“Darkness rests in the mountains, consuming them, ruling them. But in the South, hope will be found in four…”
-The Westermarsh Journals, written 122, 4th Age.
7000 Years Ago
Excerpt from “The Annals of Teranern”, Chapter II
Then Aernoss, appearing to humble himself, came before Ephaldin, eldest of the Old Gods. In Ephaldin’s tent, Aernoss bowed before him, groveling.
“Oh, Wise Brother,” spoke Aernoss, stooping as a cur. “How is it that we are servants to the Three Fathers?”
“Servants?” Kyr’Ephaldin spoke. He smiled glibly. “We have everything we would want. We may go where we please, are given what we please, may do what we please.”
“Indeed,” said Aernoss. “But what of the days when the gods are not so kind? What of our children? Our Fathers will not be so kind to them.”
“Do not speak such ill tales,” Ephaldin chided.
“Do you not believe me?” Aernoss said. “Ask your wife. She is a seer, is she not? She will see the truth.”
So Aernoss set into motion the events that would betray the company of both god and element.
Ephaldin, Glorious Star, came then to his wife’s side, and lay his head on her lap. But her eyes could see his trouble.
“What is it, my husband?” the Graceful Queen asked.
“I am troubled by thoughts of the future, my only love,” Ephaldin said. “What will be the fates of our children in the hands of the Fathers?”
And Andrela looked to the sky, and sought the Threads of Time which spread across the skies, and connect every being that was, and is, and is to come. There, she saw the fate of their offspring at the hands of her Fathers, and she gasped in terror.
“The vision is unclear. Be that as it may, I see Dur, Beast of Flame, an uncontrollable creature, who lashes out at our children, and burns them from their tents, and takes their very lives.
“Dal, the Living Sea, encroaches on the villages of the children, taking home and life as he strangles the children of their essence.
“And finally, our father Din, the Indweller, shall send great storms that will also take life and limb, and his essence will leave the bodies of those he despises, and they shall not live.”
“How can this be?” King of Gods asked, distraught. “We cannot allow our fathers to harm our children in this way. We must stop them at all costs.”
“How can you say such a thing?” his wife asked. “They have been so kind to us.”
“Can they truly be kind if they would do this to our children?” asked Ephaldin. “We must take up arms against them before they slay our brood.”
And in secret, Ephaldin spoke to his brothers and sisters, and all agreed to the course of action. But Sephera, innocent and virginal, stepped aside, and would not join in the fray.
Njor Anvilheim took up his burnished hammer, and began forging weapons of great power, for each of the War Gods. Working ceaselessly, he bent mighty ore to his will.
For himself he forged the Thunderhammer, mighty in both war and forging, and it was formed in bronze.
For Kildaer he forged Marbillow, a sword of chromium that when swung, sounded as the lapping sea on stone.
For his wife, Ymra, he forged a bow cast of antimony, and it was called Selvara.
For Andrela, Godqueen, he formed a staff of iridium named Gloristave.
Clerel, wife of Aernoss, was given the dagger of dark steel called Gravenmoss.
Aernoss was given the Ophidian, a blade of obsidian, which could convert into a whip.
And finally, Kyr’Ephaldin himself was given a sword called Elegance, a sword of solid gold that shone like the unformed sun.
And the gods made war on their Fathers.
7000 Years Later
Dom Ubel
The citadel sat high on the side of the cliff, grasping onto the pitiless wall like a bat. Its obsidian walls seemed to absorb the very light itself. The spires branched out in all directions, reaching for the sky with their tendriled claws, a single balcony stretching outward over the village.
The simple folk in the village of Austras called it “Dom Ubel”, the Place of Sorrows. No one knew who had built it, or when. As long as there was an Austras, there was a Dom Ubel: over two thousand years. There were some who said that it was built by the First Gods, the Three Fathers who were murdered by their children, the Firstborn. But none knew, for no one had ever set foot inside that bastion of darkness. It had been abandoned by the gods, and no life went anywhere near it.
The village was small, only a smattering of small stone and wooden hovels surrounding a gathering square in the center where a large well stood. The thatched roof cottages had stood there, unchanged, since the age of bronze.
It happened upon one day that a cloaked man came to the village. He wore black robes that did little to disguise his hulking form. The villagers, a simple people, had not had a stranger in their lands for over three hundred years. He brought nothing with him, riding in on a black charger that stood over seven feet high at the shoulder.
There was a small pathway along the side of the mountain that led up to the village from the foothills below and he was seen at least two hours before he arrived. The villagers gathered in mute anticipation in the square to greet their guest. As they waited, the clouds rolled in, and a steady rain began to fall.
Rounding the final corner, the cloaked figure rode into the square, and slowly stopped.
Dismounting, he stepped forward. The High Elder of Austras bowed complementarily, and smiled, though this man brought an aura of unease with him. “May we help you, sir?”
The man didn’t reply at first.
A flash of lightning, a symphony of thunder.
The High Elder saw his eyes. Black pools of darkness. Dragon wing markings across his face.
The prophesies of the village foretold of this man’s coming. He was the Asaia, the Harbinger.
The High Elder bowed, and the villagers followed in turn.
“What do you require, my Lord?”
The man leaned in and whispered in the High Elder’s ear.
“Food.”
Grabbing the old man by the scruff of his neck, the dark visitor threw back his other hand, revealing an ancient, bone-like blade protruding from his wrist. He thrust it forward, sliding it between the ribs of the Elder like a scythe through grass. The old man gasped as his skin quickly paled.
The villagers gasped, and some of the men stepped forward to stop him. The man in black dropped the High Elder to the ground, and the villagers saw the true horror of the moment.
Blood glistened off the blade, heavily coated in ichor. But instead of the red liquid dripping from the blade, it was slowly absorbed into the small rune-like lettering that ran along the bone.
The cloaked man sighed, satisfied.
“I am your master now,” the darkened man announced, his voice carrying over the village. “I am Tan’Dal, the Bringer of the New Age. I have returned home!” He thrust his blade upwards, pointing towards Dom Ubel. Rain poured down on him, soaking his robe.
“I shall need servants…”
Covenant
Kasen was woken in the night by the clashing of blades. Outside their window, the steady ringing of steel leapt to his ear. Springing to his feet and reaching for his longsword, he looked around the room furtively. The candle had long since gone out, but a new light shone in through the window.
Looking out, he saw that their room was seated above a large meeting square. There, torches had been placed so as to shed light on the gatherings below.
A large crowd had gathered, but parted in the middle around a circle, within which stood two combatants. Copper, bronze and silver pieces were littering the ground as people cast money at the two shirtless men in the center. Both held blunted swords, nicked and dented from heavy abuse. One man, a large brute of nearly seven feet, wielded a two-handed sword in one hand, swinging it like a club at the smaller man who leapt aside to avoid the blows, and, when unable to dodge, raised his wooden shield in defense. With each strike of sword on shield, large splinters of the shield broke off and knocked the smaller man back.
The smaller man was around 6 feet tall and held a single-handed blunted sword. His face was unkempt, and his brown hair glistened with sweat. His body bore scars as if a great beast had raked its claws across him.
The larger man swung downwards, knocking the smaller to the ground, driving the shield against his body. As soon as the sword raised, the man leapt to his feet and backed away.
The next blow drove him back into the crowd, who picked him up and threw him back in the ring.
“It’s time to die, Winterborn,” the brute shouted.
“Been there before, Graves,” the smaller man replied, smirking. “It wasn’t so bad.” He leapt forward, knocking the larger man’s blade aside with his shield and striking him across the ribs with the blunted blade. The nicks in the blade drew blood, and the beast howled. He stumbled back, and was unable to defend from the flurry of blows by his enemy. Strike after strike came down upon the animal Graves, to the arms, the chest, the stomach and legs. Finally, he had enough, and dropped his sword to the ground.
“I yield!” he shouted.
The crowd began to both cheer and boo.
Winterborn walked around the circle, looking menacingly at the crowd.
“Is there no one else?!” he bellowed. The crowd looked upon him uncomfortably.
“I thought not.” He reached down and began to pick up the coins off the ground. The crowd slowly disbursed, until he was alone in the square.
“Can it be…?” Gwyn said. Kasen jumped. He had not heard her awaken. She was looking out the window next to his. “It is!”
She pulled on her boots and bolted out the door.
“Gwyn?” Kasen called after her. Muttering, he followed.
Emerging out of the tavern into the square, Kasen and Gwyn saw Winterborn still picking up pieces of coin. They remained in the shadows.
The blind man leaned in and whispered into Gwyn’s ear. “Do you know this man?” Gwyn started, and Kasen jumped for the second time this night. He hadn’t heard the man sneak up on them.
“Know me?” Winterborn called out. “We grew up together.” He looked up from his work through his mess of hair. “Hello, Gwyn.”
“It’s been a long time, Caymas,” Gwyn said, stepping out of the shadows. “What has it been, seven years?”
“Eight, this autumn.”
Kasen stepped forward. “If you don’t mind my asking, who is this?”
“Kasen Lightcloak, meet Caymas Winterborn,” she said, gesturing between the two. “The man in the shade hasn’t told us his name. He’s traveling with us for protection.” She looked at Kasen.
“Caymas and I were good friends in our childhood. When he turned seventeen he left our village in Myyn, taking my brother with him. Neither has been seen or heard from since.” She looked around. “Speaking of which, where is my brother?” Caymas began picking up coins again.
“Cay?” Gwyn said, quietly, steadily. “Where is he?”
-=*=-
The graveyard was cold, chilled with the souls of a thousand restless dead. A fog hung in the air. Just outside the city gates, the silent tombs stood testament to lives lost, both noble in ignoble. Huge and sprawling, it took a five minute walk past gravestone after gravestone. Finally, Caymas stopped. He put down the lantern.
“The light goes no further. The spirits won’t allow it.” He continued forward, confidently.
“Are you sure about this?” Kasen asked Gwyn. She ignored him, continuing on. The blind man followed, feeling his way with his staff.
The temperature began to drop drastically. A chill froze the bones, and fog obscured two moons, mere slivers in the sky. The branches on the trees here drooped, as if mourning the loss of all these souls. Caymas stopped again. Sadly, he turned around, and gestured to a single, simple grave. Gwyn approached it, dropping to her knees. She reached out, brushing her hands across the stony surface and the etched name.
HERE LIES JANSEN MOURNINGWAR
A GOOD BLADE, AND A GOOD FRIEND
1114-1137
THE SIXTH AGE
Gwyn silently began to weep.
“If it’s any consolation,” Caymas said softly, “he died well.”
“There’s no way to die well,” Gwyn said bitterly.
“Hush!” the blind man said, turning his head to hear a sound.
“What is it?” Kasen asked.
“Shhhh!” the blind man spat.
Gwyn slowly stood, looking around. The graveyard was silent. Not even the midnight birds sung.
No wind, no sound. A cold crept over the yard.
It came upon Caymas first. A black, shadowy thing, fluid in shape, clawing at his back.
“It is here for me!” the blind man hissed.
Caymas grabbed the shape, pulling it off of himself.
It was dark, sinister, spectral. It was like a robe of pure darkness. It hissed angrily, lunging again towards Caymas as he spun around to face it.
Caymas fell back this time as it attacked him. Invisible claws scratched across his chest. Kasen leapt forward, swinging his sword across the thing. It moved away as easily as water, its fluid shape hurling itself towards Kasen instead.
It couldn’t be stopped. It shrieked an unearthly cry, setting upon Lightcloak faster than the eye could track. Gwyn reached forward, trying to pull it off, but it simply wrapped around Kasen, clawing at him with unseen hands. The blind man stepped forward in front of Caymas.
“Thing of darkness,” he cried. “It is me you want.” He stood there, facing the shape. It detached from Kasen, who even now was covered in deep gashes, and hovered for a moment. It made the appearance of turning towards the man.
Howling, it hurled itself forward.
As it drew within a few feet of the man, he thrust his hand forward, and a large burst of flame engulfed the shroud.
Its cries could be heard for miles. It shot up into the sky, and off into the distance, crying out in anguish along the way.
Caymas, Gwyn and Kasen turned to the blind man in shock.
Kasen was furious. “You’re coming with us.”
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