StealthA Chapter by Eddie DavisAmala begins to realize the reason for the Ambush5. Stealth
She was shaking in a weird mixture of
fear, excitement and pain by the time the Orcs gave up searching the bodies and
hurried off to join the others. Again
they gathered around the scene of the center of the first ambush and seemed to
be moving the bodies of the fallen cavaliers around, and carefully arranging
them for some reason.
Obviously they were trying to convince
those who came upon the scene later, that someone else was responsible for the
carnage. Staying in the shadows and
moving very carefully, Amala moved over to the bodies of the Orcs she had
killed. Holding her nose to keep from
throwing up at the smell, she knelt down and glanced at them.
They seemed like the typical tribal Orcs
that she had seen from time to time.
Then she noticed their feet. Orcs
tended to favor big, sturdy, hobnailed boots.
Yet those she had killed did not wear the typical Orc boots but short,
leather boots with studs set into the soles for traction.
They were familiar somehow, though for
a minute she couldn’t place where she’d seen them before. Then it occurred to her; they were
legionnaire boots - the marching boots worn by members of the Imperial legions.
They wanted to leave footprints, she
quickly figured out, and they were hoping to create the impression that the
ambushers had been Imperial legionaries.
But why?
She heard a commotion from the Orcs
ahead, so she crept as close as she dared, then laid flat on the ground.
The Orcs were pulling a bound man
behind them, a rope around his neck.
She could tell from his armor that he was one of the cavaliers in Prince
Edwarren’s troop.
Leading them was a figure that
certainly was not an Orc. He wore the
rich clothes of a nobleman, though she could not make out who he was from her
vantage point. The man pointed, and the
Orcs dragged the cavalier to the spot. “You will regret this, Bristane! You won’t fool them!” The bound man yelled at the nobleman.
The richly dressed man responded
something in a much softer tone that sent the cavalier off into a furious list
of curses, but only for a moment or two, because an Orc thrust what looked like
a legionnaire’s spear between the plates of his armor. As Amala looked on in horror, the man gasped
several times, and then fell over dead.
He had no more than hit the ground when
‘Bristane’ began ordering the Orcs to position his body in specific ways. “He should be on his back; he was
knocked off a horse by a spear. Hurry up;
we have three more and the Prince to set up. That damned coach interrupted our
schedule.”
They dragged the body into place and
sat up a few ‘dropped’ Imperial weapons.
Amala thought she had heard the name Bristane before, but she wasn’t
certain. There was a town named
Bristane, a couple of days’ ride to the east.
Could he have a connection to the town?
The mysterious nobleman monitored
their placement of the corpse, then said something to the Orc captain and
turned and headed toward the Guardhouse.
Three Orcs accompanied him, but Amala was curious, so wrapping her cloak
around her and staying low, she followed them, careful to give them plenty of
space and swinging far around their perimeter as they neared the building.
There were a number of Orcs inside the
guardhouse and four sitting around a campfire made in front of its entrance, so
there was no way she could sneak or fight her way into the place. She crept as close as possible to the stone
guardhouse, listening to the noise from inside.
Aside from the sound of Orcs, she
could hear the booming voice of Prince Edwarren, angrily arguing with his
captures. Amala didn’t know what to do;
she couldn’t rescue him and the remaining cavaliers by simply charging in, or
she would have hundreds of Orcs to battle.
Yet an idea came to her of a possible way.
Her father had told her about the Drow
of the Underdark. He’d said that they
tried to fight smart rather then to overwhelm an enemy with brute force. One method of the Drow that he had adopted
was the use of either a coin or a small stone with either a darkness or silence
spell cast on it.
These are then thrown into the middle
of combat, and the removal of sight or sound would throw their opponents off,
whereas the Drow that had been trained to fight in these situations could move
about almost as well as normal, giving them the advantage.
Her father had paid a large amount of
money to have a silence stone enchanted, then a permanency spell added to
it. The result was a stone he had used
on several occasions in battle or to sneak around. In later years, while head of the Order of
the Knights of Northmarch, he’d devised new strategies using both darkness and
silence spells and had paid to have a number of darkness stones enchanted and
then made permanent by spells.
In overwhelming odds, he had told her,
these might even up the chances, but only if the user of these enchanted stones
understood how to fight in these sensory deprived conditions.
She’d been allowed to keep a silence
stone and a darkness stone, which she kept in round, lead, locket-like cases in
her pocket. For several years she had
practiced moving about and fighting in utter blackness and silence. She’d learnt that when a person is suddenly
deprived of both sight and sound at the same time, they panic and usually feel
as if they are trapped, boxed in or suffocated and will drop whatever they are
doing to escape.
She’d never tried using the two magic
stones on anyone other than friends to chart their reactions, but she had no
better idea on what she could do, so she quickly formed a crazy idea.
© 2014 Eddie Davis |
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Added on March 4, 2014 Last Updated on April 24, 2014 Tags: Drow, Elf, Fantasy, Adventure, Marksylvania, swords and sorcery AuthorEddie DavisSpringfield, MOAboutI'm a fantasy and science-fiction writer that enjoys sharing my tales with everyone. Three trilogies are offered here, all taking place in the same fantasy world of Synomenia. Other books and stor.. more..Writing
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