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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: 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: 25 Nov 2011 at 20:11
Very well done!
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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: 23 Nov 2011 at 18:16
END OF CHAPTER 4
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 18:15
It took Vhaki the better part of an hour to locate the boy. The tolling of the bells had awoken the whole town, and soon the streets were filled with humans.

She darted from shadow to shadow, but as the town came to life, opportunity shrank. Bringing the wolf with her had proved impossible. She only hoped that Gruggi was behaving himself.

The kobold had crept almost to the center square when a door flung open. A young girl emerged, dragging a bleary-eyed woman behind her.

"Please, Miss Urmilla," the girl said, "There's no time..." The girl said something else about a Shae being hurt, but Vhaki had already started climbing up the side of the wooden building the minute they had turned their attention to the lights and activity.

Vhaki noted with satisfaction that from the rooftop she could see almost the entire town. There were about a hundred men and women moving through the streets - mostly farmers and miners by the looks of them. Good, strong slaves,  she thought, imagining the commission she might get. Enough to buy her own house of bone and clay, surely.

"Oi! Brother Mylmo!" 

Vhaki watched intently as two soldiers emerged from a low, fortified building. The barracks. She recognized the design from other raids. They carried a large chest between them.

A fat monk wearing the robes of a friar stepped forward. "What is it, Harry?"

"We caught a spy."

Vhaki's ears perked up. The monk stared through the grille. "Doesn't look like much."

The second man, the not-Harry, grinned. "He didn't put up much fuss. Not after we made him confess." He rapped the top of the lid as the other man laughed. The friar looked displeased.

"You'll be sending 'im on to Emmit, I suppose."

Harry smiled. "That's Robin and Tom's idea. Figured Brother Emmit could sort him out when you all got to the monastery."

Even from a distance, Vhaki could hear the friar's sigh. "Fine. Load him in the last cart. He have a name?"

Pete shook his head. "Wouldn't give one. He's a scrapper, though."

"Scrapper it is," the fat friar said.

***

Damn you, Tom...

Even though the grille, Mylmo could tell they had roughed the boy up, too far by half. Already he could see the bruising where they must have crammed him into the box.

"Well, get it over there," he said, pointing to the last wagon. About thirty yeards ahead, his brother Emmit clambered up next to the lead driver. 

He followed the soldiers towards the rear of the wagon train, past the townsfolk who were hurriedly piling as many of their belongings as they could atop overburdened horses, and in a few cases, cows as well.

"I'd worry less about the silver," he advised one woman, "and more about the grain."

He climbed laboriously into the second-to-last wagon, which gavr a mighty groan but held. He hastily rearranged his robes so that he was decent again, and turned his eyes towards the buildings surrounding the square.

There; what was that? 

Something glinted in the moonlight, just barely, like burnished metal. "Emm!" he roared, pointing to the rooftop. The shadow moved quickly, leaping from one roof to the next. 

It slid down the far side of a thatched roof and out of sight; a moment later he heard three horn blasts sound in quick succession.

An orc, Mylmo thought with despair, had it heard everything?  He watched as Tom and Robin and the rest of the rearguard poured out of the barracks to join them.

"Don't bother," he called out when he saw Robin moving to intercept, "the signal's already been given. It's best to get to the monastery now, while we still can."

"Aye," Robin said disgustedly, "Harry, Pete, take the company and get them moving...Tom and I will go house to house to check for stragglers..." The both both unsheathed their swords. "If we haven't caught up to you by the time you've reached safe ground, get inside and bar the door."

"Don't wait," Robin added, looking clearly at Mylmo until he nodded.  

Somewhere nearby, a wolf howled in response to the horn, and in the wind Mylmo imagined he could hear the sound of drums approaching. 
 

 


Edited by Lashka - 23 Nov 2011 at 18:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 12:07

Wow pretty good Smile

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 06:17

"I'm sorry, boy - it had to be this way..."

Ori glared at the stalwart, and lunged at him through lattice of the wardrobe they had shoved him into. His hand throbbed, but he paid it no mind. So you say, Silver-Chain. When he focused his hatred of these humans, he almost felt as if uruk blood flowed through his veins.

Almost.

He pounded his good fist against the side of his own head. Stupid soft-headed fool! It had almost worked, the poor beggar act.

 

They had wrapped him up in warm blankets - horse blankets, actually - but they had felt so warm. And then one of the soldiers had suggested brandy to ward off the chill, and well by the time he had finished that, he felt fit to boil.

 

The warmth had made his eyelids heavy, and the next bit was still a bit fuzzy, but he remembered one of the soldiers tucking the blanket more tightly around him. It had reminded him of so much of nights spent bracing with Vhaki and Gruggi against the wind that he had instinctively murmured, "Uruk shagga vhok, Vhak'na  Grugg'" which might have translated into Common as "Sweet Dreams, Vhaki and Gruggi," if human dreams had routinely involved decapitating one's enemies.   

 

***

He was startled to find himself hauled swiftly to his feet by Tom Sullery, of all people. "What did you say?" When Ori didn't answer immediately, Tom nodded darkly. "That's what I thought." He propped Ori on a stool while the other men moved to form a circle around him.

 

Tom reached into the fire with a pair of metal tongs until he found an ember that still glowed red. "Now, you can either tell me why you can speak the Black Tongue," he walked slowly towards Ori, brandishing the ember, "or I can burn it out of you."

 

"Easy, Tom," the stalwart said.

 

Tom laughed. "Easy?  My sons died in that field - Jon and Avery. They were sixteen. Remember them, Robin? What about Hollis, and Dobrey and Flynn? Did they have it easy? The crows certainly did. They never got a proper burial, just left in a field to rot..."

 

Robin nodded. "Aye, and burning the lad silent won’t bring them back."

 

Tom shook his head, "I'm not sure the boy is what he says. Part of me thinks he's some sort of demon that just looks like a boy."

 

“Orcs know magic, and have assassins…” a freckled-faced boy barely older than Ori muttered.

"Shut up, Rody,"  Robin said through clenched teeth. He moved slowly, as if to not spook Tom.  "Tom..." Robin said softly. "Tom, look at me. Killing this boy won't bring them back. In your heart, you know that..." Robin glanced at the boy.

 

 In those eyes Ori saw something akin to regret in the seconds before they hardened. "Besides, if you burn his tongue, he can’t confess."

 

"Aye," Tom said softly, "There is that." A look of understanding passed between the men. "But a price needs to be paid."

 

Ori felt his shoulders relax. He almost laughed in relief. A blood-price? Is that all? Such things were common among orcs too. He might lose the tip of a finger for spying, but compared to losing his tongue, anything was preferable.

  

"Stick out your hand," Tom commanded, and he surprised them all by complying without protest. But his calm gave way to confusion as they turned his hand palm-up.  

 

"What are you..." he started to say, and then there was only pain, blinding pain as the hot ember was dropped into his outstretched hand.  He dimly heard Tom say "Grip it," and almost shrieked as they forced his hand into a fist with the ember as its beating heart.

 

Ori's vision began to go black at the edges.

 

"Enough," Robin said. "Bring the pail over here," he commanded.

 

Ori fell to his knees when they released him, cradling his injured hand to his chest. His breath came in quick, heaving sobs and the stench of burned flesh hung in the air.

 

He heard the door of the barracks slam quickly open, heard the great commotion of people moving outside, and then the door slammed shut and the wooden beam was lowered again against the door.

 

"Here," Robin said, gripping his wrist, "Put it here." The stalwart plunged his fingers into the pail, which he had filled with snowmelt, as the boy collapsed, sobbing, against his shoulder.

 

"The boy has been purged of his sin," Tom intoned, "His iniquity has been burned away from the hand he would raise against his own people..."

 

"He is forgiven," the soldiers replied in unison, "By the Blessed Light of Our Lady."

 

"He must serve his penance," Tom said, gesturing to two of the other soldiers, who had brought forth the lattice-box.

 

"Put him in."

 ***

Ori growled at Tom as he leaned forward to peer into the box. "He doesn't look very repentant," one of the soldiers said, and the others laughed. All except Tom and Robin, who stared at each other over opposite sides of the box.

 

Finally, Tom sighed. "Pete, Harry...load him on the wagons."

 

Harry made a noise of protest, but cut off when he saw Robin's face. "Aye," he said sullenly, giving the box a kick.

 

Pete grinned at Ori. "Just you wait, boy...you think we're bad? Just you wait till ol' Emmit gets his hands on you..." The other soldiers laughed.

 

"Just you wait..."



Edited by Lashka - 23 Nov 2011 at 06:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 02:28

Not all of us can reflect the serenity of the Lady,  Emmit reflected, as he watched his brother Mylmo work in shadows and torchlight, Some of us need to thrive in the chaos.

 

All around them the townspeople stumbled out of their beds into the chill air of the night, but Mylmo was clear-headed and definitely in his element. "Move those horses, you slaggards! Elmi Torchwell, get that grain onto the wagon! Jasca, you silly girl, wait until we get those pigs loaded before tying off!" He moved in between the wagons and horses with a grace that belied his size; he had but to offer a calm word here, or curse loudly there, and the entire town moved to do his bidding.

 

I am their shepherd in name only, Emmit thought, it's him they trust.

 

It had always been that way with Mylmo. When he had been a boy, he had gone to Centrum to try his hand in the jousts. Mylmo the Mountain, they had called him. He had done quite well - for a trader's son - earning the respect of more than a few of the nobles.

 

 Things had been different for Emmit. He could never afford to accompany his brother that far inland. Their father needed him to help administer the accounts from the dockside and besides, he was the eldest son of a Kellsmouth fishmonger; there would be no life for him beyond the sea.

 

But they had loved Mylmo. Particularly their daughters, Emmit remembered, his mood souring.  Within three months, every bit of coin Mylmo had won had been handed over to the slatterns and the taverns and the cards.

 

My Queens of Cups and Brushy Thickets, Mylmo had called them, and if he had stayed within his class, perhaps he might have spent out the rest of his days in drunken bliss.

 

But then there had been the girl.

 

The Lannigold girl - Daisy, or Rose or somesuch - a flower had been her name; Myl would no doubt remember. A distant branch of the tree, to be sure, but still powerful enough that deflowering the flower had proven his brother’s undoing.

 

Father's too. Within a month of the affair being made public, their father's contracts had all been cancelled, or given to other merchants. Their loans were called in months early, and a suspicious fire had destroyed half their fleet.

 

The last memory Emmit had of his father was through the cart's iron bars as the King's Men hauled him off to debtor's prison. Mylmo had pleaded to the King for leniency, to no avail; the Lannigolds were a power to be reckoned in the Kingdom, and they had very long memories.

 

They had drifted for years before the priests had found them, half-starving in a village in Ursor. At first, their devotion stemmed from a warm bed and three meals. As they had lived with the priest of the Silver Chain both brothers found their faith worthy of emulation, and over time they had both found redemption as servants of the Lady. 

Emmmit had even found it within himself to forgive his brother in Her name.

 "Emm?" Mylmo called out, "The wagons are ready. Is our shepherd?"


Emmit could have told his brother how much that little gesture of deference meant. There would be time enough for  that later.

 

For now, he thought, there is a flock to tend.



Edited by Lashka - 23 Nov 2011 at 02:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22 Nov 2011 at 21:23

Orcs had two views of trouble - one where one sought it out to challenge one's self, the other where it found you.

This, Ori thought, this is most definitely the second kind.


True, sitting in a sealed barracks with his enemies wasn't the worst situation he had ever put himself into - there was that time had had tried to run away, and ended up falling into that snake pit - but it came close.

 

"You. Boy," one of the soldiers growled. "Be a good lad, and bring me another pint." Ori moved quickly to comply. "Ah, there, that's a mate...gets harder and harder to keep the chill off the bones without a bit o' spiced mead. I keep telling Ellinora we ought to move on south, but..."

 

"That's enough of you, Tom Sullery," a burly stalwart said, knocking Sullery's feet off the table. "You'd wear a saint's patience thin with all yer flapping. Give the lad some peace..."


"Tom Foolery, more like," one of the other officers offered, and they all roared with laughter as Tom grumbled good-naturedly.


The stalwart reached back and handed Ori a crust of bread. "Here you are, there’s a bit of mash in the pot yet…" When Ori hesitated, the stalwart nudged him with a gauntleted finger. "Git goin'...it’ll be solid soon enough."

 

Ori stumbled over to the fire. He carefully spooned some of the marm barley and potato soup over the round of bread, careful not to spill a drop. He sniffed at it carefully, then took a careful bite. He groaned in appreciation at the wonderful taste, and without thinking, dropped down to a crouch next to the warm hearth stone.

 

Gradually, he became aware that the room had fallen silent; the entire room of soldiers were looking at him queerly. He realized too late that that light of the fire gave them a full, honest look of him – all skin and bones and clothes that hung in tattered rags. The filth was plain to see under his nails and in dirty streaks that traveled up both arms.

 

Ori looked around the room wildly. There was nowhere to run.

 

The stalwart looked at him. There was an expression there that Ori had never seen before.   “Here now, lad, you seem to be in a right ruinous state…” the stalwart said gently, "I’ve never seen a child of the Lady look so ill-used before. Who are your parents?"

 

On instinct, Ori decided against lying. "Don’t know. They died before I was born. Took care of myself, mostly." That part too was true; orcs were not known for treating their slaves well.

 

Especially Vhaki; especially after the viper pit. He trembled slightly.

 

"Easy lad, we won’t hurt you…" The stalwart reached a hand out to him. "A wildling," one of the older men said, nodding sagely. "That explains why we found him outside; must have wandered in from the cold," the soldier that had grabbed him off the street said.

"Most likely his parents were traders who ran afoul of those accursed orcs," another offered.


"Blankets,” the stalwart said, “and hot tea."


Ori smiled. That was easy enough to do, because he was happy. Happy to be warm, and surrounded by these foolishly giving people. He had had some trouble, but now it was the first kind: a challenge.


 I haven’t failed yet, Vhaki.

Not yet.



Edited by Lashka - 22 Nov 2011 at 21:26
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