost.  Whale oil was almost unheard of this far north, but they still had kin that patrolled the southerns seas, and had not yet forgotten them. Every month Mylmo sent gold, and every month a barrel of oil arrived; Mylmo estimated they must have nearly fifty stored up at the monastery.      

 

He thought he heard his name being shouted above the wind. He lurched to his knees, cradling his lantern.

 

"Mylmo..."

 

The words were indistinct, drowned out by the wind and the chattering teeth of the villagers on either side of him. "Quiet," he growled. He strained against the rushing snow. Emmit turned forward for a moment, then Mylmo saw his brother straighten like a pin before whipping around to face him again.

 

The wind shifted, blowing Emmit's words towards him "Bridge..." he heard clearly, and "fire..." He inhaled the wind, smelled smoke and ash. The night sky was a little brighter to the east. They got ahead of us, he thought despairingly.

 

They had burned the bridge... Mylmo thought, they mean to slaughter us all. He looked down at the villagers next to him. He saw how worn and sullen their faces were. These were no fighters - they were potters and weavers and tanners.

 

Mylmo looked to his brother, who for all his grace was no fighter either.  He weighed their options carefully. There will be no going forward, that's for sure.

 

He lifted his lantern and covered the light with his hand. Thrice, an ancient Tallimar signal that the lightkeepers had used to warn villagers when there were raiders on the shoals. 

 Emmit returned the gesture; he spoke curtly into his wagon driver's ear. The driver tried to argue with him, but Emmit pointed to the smoke that had just started to come into the horizon.

 

Harry drew up next to Mylmo's wagon. "Trouble?"

 

"Trouble," Mylmo agreed.

 

 

 

 

 



Edited by Lashka - 29 Nov 2011 at 04:38
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 29 Nov 2011 at 17:43
(AUTHOR NOTE: Some content may be disturbing to some readers with children. Please be aware.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Vhaki knew her brothers and sisters were close. 

Very close.

The wagon train passed no more than fifty yards from her hiding place high up in a snowy pine. The cold and damp would make her leather unworkable soon, but she paid it no mind. 
 
Gruggi paced restlessly among the dry, dead needles at the base of the pine. The wolf whined softly, anxious to join his brothers on the hunt. Vhaki hissed at him, and he lay down quietly. In truth, she could not blame him - she too longed to be on the march with the uruk, to feel the weight of cold steel against her thigh and the heft of a bone-handled spear in  her hand. But Lashka had been clear: Watch and wait; nothing more.

The wagon train stopped. She saw a fat man in brown robes hold a lantern aloft and watched as the gesture was mirrored by another man in the lead wagon. She followed their gaze to the horizon, and almost laughed. She rocked back and forth in glee for a moment. 

Her cousins were close;  if she was any judge of distance and direction. They had set something very dear to these humans afire. She savored the smell of smoke, and the small halo of light that was growing on the horizon. She watched as the humans clambered out of their wagons to take up a defensive ring around the weak and the sick. 

This...this is why you will lose,  she wanted to yell at them, you let their weakness drag your entire horde down. Time and again she had watched humans commit this same error. They protected the sick, the old - even their children, which was the ultimate waste. From the time they could crawl, uruk learned to survive on their own.  Besides, if one died, you could always make more. Vhaki herself had had a birth-sister for two years. Until the day she had strangled Vasha in their creche as she slept.
 
The weak pity; the strong survive.
  
She watched as they unloaded a frail-looking woman and a small box. Her ears pricked up when she heard a steady stream of curses in uruk emerge from the box. Ori.  The prospect of battle excited her so much that she had almost forgotten about her slave.

She could hear the growls growing stronger in the wind. 

Boy first, she decided. then she would join her brothers on the hunt.

***  

Shae shivered in the cold. Why had they stopped? She raised her head tiredly, wincing as fire rippled through her feet. Brother Mylmo had said she mustn't walk for a few days - at least until the blisters subsided.

She saw Pete out of the corner of her eye - a good-looking man if there ever was one. Her mother didn't approve of her taking up with a soldier, but then her mother needed reminding that there weren't many good marriage prospects for the daughter of a bastard who was already past thirty. 

Pete treated her well, even if he did spend too much time with the boys in the barracks. He had said they could marry in the spring, when the thaw had started. He said he would talk to Mylmo about buying a little bit of earth outside the monastery. He had said the land looked good there. Just needs a bit of clearing, he had said.

The little monster rattled in his cage beside her. Pete leaned into the wagon. "Easy there, love," he said, flashing her a smile, "There's just been a bit of a hold up. Nothing to worry about." He scowled as the box rattled again. She couldn't understand what the boy was saying, but it sounded dark, and nasty. She shivered.

"Oi!" Pete said, giving the box a good thump. "There are ladies present." Pete grabbed one of the rungs of the box and heaved. The box scraped along the bed of the wagon for a moment only to land solidly on the ground. 

There was a low moan from the box, and the cursing stopped.

"There," Pete said, "that's better." He looked Shae over with concern. "Here, now." he clambered up into t6he wagon bed. "It'll work out, you'll see." he wiped away tears that Shae had not even known she was shedding. "Don't be scared."

"I'm not," Shae said, and this was true. She felt calm, unnaturally so. There was no fear, only the calm acceptance that death might come. And to her, that was far worse. She looked at Pete for a moment, reaching up to stroke his chin. "Just be careful," she whispered, and :"I love you."

He kissed the top of her head. "I love you too, poppet." He smiled at her as he clambered down the side of the wagon, using the wheel for support. He gave her a bold salute, unsheathing his sword, and with a wink, was gone off into the darkness.

Shae shivered again; this time it had nothing to do with the cold. 

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Dec 2011 at 06:31

(Author Note: Thanks to all for the encouragement. It keeps me motivated to write.)

 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jhorgo loved the smell of the black powder, loved even more the white phosphorescence as it lit, the way it eagerly consumed wood and iron and could even make the oldest stones tremble. He loved the hiss that was deadlier than the darkest asp that built into a deafening roar.

 

He studied the bridge again. He had covered the timbers in lamp oil, and poured powder into the seams, setting two small kegs underneath the keystone in the center arch. He had wound strips of cotton together and dipped those in lamp oil as well to make a rudimentary fuse.

 

"Let's go, saboteur..."  the Split-skull growled from atop his wolf, making the word sound like a curse.

 

Jhorgo sighed. Riders like Urgho preferred charging into battle. They never appreciated the subtle cunning and planning that went into moments like this - the endless experimentation to find the perfect mixture, the selection of the proper stress points. Such things required careful study.

 

"Fine," he snapped, aware that Urgho's evaluation of his work could reach the Horde-Mother's ears. He lit the fuse, watching as the flames licked hungrily at the threads. Urgho's wolf paced restlessly next to him; it clearly did not like the fire. Urgho whispered in its ear to be still.

 

"How long will this ta-" Urgho started to say but the rest was cut off by a brilliant flash as the bridge exploded in all directions. Timber and stone rained down on the orcs, who turned their faces away in disgust. Urgho's wolf bolted, throwing his rider into the mud at Jhorgo's feet.

 

The saboteur knew better than to laugh, but he permitted himself a small smile as he surveyed the new pile of rubble in the stream. A few loose stones clattered belatedly to join their brothers, and there were a dozen new fires burning merrily away across both sides of the river.

 

 I would have warned you to brace yourself, Split-skull, if you had left me to my work. Urgho floundered to his feet in the mud, sputtering. The Split-skull stomped over to where his wolf lay, shivering and boxed it on the ear hard enough to make it yelp as he clambered back into the saddle.

 

Jhorgo thought to make a jest, but held his tongue when he saw murder in Urgho's eyes.

 

"The humans. We go. Now." Urgho said, pulling his mount by its reins up onto its haunches.  Jhorgo leapt nimbly onto the back of one of the other wolves. He inhaled the rising smoke and ash, feeling his chest swell with pride. He seated himself facing rearwards so that long after the wolves had plunged into the wind he could watch the embers of his work drift high into the night. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Dec 2011 at 21:17
There was little to do once they had drawn the wagon together into a rough circle but wait. Every man and woman that knew how to fight had been drafted, and even a few that didn't. Old Tom Jaffer's girl couldn't be older than ten, but she held the broken remnants of a hoe aloft as if she meant to run the first orc that crossed her path through. 

Mylmo had not carried a sword in thirty years, and there was none to spare, but he had made do with an extra set of smithing hammers that were useless against an anvil but could still stove a skull in quite nicely. Even old Emm had found himself a pitchfork and a small woven net that he had quickly weighted with stones. Their ancestors had been net fighters, and Mylmo had the scars along his ribs to prove Emm wasn't half bad.

"Look alive," Mylmo cautioned, "they're watching."  

He imagined he could hear the low, heavy breathing of the wolves on the wind. He studied the shadows at the tree line for any hint of movement-

And with an unearthly howl, the orcs dropped from above.

Mylmo whirled , his face turned upwards. How had they gotten above them?  Soldiers from the other side of the circle gave aq cry as a wolf rushed out of the shadows snarling. The orc bounded nimbly down the side of the tree, slashing at a poor cotter's son with a wicked looking dagger.

A scout! Mymlo realized the error too late. He turned to see the night splitting like a wave as dozens of orcs spilled out of the darkness. 

"Down!" he roared, wedging as much of his bulky frame underneath a wagon as he could. He heard a whistling sound, followed by vibrations and cries of pain from nearby. The spears, he remembered. Death-dealers, they were called: orcs that could throw a sharpened bone spear crafted from the femur of an elf. 

From beneath the wagons, he could see several prone shapes; he wondered who had not been fortunate enough to find cover. In the confusion, he had lost track of the scout; he could only hope it had been dealt with.

The snarls snapped him back to focus. Next, the wolves. He had never seen a great wolf up close, but he had heard stories and tended to many men who had claimed to lost limbs to the beasts. Cunning, and without mercy, they said, with eyes like the harvest moon. 

He saw immense shapes prowling in the darkness. On either side of him, men shifted restlessly. Three wagons to his right, a lad tried to bolt for the woods, and almost too quick to follow, a wolf had him in its jaws, his neck hanging at a lifeless angle.

"Enough; hold your men, Rhaga." Mylmo started; he knew that voice. A dead man's voice. 

"Prelate Tullim?" Emm called out, "Is that you?" Mylmo couldn't see his brother, but felt a warm surge to know he was still alive, which gave way to the sober realization that they had still lost others.

"Aye," the voice replied. Mylmo could swear he heard sadness there. "It's me, Brother Emmit." 

A small pony cantered into the moonlight, its rider swathed in furs. The rider pulled back his hood as the villagers gave an audible sigh of relief to see their shepherd again. He was too thin, and there was a feverish cast to his eyes. A month's worth of stubble made him look jowly and old, and he cradled one hand again his chest. But it was undeniably him. 

Tullim rocked slightly in his saddle. "Emmit, is Mylmo with you?"

Mylmo rose heavily to his feet. "I'm here, Father." He slid the hammers into his belt for safekeeping. There was something in the way Tullim tilted on his horse that Mylmo didn't like.

"Good," Tullim said, "we have much to discuss."  

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Dec 2011 at 03:58
This is taking too long.

Rhaga's men moved restlessly through the tree line. They wanted battle and the thrill of the hunt. And he could not give it to them. Not unless the humans refuse our offer. 

Not unless Tullim fails.

The Death-Dealers stalked their way among the humans, retrieving their spears. The humans glared at them, but shrank back, reluctant to provoke the orcs any further.  An orc would have met the challenge, even with smaller numbers.

Satsfied that there would be no trouble, he turned his attention back to Tullim and the fat friar named Mylmo, who were huddled together by one of the wagons.

"No," the fat friar said loudly, "absolutely not, Tullim." 

The old man looked displeased. "One in ten is a fair number, Mylmo. The rest will stay in the city."

 "As slaves? We'd rather die on our feet." The firiar hand drifted to the hammer  that he had slipped inside his cord belt. 

Tullim sighed. "Are you sure about that Mylmo? Look at these people," he said gesturing to the caravan, "and think beyond your pride. They will let us have the monastery, and we will be able to live."

"As their servants," Mylmo said bitterly.

"Yes," Tullim said softly, "but we will live." He patted the friar's shoulder, "and together we may grow."

"No!" one of the villagers shouted, "We can't treat with these monsters!" Within minutes, the caravan was filled with the babbling undercurrent of fear.  The grinding sound of unsheathed metal rang in the air.

Thud. With a soft cry, one of the villagers toppled out of a wagon at the front of the train, a spear clearly protruding from his ribs. Rhaga cursed, ready to make an example of his men, but a human boy leapt down, still holding the spear. A kobold clambered down swiftly after. 

"Fools. They'll kill you all." He wrenched his spear from the human, and handed it to his kobold mistress. 

Vhaki. So that's where she's been hiding...The boy, Rhaga noted, had the tattooed circle of a Stalker slave on his hand.  

Several of the human soldiers gave cries of recognition, and moved towards the boy with murder in their eyes. Rhaga's orcs shifted, clearly anticipating a fight.

"Enough!" Tullim said, "The boy killed Anrik; the orcs have not broken their word, and in the Name of the Lady I forbid you to shed blood." The soldiers protested loudly, but sheathed their weapons; they glared across the moonlit clearing at the orcs.

The boy is right. I've been to their city, and I've seen their army," Tullim said, loud enough for his voice to carry across the caravan, "they will cut us down where we stand if you resist them." 

Mylmo stepped forward until he was eye-to-eye with the priest. "When? When did you become a coward, Orm Tullim?" 

The old man held his gaze for a moment, then looked away, to the light of the burning bridge. "We all have our trials of faith, Mylmo; You, more than your brother, must decide if freedom is more important than a meaningless death."

Mylmo shuddered; the veins worked ceaselessly at his temple. He finally spat into the dirt at Tullim's feet. "Very well, Orm Tullim; we'll do it your way...." 

Mylmo gave a hand signal, and the soldiers sheathed their weapons. His brother Emmit came over to stand by his side.

"...But as of this moment, I renounce you as a man of our faith. May the Lady haunt you all the steps of your life, and may she take your happiness from you an inch at a time." Without another word, Mylmo stalked over to the caravan, leaving his brother and Tullim to work out the details.













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