Of Maps and Murder

Euan picked his way carefully through the shattered planks. His well-oiled leather boots sank slowly into the wet grey sand and the slow, thick squelching sound of his footfall gave him a childlike sense of satisfaction. He stood silently on the quiet beach, staring at his feet the sand slowly enveloped them, watching as they sank slowly beneath the surface.

After a few peaceful minutes he remembered himself. He reluctantly pulled himself free (not without some minor difficulty) and straightened himself up. He finally allowed himself to fully observe the splintered chaos of the wreckage. It was a war ship alright but now only the shattered and skeletal  hull of a warship, this hidden cove to be its graveyard. Those traveller’s had spoken true. He congratulated himself on his gut instincts, he had known his new friends wouldn’t have sent him astray. He smiled, as he opened his leather bound sketch pad and made a shorthand note of the broken vessels location. He would later transfer the details carefully in indigo ink  to the vellum parchment he had carefully wrapped and holstered across his back. He guessed he was likely the luckiest journeyman in the guild. First slipping through the blockades in the North unscathed, then avoiding the roving Griffon the farmers had warned him of, then, within days, meeting such an interesting group of new friends! It was likely all downhill from here he thought, grinning wryly to himself. He didn’t believe that. Not for one minute.

He thumbed back over his coarse yellowed journal pages, pausing to admire his portrait linework. He had captured the essence of those impossibly high cheekbones, the lean flowing lines of her stance and even some of her main feathers. He would work on the shading later tonight, just the base tones and a few choice highlights – he wanted to capture the way the sunset was playing off her eyes as she walked through that waist-high wheatgrass. While it was still burning in his memory. Smiling even more broadly now he stowed the book carefully in his inner pocket, and he stepped forward into the ships carcass. He counted the bodies that were strewn across the strand, the red cloaks of Namburg now a dark maroon, soaked by blood and waves. Forty men, Fifty perhaps? Soldiers all.

The smell of the softening, rotting wood and brine wafted into his nostrils as he dipped his head under an overhanging plank. There was shade here from the sun and as his eyes adjusted to the darkness he made his way through the timber maze. He stopped to run his hand over the enormous, hull spanning hole, its edges jagged and warped, as if ripped from their place be a giant club. He shuddered as he wondered what could cause such damage.

Wading now through with the water lapping around his thighs, he made his way to the back of the ship. He gingerly plucked up a bobbing spear shaft and prodded a bloated figure out of his way and guided it gently into a far corner. He pushed past an gilded oaken chest as it floated past him,  and clambered up the rear stairs into the Captain’s chambers.

The stench was intense, overpowering almost and Euan covered his mouth with his sleeve as he advanced into the hotbox. The figure of the captain lay slumped over a desk, a chandelier embedded inelegantly into his back. The floor lay blanketed by assorted parchments, maps, letters and books, some damp, others tattered. Some papers never made it to the floor and  were pasted with blood to the Captain’s longcoat ,clotted into the fibres. Euan picked up blood-soaked map and frowned as he skimmed it. Thoughtful for a few minutes, he shrugged and folded them into his inner pocket. Every little helped.

_____________________________________________________________________

“Suicide Pact”

“Hmmmmm”

“Open shut case Sarge. See if all the time”

“You think so?”

“Oh ya. Trust me boss”

Mario leaned against the cool stonework of the alleyway and gently massaged his temples. He tried  to massage away the drudgery. Tried to massage away the stupidity. It wasn’t working.

“Look I know you’re new Sarge, but this alleyway is famous for suicides. I once saw two people stab themselves in the back here , then hide their own bodies in the shit-wagon”

“You mean to tell me, that four men independently gained access to the roof of four different buildings, and despite no believable motivation or suicidal indication prior to this, all  independently decided to jump to their death.”

“Well yes”

“Simultaneously.”

“uhhh.. yes… Sarge”

“With their weapons drawn. With a slashed-up net on the ground beneath them”

“ Well.. uh.. I guess they… “

“ And this guy set fire to himself, while his friend appears to have punctured himself multiple times with a sharp object before jumping from a roof with a sword in his hands, backwards and landing on his crossbow.”

“Who knows the minds of the religious zealot , eh Sarge?”

Mario restrained himself. He had preferred working with Dave, but Ignatio was his man now, so he was going to have to learn not to run him through with his rapier every time he spoke. He picked his way through the wreckage, looking at the torn segments of rope. He ran his fingers along the charred wall, and positioned himself until he could take in every line and angle of soot, every scorch-mark. He looked down at the net he was standing on. He checked his sight-lines. He had seen this before.

“There was a mage here” he said, pointing to the ground beneath him.

“Are you sure sarge”

His sword hand twitched imperceptibly..

“Ingatio, a mage stood here and incinerated that man, he was either under … wait.. ”

There was no charring on the netting.

“He had avoided a net, something his companion had not managed. The gentleman in the south was attacked by an unconventional thrusting weapon from the rooftop and most likely was pushed while he faced down his assailant. As for those two in the north.. I have no idea. One may have slipped. Two? I know not yet.”

Ignatio stood saucer eyed looking at his new Sargent.

“ You .. you sure? Wow.. that makes a lot of sense really. So this Mage and his friends, attacked these four men on the roof top? I’ll let Captain Sofia know. ”

Mario squinted down the alleyway at the trail of blood leading to the North. Somebody escaped the carnage.

“ No need Ignatio, leave the rest to me. I will report to the captain personally.”

 

 

Tulip’s saga, part 1

We sailed with Captain Luca Blackwell,
A boss, a fighter, a father,
The proud owner of a caravel,
A good man and gentle lover.
His caravel was called The Walrus —
‘Twas there that Luca introduced us.

Six mercenaries Luca hired.
First came the goblin named Gritgoz
He joked a lot and owns a spider.
Then Ernodal who I think was:
Some sort of magical messiah
Just like our wizard Jerimiah.

Then came one with feathers of a hawk
She was a human named Celeste.
Then there was Throkk — a stoic orc
He spent his time in the crow’s nest.
Lastly me — an elven orator,
Meet Tulip — your humble narrator. Continue reading “Tulip’s saga, part 1”

The Saga of the Rhode Crew

Inscription on the Runestone of the Rhode Crew in the Stahlmehz clanhold.

 

These words were carved that the dwarves might remember

Until the end of time

The heroes of the Rhode Crew

The slaying of the dragon Iymrith

And the repayment of the Great Debt by Rurik Oathkeeper Stahlmehz

 

 

 

Hearing I ask | from the holy races,

From Heimdal’s sons | both high and low.

Thou wilt Valfather | that well I relate,

Old tales I remember | of days long ago.

 

I would tell of | the giant’s war,

The empty throne | the fighting tribes.

Axe-time, sword-time | shields are sundered,

Wind-time, wolf-time | ere the world falls.

 

Now high and low | does Uthor hunt,

For Hekaton | true giant king.

Without him none | of Annam’s sons

Know or obey | the Ordning.

 

Whom shall you trust | in Maelstrom now,

Where sisters smile | and whet their knives?

Woe unto those | wrapped in the web,

As wicked Iymrith | spins her lies.

 

On mountain high | the Oracle grieves,

How might wise Grimnir | right this ill?

When giant bands | ransack the land,

Which wise words might | wild warhorns still?

 

Warrior whet | thy weapon’s edge,

Of such foul times | are heroes forged.

In shattered Nightstone | oaths are pledged,

The Rhode Crew rise | to meet the storm.

 

Grimnir go forth | fain to befriend,

These heroes who | have saved a town.

Give council good | that they might seek,

To save a king | restore a crown.

 

Much hardship shall | this quest entail,

Skuld measures out | each hero’s skein.

Valhalla bound | is brave Harshnag,

Defending friends | he dies in flame.

 

Sorrow and pain | shall only serve,

To fuel the Rhode Crew’s | righteous rage.

Relentless on | their worthy course,

They reach the king | and break his cage.

 

Now vengeful as | the Valkyrie,

To Anauroch | Hekaton flies.

Iymrith to slay | for her base crimes,

With the king’s host | the Rhode Crew rides.

 

Verthandi weaves | their lives together,

Their wyrds are one | for weal or woe.

As one they must | this lightning weather,

United must | they fight this foe.

 

Through tunnels dark | does Gilly tread,

A route to scout | round Iymrith’s maze.

With stealth and skill | she steals unseen,

Beneath the dragon’s | baleful gaze.

 

But giants lack | such grace and guile,

Iymrith has heard | and lies waiting.

Her strike is swift | royal blood is shed,

Terrible claws | tear at the king.

 

Iymrith has set | her ambush well,

Sentinels stand | nearby, unseen.

Stone dragons stir | and spring to life,

In shrieking swarm | to serve their queen.

 

Falvyar is fastest | no fear does he feel,

From death he has risen | to fight on again.

First blood is his | fine blade deeply drinks,

He swears this time | he will see Iymrith slain.

 

Next Varak charges | savage with wrath,

He owes the drake | a debt of scars.

Wild magic burns | within his blood,

It speeds his step | strengthens his arm.

 

Shaldoor springs forth | to shield her lord,

She scorns the cost | her oath to uphold.

Nine blows she lands | nine strikes for her king,

And slain by the serpent | fearless she sinks.

 

Noble Nimir | is next to die,

Vaasha lies broken | barely alive.

The blood-stained beast | bears down upon,

Duke One-Eye | and the weaver’s son.

 

These two are soldiers | tested and true,

Well have they learned | the shieldwall’s ways.

When one is wounded | the other steps forth,

To shield his brother | and avenge his hurt.

 

Yet Guy is with them | servant of Ra,

Through dragon roars | his prayers ring clear.

Beloved of the light | his lantern aloft,

Allies invincible | while he is near.

 

Rurik runs toward | the dragon horde,

Endures the burns | from acid breath.

He throws his hammer | thunder tolls,

Fresh sacrifice | for Lords of Death.

 

Willow loathes | these lifeless slaves,

Her power flows | from living land.

She calls a Xorn | from stone below,

The earth erupts | at her command.

 

In battle din | Tanga stands still,

Target at last| within his sight.

To Casper’s soul | he commends the shot,

Thanks his brother | as barbed shaft bites.

 

A howling wind | Willow invokes,

Caught in the storm | golems collide.

Then slump to earth | by arrows slain,

Gilly’s shots pierce | through granite hide.

 

How does Rex now? | No hedge mage he,

Nor youngling | yet to win renown.

Great in magic | grey of beard,

The secret shapes | of runes he knows.

 

A beast he knows | a behemoth,

A form which dragons | fear to face.

A word he knows | which spoken well,

Shall grant him such | a savage shape.

 

The Midgard serpent | scarce could seem,

More terrible | than mighty Rex.

With whiplash tail | and crushing maw,

Short work he makes | of Iymrith’s spawn.

 

Now base Orlekto | breaks his oaths,

Iymrith would grant | Mirran the crown.

For her he wields | his wicked knife,

The scoundrel strikes | his liege lord down.

 

Tanga marks well | this treachery,

To king’s defence | the Chultan flies.

As murderous | deathblow descends,

Two shots, two strikes | the traitor dies.

 

Go swift Gilly | for time is short.

Be quick of finger | deft of hand.

A master thief | might steal the soul,

Of dying king | from death’s dark land.

 

Now wields Guy well | the Wyrmbane wand,

Cut from the corpse | of Iymrith’s kin.

Scales crack and fall | away to ash,

The spears sink deep | in dragon flesh.

 

As enemies on | all sides draw near,

Iymrith lets loose | her lightning breath.

Divine grace saves | Rurik and Guy,

The Gods shield them | from certain death.

 

As they surge forth | the Rhode Crew roar,

For Rhodey, | Casper, Petrichor!

Bongo, Zephyros,| Harshnag, Grimnir!

Their names the last | words Iymrith hears.

 

On mountain high | the Oracle smiles,

As Urth cuts through | the serpent’s thread.

In Iymrith’s halls | a hush now falls,

The deed is done. | The dragon dead.

 

 

 

 

* Inspiration, meter, obscure references and several lines taken from the Voluspo – the Norse legend of the creation and destruction of the world.

Welcome to Vaul

 

 

These are troubling times indeed.

The priest and prophets wail of the coming of another century war. The great empire of Namburg raises an army in the far north, soldiers churning the earth of their ancestral farmlands as the regiments assemble, parade and drill. Lancers of Namburg ride abroad once more, recruiting where they can, intimidating where they can not, and destroying where they must. Some whisper the Judges move again, emerging from the history books to hunt down the enemies of Namthar and purge the lands of any who would move against him.

Meanwhile, Kossos trembles with the roars of the great behemoth, furious and powerless, chained to the Eastern capital by their Deity to feed, defend, and perhaps control the Federation. The chieftains and generals pour over wargames and battlemaps, as the Godbutchers continue their sacred and grizzly duties behind the blood drenched walls.

It has been almost 3000 years since the world shattering clash between the twin gods Namthar and Alastor, a conflict that left Vaul a broken and shattered world.

The battle left a magic-scared and desolate wasteland in its aftermath, the God-brothers fighting to a bloody stalemate with armies of primitive men, elves and orcs under their command. The “century war” created that ancient bleak and barren world, and it took the survivors hundreds of years to rebuild any semblance of civilisation.

Few records exist, and only scholars and poets speculate as to true cause of the war. Fewer still speculate as to who really won, or how.

And so…the Doomsayers bellow still louder. Rulers and peasants alike bristle and balk at the idea, but in the privacy of their own thoughts, many prepare for the coming conflict, extra mercenaries, a packed backpack by the door, and shadowy alliance in a smoky tavern backroom, or a lonely, whispered prayer in the dead of night. The tension grows, and the noose tightens around everybody’s neck, as the nations stare each other down. The fresh-faced young soldiers of Vaul stand shoulder to shoulder with its grizzled mercenaries dulled blades sharpened once more. If this is to be another century war, all are determined to emerge victorious, or the very least, emerge alive.

But our story begins somewhere much humbler

Our story begins, off the coast of the Silver Strands, aboard a cork-oak Caravel, the Walrus. From a distance, only the bright white sails can be seen, glowing brilliantly against the deep blue ocean breakers that bounce around her. The Walrus skims across the waves, hugging close to the coast, always keeping in sight of the towering grey cliff faces, the imposing wardens and watchers of the rolling meadows and vineyards beyond.

The Sun is now past its zenith and as it lowers itself across the western sky, the Walrus’ shadow grows, stretching languidly towards the beaches.

The days chores are being done, the hempen rope has been coated and tarred, and your arms ache from hours of Whipping, splicing, and reeving the running rigging. The brass fittings gleam, and the chipping hammer must surely be a few pounds lighter so often has it been swung these last few weeks.

Your watch has ended, and you sit in the darkness of the crew quarters with your fellow travellers, thankful for a little shade.

A motely crew, Ernodal, Throkk, Gritgoz, Tulip. Strange bedfellows, but then, these are strange times.

You’re due to make landfall tomorrow, and should arrive in Vicetina within the day, to what purpose, your captain Luca still has not revealed. Buy as he says –Coin is coin and orders are orders.

As you stretch out your stiff muscles, you listen to the slow creak of the wood and lapping of the waves only to have your thoughts interrupted by a high clear tolling of the main bell.

Time to assemble on deck

.