Chapter Three: Hunters and HuntedA Chapter by Jake Chapter Three: Hunters and Hunted Luthe and the other dark elves
decided that it would be imprudent to leave at night, given that the Outlands
were populated by desperate people, and many of them had turned criminal to
meet their increasing needs. Seeing the wisdom behind this, Carsten had agreed
to these terms, and followed the lead of Luthe and his sisters. Or rather his
sister. The younger dark elf, who he had introduced as Ciara, was in fact his
sister. The other, who gave her name as Nari Blackroot, was a drifter that the
two of them had met before they arrived in this village, and apparently had
made a name for herself as a huntress and natural healer. Unlike the other two,
who wore hip quivers and carried hunting knives or shortswords, she carried
only a bow with a shoulder-slung quiver and no close combat weapon. Not that
Carsten paid much attention to women usually, but this particular elf felt…different.
And not just because, even in her hunter’s garb, she was quite obviously a
beautiful woman who carried herself with an almost alien grace. Maybe it was
his mother’s sprite heritage, maybe not. But he sensed a powerful magical aura
emanating from her, one that would take considerable effort to suppress, let
alone conceal altogether. However, his gut feeling was unreliable at best, and
that could mean she was a normal (albeit gorgeous) young woman who just set off
alarm bells in his head. In addition, he had noticed slight hesitation when she
gave her name. Maybe she was telling the truth and just paused before she said
anything. Again, Carsten doubted that. She had not paused when she said
anything else, and thus he suspected a far more dangerous reason for concealing
her name. Not that he blamed her, of course; he had hidden his surname,
something easy to do because his was a fairly common dwarf name. She, on the
other hand, had no visible cause for hiding it, and that made him the more
suspicious. The other two appeared uncomplicated. They seemed honest,
straightforward, and trusting. That made them difficult to deceive, or so
Carsten had previously believed. However, they seemed to trust Nari almost
unequivocally, something he was not at all comfortable with. Why should they
trust anyone like this? But that was not his place to question. At least not
yet. As he watched Luthe dealing with the innkeeper, he was struck by the
innkeeper’s familiarity with the dark elf, as though they had known each other
all their lives. Finally, their transaction was complete, and the hunters could
leave. As they slipped out of the inn, Carsten caught a glimpse of something
moving across the street. It was a dark blur, so quick that he almost thought
he had imagined it. However, he simultaneously heard a hiss similar to the
sound of something flying past at high speed, and that made him pause. “Is something wrong?” Nari asked.
Carsten looked at her. Her voice was soft, but he had no difficulty hearing it.
He shook his head, uncomfortable at her attention. “No…” he murmured. “Nothing I can
see.” “Then why did you stop?” She asked. “I thought…” His voice trailed off. “You see where the others do not.
You felt something out here,” she finished, looking back inside the inn. Luthe
was tightening his belt while Ciara chatted with Hilde at the counter. “Just
like you saw me for what I was when we met.” Carsten flinched. “How…” he could not quite find the
words. “How did you…” “You are not a pureblood dwarf, are
you? Part elf, perhaps?” Carsten shook his head. “Sprite.
Helps with woodcraft, I find. My mother taught me a few tricks no one else
could, and that’s one of the reasons I’m as good as I am.” “And you have probably realized I am
not what I seem, either,” she said softly. “Yes, but I do not know the extent
of your abilities,” he said. She shrugged. “I’m a healer. Beyond
that, I only have a few talents, but I get by with them.” “And Nari,” He said. “That is not
your real name, is it?” She grinned again. She had a symmetrical grin, but it
still seemed lopsided because she cocked her head. “No, it is not. Just like you have a
real surname.” She stepped out of the door. “But let’s leave each other’s
secrets alone for now. And, Carsten…” She looked across the road. “I felt it, too,” she whispered. The other elves were not long in
leaving the inn. Once they were in the street, Luthe led the way to the town’s
north gate. Carsten looked from side to side, but he saw nothing like the
shadow that he had seen, or rather felt, near the inn. Nari, too, seemed
uneasy. Maybe because she was stronger in magical skill than he was, she sensed
things like this more easily. But she was not reacting to anything she saw, so
perhaps they were safe as of now. Luthe
led the way through the market, where he haggled for supplies. They needed
salted beef and hard bread for the road, in addition to insulated waterskins
for the journey. He could not get them cheaply, for few people travelled far at
this time, and so shopkeepers did not keep a large supply. That done, he asked
directions to an inn with a name Carsten did not recognize. One of the more
helpful shopkeeper, a stout faerie woman with graying hair, had given him the
street name and building description, and the group followed it to the letter.
They arrive at the inn, and Luthe stepped inside, where he was for about half
an hour. Ciara and Nari started chatting in the Outland dialect of elven Lirial
speech, while Carsten reached into his pack and removed something from it. It
was a beaten leather-bound book, marked with faerie runes on the top. Most
people in the Outlands could not have read something in this particular
language, but his mother had taught him to read it since he was four. He
flipped through the pages, looking at various species. This tome had
information on every known species in Pathonia, and he had been consulting it
just about every day. Technically, though, the book was neither his nor his
family’s; his mother had stolen it from the library the faerie folk kept just
south of the Outlands’ border. The reason he was reading was his innate
curiosity about these white dragons; he had never seen such a creature before.
Plus, several clues told him that these beasts were far from ordinary. First,
they lacked any form of breath attack, something uncommon among dragons.
Second, it had a stinging tail filled with translucent blue venom in it. He
removed the stinger from his pack and turned it over in his hands, appreciating
its long and deadly curvature. While he had not experienced the effects
thereof, he had no doubt it was quite uncomfortable and most likely fatal. Lack
of breathed attacks and venom indicated, according to the information in this
tome, that the beast was a class of dragon known as a wyrm. Wyrms supposedly
lacked the inner elemental fury of its more majestic kin, and he believed the
information. Faeries were the only people that inhabited all three realms aside
from humans, and they took copious stock of the wildlife wherever they found
themselves, compiling all of their information in their library in the South.
However, there were no records of any ice wyrms, only those that lived in
temperate or hot climates. Desert Sand Lions, ocean-dwelling Electricutioners,
tree-dwelling Vineweavers….he cut off reading with a silent oath. In reading,
something struck him; none of the species mentioned inhabited the Waste, even
though he knew the names of several such creatures. Suddenly, it made perfect
sense. The beasts were not native to the Outlands; they had come down from the
Waste. But these beasts, though not apex predators by any stretch, easily threatened
hunters and other creatures in the Outlands. Therefore, anything that could
have driven them out had to be truly a force to be feared. He slid the book
back into his pack and took out his sharpening steel and began whetting the
blade of his single-edged sword. Nari and Ciara still remained absorbed in
their conversation, and so he felt no need to interject. Apparently, they were
abuzz with the news that a wealthy elven prince had proposed marriage to one of
the daughters of the dark elf king, Oriem Blackfire, nine months ago. While
Blackfire had no older son who would sit on the throne after him, his daughters
had queenly looks and bearing. However, one of them defying both her suitor and
the expectations of everyone around her, she had vehemently refused. “I
heard she told him that she thought him overly foppish and self-obsessed,”
Ciara said. “Although from what I’ve heard, she’s not much different.” Nari
shrugged. “I have met her. She is not quite so terrible if you get to know her.
But yes, she can be bad sometimes. A lot of times, actually.” “Who
was the elf prince?” Carsten asked. Ciara
turned, surprised that the taciturn dwarf had said something, and in addition,
that he had said it in perfect dark elf Lirial, without any accent or
hesitation. “You…how…” Carsten
shrugged. “I’ve made a study of some languages. A working knowledge pays
dividends. Stranger things have happened than a dwarf speaking Lirial. So, who
was the prince?” Ciara
though for a second. “I think his name was Dathnil or Dothnis or something like
that.” “Dothnae,”
Nari corrected. “His name was Dothnae Redbark.” Carsten
started laughing. “I’d have given good money to see the consternated look on
his face. The stupid fool.” Nari
looked at him. “You know who he is?” Carsten stopped laughing long enough to
nod. “He’s
the eldest son of Karyth Redbark, the Elven-king of Andrion. I expected the
king to do something like this, though I do not think his heart was in it. See,
Dothnae’s father has always been unity-minded, but Dothnae hates most Outlanders,
I have heard. Karyth may have had a hand in it. He’s never been able to stay
out of our affairs all the way.” Carsten scowled. “Perhaps
she didn’t want him to know she knew. I know she said what everyone knows about
Dothnae, but she probably had some other reason in mind. From what’s been said
about her father, his ulterior motives have ulterior motives, so perhaps his
one of his daughters is capable of similar misdirection.” “You
think she would lie to him?” Nari asked. “She
may not have lied, but she certainly did not tell the truth. By the way, was
that Arcaena?” “What?”
Ciara asked. “The
elf who turned Dothnae down. Which one was it?” “His
eldest, Arcaena,” Nari said. “Why?” “I
thought she might,” he said. “He is far too self-absorbed to make a good
husband, or even a passable one.” Nari
shook her head. “From what I’ve heard, he is not so terrible. Why would you say
she is not suited to him?” Carsten
shrugged. “She is a dark elf, he is a light elf. I do not believe that he was
thinking about such a decision. If he got her to agree to marriage, Karyth
would disown him. If Arcaena did, Oriem would probably disown her. They are not
rebellious enough to marry out of spite, and they both need their parents.” Ciara
raised an eyebrow. “How so?” Again, Carsten shrugged. “They
are both high on themselves, and from my experience, parents deflate egos quite
well.” “So
you think them overconfident?” Nari asked. Carsten looked sidelong at her. “It
is only overconfidence if it is unfounded, Nari. And, from the rumors I have
heard, neither of them is ordinary. So not overconfidence, perhaps, but rank
egotism nonetheless.” “Really?”
Caira said. “Well, tell us what you have heard.” “Yes,”
Nari agreed. “I am most curious.” “That
Arcaena is the most beautiful of Oriem’s daughters. According to popular
opinion, she could rival Yariel Redbark for looks, and she supposedly is a
master spellcaster. Dothnae, for his part, is an expert warrior, the
quintessential knight. He is chivalrous, noble, and every bit the warrior. But
they could not be less alike beyond their notoriety. Arcaena is very witty, by
all indications, and Dothnae is quite serious. She is cool and even-tempered,
while he is quite the hothead.” “Then
it would make no sense for him to propose to her, if you think about it,” Nari
put in. Carsten
laughed. “He was thinking, all right, but not about character matches.” Ciara
looked coyly at him. “Really? And you have never had thoughts in that
direction, dwarf? You said she was beautiful. Have you seen her for yourself to
judge?” Carsten nodded. “She
is,” he replied. “But it is precisely for that reason that I have no thoughts
in that direction. Besides, she is not exactly my type.” “Your
type?” Ciara echoed. “My
type,” he replied. “She truly is stunning, and every inch a lady. Look at me,
elf; I am rough, barbaric, and more than a little savage. Plus, I look like I
put my head in a Battlewagon’s treads.” Ciara
giggled at that. “Oh, stop. What you see on the outside is wallpaper. It is the
heart that counts.” Nari
nodded. “Well said. She has a good way to go before she is ready to be a queen,
btu I do believe she has the potential. A truly selfless heart is the only way
to be the leader we need. I do hope she turns out right.” “Agreed,”
Ciara said. “We could use some solid leadership.” Luthe’s
return disrupted further conversation, who exited the building beside them with
a small, squat creature with a crooked nose in tow. The goblin (for goblin he
was, and not true orc) had a blowpipe strapped to his back and two bandoliers
of darts across his chest. His outfit was patched leather, and his boots and
gauntlets were similarly beaten and damaged. He had a fur cloak toed around his
neck with thick leather cord, though it looked a bit large for him. His
intelligent yellow eyes shifted from one member of the odd-looking company. “This
is Scurjal,” Luthe explained, and the goblin dipped his head in a nod. “He’s
another hunter who will be helping us for some time. He’s agreed to work for
the same rate as Carsten, so we should be fine for money.” Scurjal mumbled a
greeting to all of them, and then they moved on toward the north gate. Carsten
suddenly felt the same chill he had next to the inn, and something moved across
several rooftops. He shook his head. Had he imagined these surreal feelings and
sights? He did not think so, and looking at Nari’s face, she had felt it too.
Her pace quickened accordingly, and he could tell that she wanted to leave as
well. The
others seemed blissfully unaware of any danger, and continued on much slower
than he would have liked. Nevertheless, they were soon outside the city. Once
they had gone out of sight of the walls, Luthe consulted a small map he kept in
a small pouch on his belt. “All right,” he said. “There’s a
norther village to the northwest, but we’ll have to go out of our way to get
there.” He rolled the chart up. “And sleeping in this cold, even with camping
gear is a death sentence.” “Will we reach there by nightfall?”
Carsten asked. “Travelling at night would be foolish, even for a little time.” “But this far south, can the
phantoms be that much trouble?” Ciara asked. “We haven’t heard reports of them
here.” “But they are,” Carsten replied.
“I’ve seen what they can do, and I’ve seen what’s left after they do.” “You’re sure it was these phantoms?”
Nari asked. Carsten shook his head. “It’s difficult to identify a
never-before-seen animal,” Carsten replied. “But travelers have confirmed that
these killings match the phantoms’ work. So no, I won’t sleep in the open.” Luthe shrugged, taking a few steps
down the snow-covered path. “Neither will we. Let’s get on the road.”
The two dark creatures were in the
village inn, their presence masked by their innate ability to draw shadows to
themselves. They were rummaging through the dark elves’ room. “Their scent is strong. Especially
the sorceress…” the first hissed. “We have missed them.” “There is another,” the second
whispered. “His scent is strong.” “Which one?” Asked the first.
“Another elf? A man?” “No…” the second murmured. “Nor it
is not mere magic. He seems harmless, no power at all. And yet…” His voice
trailed off, but his eyes flashed as he calculated the possibilities, similar
to a supercomputer choosing a move in a game of chess. Then, he saw something,
and his eyes widened, his breath coming in ragged gasps. “And yet. We must
return to the fortress at once.” “Why?” “He is the one the mistress seeks. We
must report what we have found. The elf will be caught at another time. Her
father would never take her back after this latest rebellion against him. This
other one, though fills me with uncertainty. Fog clouds him, like a veil.
Perhaps he has hidden himself from us.” “And perhaps another more powerful
sage masks him from us. But why?” The other shook his head. “I know
not. Come.” As abruptly as they appeared, the figures seemed to vanish from the
room, leaving only wisps of black fog. Carsten
felt the protective shield hit him like a wave, driving him to his knees. He
swore and stood again, wobbling on his feet. That had been his mother’s spell;
of that he was certain. He had felt such protection before, when she had hidden
him the night of his birth. He remembered that night crystal clear, even though
he could remember nothing between then and his third birthday, oddly enough.
Nari turned and stared at him. “What happened?” She asked. “Are you
all right?” He nodded. “I will be perfectly all right.” She
wrinkled her nose at him, but the others continued walking, and Nari and
Carsten had no choice but to follow suit. He heard her voice in his head. You have been hidden from me. Can you
do that? I thought you said you were unable to use magic. That is not my fault, and I cannot, he
protested. It was my mother. What
do you mean? She asked. She
cast a protection spell. She masked my-our-presence. Why?
She
pressed. He turned his head to look back at the village they had left. He felt
a chill run through him again. He felt certain now that Nari’s presence and the
shadow’s appearance were related. You
know, she thought, I felt that chill
again. Carsten nodded. She
felt it, too. Whatever it was. They
are looking for someone. Maybe us. Their journey led them across a
wide-open field, empty of any signs of life except for the travelers. They all
kept the hoods of their cloaks tightly about them, as the biting Outland winds
would exploit any crack in their defenses. The wind whipped the snow up in
wave-like undulations across their path, sending crystals of it into their
faces and clothes. Carsten’s cloak whipped in the wind, billowing against his
best efforts to hold it close to him. The others were still walking forward in
the same stolid trudge that they had been using all day, trying to push through
the snow without getting stuck. It was slow, though; six inches of snow might
not seem like a lot to most people, but for Carsten and Scurjal, it was a lot
of work. Six inches is quite substantial when you have few to spare. However,
all of them kept moving, and the plain soon began to incline, and here Luthe
again consulted his map. Scurjal looked at the chart with him. Apparently, the
goblin was a cartographer in addition to being a hunter, and that had been one
of Luthe’s reasons for hiring him. He pointed up the slope. “Elves’ map is wrong,” he said in
broken Pigdyn, the common language that all people groups at least understood.
However, goblins were considered by even most other Outcasts backwater
barbarians who had no grasp of the finer points of civilization. For their
part, the goblins did little to dispel this notion, since they regarded
outsiders’ opinions about as much as they did dragon scat. Therefore, they made
little study of Pidgyn, believing it regulation imposed on them by outsiders.
Apparently, though, Scurjal had at least studied it enough to express himself
in broken sentences, which he continued to do. “Pass not here anymore. Closed
off by landslide.” Luthe looked up the slope at the
pass, which was still hidden by the horizon. “Are you certain? If it’s closed,
we have to go a mile around.” He rolled up his map, shaking his head. “We
travel up the slope to go around the pass anyhow, so we should at least get a
look.” The goblin shrugged, and they went back to moving through the snow at
the same slow, unrelenting pace. Nari looked around before she started moving.
Her senses were going crazy; she could feel something
powerful, and close by. Scanning the landscape, however, she saw nothing
moving at all. She began to walk again, taking a few steps before the nausea
hit her. She dropped to her knees, her stomach roiling like a witch’s cauldron
and her head feeling like it would split open. She shut her eyes in a vain
attempt to close out the pain, but the agony remained. Nari felt it more keenly
now; her senses were reaching farther, beyond her immediate area, searching for
what it was that had first agitated them. Suddenly, she saw it; momentarily, in
a flash so brief she thought it merely a hallucination, two brilliant golden
eyes, set in an unnaturally pale face. It looked like a woman, but before she
could scrutinize it further, the vision was gone. She shook her head, trying to
clear her thoughts. “Nari!” Ciara called from up the
slope. “Are you all right?” Nari nodded. “Fine,” she replied. But even as she
said the words, she knew them to be a lie. She was far from it. What she had
seen was no illusion; but who was it? No one she knew matched that description,
and she was not about to try to establish that connection again. Such conduits
often worked both ways, feeding information to the person contacted, as well as
the initiator. She pushed the thoughts aside, focusing on not slipping as she
climbed up the slope. The pass was closed off, but more
than that. The mountains on either side were ravaged, their surfaces gashed as
if by the blade of a giant axe. Rocks had tumbled free of their places on the
mountainside, falling into the snow in the narrow pass, forming a wall of ice,
snow, rock, and dirt that was impassible. The cliffs directly above the pass
were sheer, and climbing them would mean almost certain death and definite
discomfort to life and limb. Luthe looked down at the mess before them, and
then at the holes at their feet. Frozen to the ground in some places were what
looked like broken shafts of digging tools, and Scurjal even found an intact
shovel, but he dropped it immediately, as though it burned him. Also, there
appeared to be tent spikes driven into the frozen earth, although there was no
village near enough for a mine to function in these conditions. Luthe looked
down at the closed pass, snorted in disgust, and then turned away. “I suppose that ends that,” he
growled. “Come on. This will put us behind by three hours. If we don’t hurry,
we’ll be out after nightfall.” The others looked at each other, consternation
writ large on most of their features. They looked down at the holes at their
feet, unsure of what to do. After half a second, Ciara shrugged and followed
her brother down the slope. Nari followed, and then Scurjal. Carsten, however,
stopped, kneeling in the dirt and examining a rough-edged black object
carefully. After several seconds, he slipped it into his pack and followed them
down the slope to the path. Scurjal also lingered behind, making a sign with
his fingers, several loops followed by placing his left hand over his heart. It
was a gesture Nari recognized; it was customary for goblins to make such signs
in the presence of powerful magical forces or the dead, and they did it to ward
off evil. She shuddered. “Not good,” the goblin murmured.
“Bad things be here before elves. Make holes, shut pass. They are abroad once
more.” “What things?” Nari asked. “The cold ones. The cold ones have
come again,” he whispered. “What are you talking about?” “The giants of the ice. They have
returned.” Nari shook her head. Was he talking about the phantoms? She did not
think so; the phantoms were ice creatures, but they were animals nonetheless.
They lacked the intelligence to close off the pass, and the deep gashes scored
in the mountain had been made by some kind of digging tool, she could see.
Carsten was turning the object he had found over in his hands. Finally, he
seemed to tire of it and slid it into his pack. He moved off, shaking his head.
Nari followed them, Scurjal’s word almost forgotten already. The road they took now hugged the
mountainside, and it was much harder. The dark elves used their agility to
maneuver through the maze of boulders and debris in front of them, but they
still had trouble. In addition, many of these rocks were frozen over, making
them difficult or impossible to climb and difficult to slip past. Carsten, of
all of them, seemed to have the easiest time among the stones. However, their
pace had slowed to a crawl, and it was about half an hour of this agonizingly
slow pace before Luthe said what they were all fearing would be the case. “We cannot make it to the village,”
he said. “We’ll have to spend the night on the road.” Carsten slid off a large
rock, his boots crunching in the snow. “Do you have anything to build a
fire?” He asked. “Look north. There’s a storm coming; if we do not find a heat
source, we freeze to death.” This much was true; the horizon was covered with a
massive dark bank of clouds, and they were sweeping south with tremendous
speed. “Do you have anything?” Nari asked. Carsten nodded. “I brought some wood and a
fire-starter kit in case we needed it. I think I could build one fire, but
nothing more.” Ciara pointed up ahead, to a place
where the road was nigh impassable because of boulders that had fallen across
the path. “We cannot put tents up in the pass, and so we’ll need to find a cave
or other shelter.” “Besides,” Luthe said, “I do not
even have one. I left it back home.” Ciara reddened with anger. “I told you to bring the blasted
thing!” She exploded. “But no, the great hunter wouldn’t listen to me. We’ll
need it before we’re done, mark my words.” And before anyone could say
anything, she spun angrily around and began moving again. Shaking his head,
Luthe followed her. Carsten looked at Nari and shrugged. “Ah, well. I’ve traveled with
worse.” And he went after the other two. Scurjal was next, with Nari bringing
up the rear. At least tonight would be warm and dry, if not comfortable. There were surprisingly few caves in
the mountains where they were, which frustrated the group to no end. They
stopped once for the midday meal, cold meat and bread, and then they continued
in their search. How hard could it be to find one unoccupied place to stay in
mountains thought to be full of them? But it was proving difficult; by
midafternoon, they had circled three peaks, and come up empty all three times.
Luthe’s anger was mounting. “How difficult can this be?” He
asked no one in particular. “The sun goes down in four hours, and we still
haven’t found a place to stay the night.” “I told you we needed tents,” Ciara
muttered. Her brother glared at her. “We will not need them,” he shot
back. “We just need a little more time and luck if we are to find a cave to
spend the night.” He began walking further on. Ciara looked back at the others,
mouthing I told him to bring a tent. She
kept going anyway, content to let her brother be wrong. Luthe was not wrong, as it turned
out; the cave just took a lot longer to find than any of them had anticipated.
The sun had nearly set, and most of the others were losing patience with him.
In addition, a storm had kicked up, and snow was flying in a blinding white
wall right at them. However, despite their compromised visibility, they did
find a reasonably large cave about halfway around the fifth peak, and it looked
unoccupied. Luthe stepped inside and scanned the walls. “No bones, orcs, dragons, or bears.”
He grinned. “It should do.” Carsten shook his head and pulled off his pack. “Say what you want. I still do not
think this is a good idea.” He removed the fire-starter kit and the f****t of
wood. He dumped dwarf accelerant (something similar to gunpowder, but more
flammable and less explosive) on the wet branches before he struck his flints
together, sending a cascade of sparks down onto the waiting timbers. Almost
instantly, the wood flared to life, despite the water. The dwarf watched the
fire with satisfaction for several moments before he got to his feet. “Happy?” He asked, dropping the
fire-starter kit into his backpack. Luthe looked at the wood and nodded. “Thanks. We should probably buy some
kindling in the next town. Don’t know if this will happen again.” Ciara took
some meat out of her pack, speared it on her hunting knife, and held it over
the fire. “We had better get more. Maybe we
should buy a tent, too,” she said. But she was smiling as she said it, and
Luthe knew she was no longer angry at him for his mistake. Nari pulled some
bread out of her pack and began munching pensively. Carsten alone of all of
them had not started eating; instead, he was standing at the edge of the cave.
Though he could feel the heat of the flames on his back, he did not turn to
face the fire. Instead, he peered into the blinding storm. He thought he might
be able to see movement below through the wall of white in front of him, but he
could not be sure of it. He took the rough stone out his jerkin and turned it
over in his hands. At first, when he had seen the gashes scored in the mountain
earth, he had believed them random acts of defacement by a roving orc tribe.
However, further examination revealed a far more profound and dangerous truth. The
rock in his hands seemed insignificant, of no concern unless kicked barefoot. He
knew better; he had spent several years of his life in the study of metallurgy,
and thus knew the names of all manner of various metals, ores, and their areas
of greatest abundance. This stone was one of these ores, and, when subjected to
a dwarven process, yielded shilthain, or black steel. But why there was
shilthain in these mountains, and who could have been trying to strip-mine the
frozen earth, he did not know. However, shilthain was rarely used for weapons
or even tools by other races, because they believed the metal to be cursed. It
was said that any who wielded such weapons unworthily suffered horrible fates
for their foolish presumptions. Carsten did not believe this, but he could not
deny that some people who had taken the weapons had endured terrible things.
Still…he shook his head. “Are you all right?” The voice came
from behind him. It was Luthe, whose eyes were written over with concern.
Carsten shrugged again in his usual nonchalant way. “Fine. Just…” he looked out into the
storm. “…missing someone.” His last thought remained unvoiced. Or something. Their meal was not extravagant, but
then, they had all had worse. They drew lots for the night watch, and Carsten
drew the shortest one. Everyone else went to sleep, but he sat up, sharpening
his knife with his steel. He looked around the cave, as though anticipating
something. Finally, after he had honed the blade to a lethal edge, he took out
his throwing axe and did the same. That finished, he took the ore chunk out of
his jerkin. He turned it over in his hands, wondering exactly what it meant. “That stone. What is it?” Carsten’s
head jerked up. Nari was sitting on a stone near him. She had removed her fur
vest and cloak, leaving her in a layered leather jerkin, though she was not
wearing her boiled leather vambraces. He shrugged and tossed it to her. She
caught it with a fluid motion and studied it. “It is not impressive,” she said
finally. “I cannot understand why you picked it up.” Nari handed it back to
him. “Looks are just wallpaper,
remember,” Carsten said. “The digging tools were my first clue that those holes
might have been more than simple vandalism of nature.” He slipped the ore piece
back into his shirt. “That little rock is a piece of an ore we dwarves use to
make shilthain.” “I have never heard of it. Is it
some kind of metal?” Carsten nodded. “It’s rare, and it’s supposed to be
cursed. Plus. I’ve never mined the stuff myself, but I know what it looks
like.” Nari scrunched her eyebrows. “But if
it’s cursed, why mine it? And who could mine in weather like this?” Carsten shook his head. “I don’t
know the answer to the who. But you can be sure I’m going to find out. As to
the why, shilthain weapons carve iron like a knife cuts cheese. They are by far
superior. An army with shilthain weapons would be a mighty force indeed.” She shifted on the rock. “You know,
Scurjal said something about ‘cold ones’ being in these lands. What do you
suppose that means?” Carsten reached into his pack and pulled out the book that
he had brought with him. “Maybe the information is in here,”
he muttered. “What did you call them?” “He called them ‘giants of ice’ and
the ‘cold ones’,” she said. “And what is that?” “A book of species and races my
mother…liberated from the High Library in Andrion in the Free Realms decades
ago. If it’s a race, it should be here…” he thumbed through the pages. “No,
that’s not it…no…no….no….blast, it’ got to be here…no…no…no,” he snapped the
book shut, causing Nari to jump. “Nothing.” She stared at the book. “Then I guess we wait and find out,”
she said quietly. Carsten scowled. “The first rule of battle is to know
your enemy. I’m not exactly comfortable being ignorant of our enemies.” “We do not know they are enemies,”
Nari pointed out. “If they can scare goblins, they
aren’t all or even mostly flowers and puppies,” he shot back. “True,” she admitted. “Anyhow, I
need sleep. I am truly exhausted. Wake Ciara in two hours. It is her turn on
watch.” Ciara’s dreams were interrupted by
someone shaking her. For some reason, she had quite a vivid dream about…someone
she had not recognized. She looked up sleepily at Carsten, whose hand was still
on her shoulder. “Sorry,” he whispered to her, “but
you’re on watch now.” She rolled over and slowly sat up, stretching. Her
ribcage hurt, she noticed as she twisted around. She had lain on her stomach on
the hard ground, a mistake she would not make a second time. “It is still dark,” she murmured.
“What time is it?” “About two in the morning,” Carsten
answered. “I know it is far too early to get up, but you really should.” Ciara
slowly got to her feet, her eyes still half-closed in sleep. “All right. Get to bed. I will take
over.” Carsten nodded, rolling his sleeping blanket out on the cave floor and
wrapping himself up in it. “Good night,” he said softly. “Good night,” she replied, settling
in for her two-hour shift. The dawn came late that morning.
That meant that all the hunters woke up later than they normally would have.
Still, they set about taking apart the camp with efficiency. Luthe had been the
last on watch, and he was quite tired. Their breakfast was sparse, still the
same fare of dried meat and bread. No one was exceptionally pleased with it,
but they all knew they had no other choice; little in the way of food would
keep for as long as they needed it to, and they would not be able to buy
perishables for a while yet. “The village is about six miles away
yet,” Luthe said. “A straight shot would be about a quarter of that, but we
cannot do that with the pass shut.” “Then we are still traversing
mountains,” Carsten growled. “How far from there is the place where we lay the
traps?” “About twelve miles,” Ciara replied.
“Sorry, but there is nothing for it. That is the area that has the highest rate
of sightings and attacks.” Nari nodded. “Then let us go.” Sveldehyn The armored woman
looked at the dwarf lord, his arms crossed belligerently across his massive
chest. The Huntresses had arrived in the village less than a week after
Carsten’s departure and proceeded to camp outside it. “I told you. My son is dead,” he
said, his eyes burning with rage. “He was killed by the phantoms two nights
past. My men found what was left of his body. I thought you’ve have heard of
it.” Telara, the golden-haired queen of
the Huntresses, shook her head. Truth be told, she was not here for Sigurd’s
whelp, but there was no reason to let him think otherwise. “I do not think you
are telling the truth, dwarf,” she growled, as menacingly as she could manage.
“I think your boy is not as dead as you let on. But we shallll see soon
enough.” And she turned to leave Sigurd stepped in front of Telara,
barring her path. “You have no jurisdiction here,” he growled. “Your laws state
that, unless you’re pursuing a wanted criminal or seeking a missing Freeman or
Freewoman, you have no right to enter our domain. Those were the terms of the
treaty, the terms your ancestors agreed to.” Telara glared at him. “I am seeking a missing Freewoman,”
she growled. “But who and why is none of your business. Now let me go, and we
will leave. Worry not, we shan’t trouble you again. And Sigurd…” “Yes?” “I’m not looking for your son. But
if we find him, we will bring him back. Alive.” The dwarf raised an eyebrow. “Really?” he asked. “I am not sure I
believe that.” Telara shrugged. “What you believe has little bearing
on reality if it is untrue,” she replied. “But I am not going to harm him if I
find him.” Sigurd shook his head. “You will not find him,” he warned
her. “If he is not hiding from you by now, then there’s nothing to find.” © 2015 JakeAuthor's Note
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StatsAuthorJakeAboutStudent, writer, LEGO fan. I love fantasy and science fiction, and my background as a history student has led me to experiment with some historical fiction as well. more..Writing
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