War Stories



  • She passed through dreams and shadow, and planes of gibbering things
    She passed the Wall of Sorrows, and through the Fugue on angel wings

    She descended from the heavens, borne on shaft of light
    She descended onto grasslands, beyond most mortals sight.

    She walked from hill to hill, towards a city filled with strife
    She walked from tent to tent, past cold and shattered life

    She touched upon his face, in memory of her past
    She touched upon his heart, in memory of what would last.

    She continued her journey north, though battle raged beside
    She continued her journey north, and walked past gates inside.

    He huddled in the darkness, a boy of just shy of eight
    He huddled in the streets, by bloodshed near the gate

    “I will take you home”, she said, “And lead you from this land”
    “I will take you home”, she said, “You just have to take my hand”

    “Will I see my Mommy”, he asked, “who tried to comfort me with words?”
    “Will I see my Daddy”, he asked, “who tried to protect me with his swords?”

    She nodded and she smiled to him, “They wait in another land”
    She nodded and she smiled to him as he took her outstretched hand

    Together they walked southward, though battle raged beside
    Together they walked southward, and passed the gates outside

    They ascended from the grasslands, beyond most mortals sight.
    They ascended to the heavens, borne on shafts of light

    They passed the Wall of Sorrows, carried by angel wings
    They passed through dreams and shadows, and avoided darker things

    And there upon the sunlit fields of Lathander’s heaven vast
    The little boy and parents, were united again at last

    And as Robyn watched the battle, and unfurled her wings once more
    Her tears descended from heaven, like rain upon the war.

    • Wolfhere


  • Maya's view of the war can be found in entries 46, 47, and 48 in her jounal.

    http://www.narfell.com/modules.php?name=Forums&file=viewtopic&p=215495#215495



  • In the first assault, The city burned. Corpse lay scattered all over the streets and the stench of burning bodies and wood filled the air.
    War, always brought a smile to Damiens face, as strange as that might sound to some first and for most he was a soldier. Carrying out orders, of course they were orders he enjoyed. Killing always made him feel stronger more powerfull.

    Damien was rallying defenses at the moment helping to gather people to dig the trenches and set up blockades to hamper the enemys movement. When suddenly a small force of enemies attacked.

    "The horn blasted out the defense. Damien on the front line climed up out of the hole he was in and grabbed his shield and morningstar that was within easy reach. After properly equippeinfg hisself he charged.

    He and a group of five others took on the forcee of ten men head on whilst others hung back shooting with their bows and slings. Racing up to the first the Merc sent a crushing blow his way he raised his shield to counter, blocking the blow he hauled his morningstar back and smashed the merc squrely on the side of the head. Blood gushed from the mercs wound as his head was pulverized. THe blood sprayed in all directions. coating Damien in a thik mist of it. He quickly went on to engage another.

    THe next was not so easy a kill. They traded blows back and forth niether gaining much ground till The merc finally got a blow throuh. It caught damien in his side.. Blood poured out but damien did not relent his assault. In fact the merc turned white when he saw that Damien was completely unfased by the blow and in fact looked almost as if he enjoyed the pain. The mercs momentary suprise cost him and once again a merc lay on the ground with half a head.

    Continueing on with his wound DAmien helped another soldier fell two more foes before the battle was finnally over. When surrvaying the dammage they saw that indded their commander had fallen. She lay on the ground bleeding out and there were no potions or clerics around. Her jaw looked mishapen. She would not survive.

    Damien shrugs at this thinking. Casualty of war and I care not for this woman anyways. Better her than me. He looks at his own wound an begins poking it roughly to get a spike of pain. His eyes glaze over in excstasy.

    What is more is that more than one of the other soldiers is laying in his own blood. A terrible time indeed. the trenches need completed so damien returns to his work. a little sad that this round of fighting is over.



  • Sev’s fingers bled. But again and again he fired his bow, reaching for the arrows in the quiver slung low on his hip, ignoring the torn skin of his fingertips. Again and again he fired, and again and again his arrows found their mark. Clattering off helms, embedded in shields and piercing chain mail. Koreth’s mercenaries fell before the onslaught of the refugee assault.

    Sev had never been to Peltarch before. He’d never even wanted to visit, let alone fight a war there. But necessity makes strange demands at times. He should have known something was amiss when the caravan failed to show up. In ten long years old Birr the Trader had never been late, but Sev had just put it down to inclement weather; there had been a lot of snow over Narfell of late.

    Two tendays later and Sev was worried however. No caravans had arrived from the East nor had the riverboats from Peltarch arrived. They were just a small farming community at the feet of the Giantspires; their town didn’t even have a name. But crops can only be harvested once a year. They were dependant upon trade from Peltarch to survive, and trade wasn’t coming.

    “And now I know why”, Sev reflected as he let lose an arrow, striking a Northerner in the base of the neck. He saw the man fall, splayed face forward with one leg twitching in the dirt as he died. Why had the Northerners come to fight? Not for survival, but for gold. They didn’t care how many civilians were slaughtered; they positively thrived on it in fact. They didn’t care about the homesteads they were killing, if they were even aware. And now another was dead.

    He looked about sharply, taken note of the locations of his companions. He’d barely known them a day. Here he was in a strange city fighting with strangers, elves and half-orcs. A farmer amongst warriors, he and they had little in common.

    “War makes brothers of us all”, he thought as he let slip another arrow. Where had he heard that said? His father? His grandfather? No. No, Sergeant Tanner had said it. Sev smiled to himself, “The old man would be proud of me now”.

    No sooner had he arrived at Peltarch, finding a camp full of refugees and the city aflame than he was marching to its defence. He didn’t give it a second thought when he saw the camp full of frightened women and crying children. It was clear whose side he was on. And the sooner the invaders were removed from the Icelace the sooner trade would return to his home.

    He ran on after Sy’wyn, through the gates of the city. The elf made a good commander, worked at keeping his men alive as well as killing the enemy. And the enemy fell quickly. Arrows caught them in the throat and between the links of their armour. Those that survived the hail of arrows were quickly beaten down by the two half-orcs.

    Advancing down the street, catapult fire arcing overhead to strike the city, they found themselves in an open area. A circle of stone, perhaps now a public area of some sort. Once beautiful but now ruined; the invaders had formed a crude barricade of carts and wagons against one wall. No doubt the same wagons that were destined for his homestead to feed the families there.

    The warrior known as Pete leapt the barricade at a run; Mog and Sy’wyn close on his heels. The fighting was as fierce as any Sev had seen on the frontier. More so; these were no hobgoblins raiding the chicken coupe. A flash of blue light flashed over his head and Sev ducked reflexively. It picked up speed, accelerating into the midst of the mêlée before exploding with a flash against the chest of a robed elven woman. Sev laughed. There was a mage or two on their side.

    As quickly as it had begun the scuffle ended. Four Northerners lay dead in a heap, their elven companion scorched by the strange energy. They secured the area quickly; Sev was amazed at how quickly all his years of drilling came back to him. Sel’wyn directed the front-liners to hold a choke point running east from the area, whilst Sev positioned the archers to grant covering fire.

    Taking a few moments to tighten his bowstring and wipe the sweat from his eyes, Sev surveyed his companions. Elrien and Mog had their bows taught, Arishaka hefting a throwing-axe in her large hand. Both half-orcs stood ready to dive into the mêlée should Sy’wyn, Pete and the spellblade Chaevre require aid. Behind him he heard Khel murmuring under his breath, no doubt preparing another spell whilst the elf Elrien quickly readied arrows.

    Suddenly loud footsteps echoed down the street behind him, the marching of many men. A bead of icy sweat ran down the back of Sev’s neck as he turned around, ready to draw his dagger.

    “Reinforcements!” Sev cried out with it relief, barely able to hide the joy in his voice. A small battalion of Defenders had taken position in the open area behind them, the officer approaching them, addressing Sev. “Good work civilians; we’ll secure the Commons. Push on towards the Bardic College; we have reason to believe that is where their command centre in this district lies. I’ll send more reinforcements along when they get here. ”

    Nodding to the officer silently, Sev turned out shouted the order down the line “We strike for the Bardic College! Clear it out and hold the area.” They set out silently, making quick progress, until the fury of the invaders was unleashed.

    Pouring from alleys and doorways, the Northlanders, Black Dragon Knights and turncoat Defenders fell upon the group. Sev felt his blood rush, the pounding of his heart all he could hear in his ears as enemy after enemy fell before them. Wheeling through the throng, catching a Northerner across the jaw with edge of his bow he saw one of his companions cut down out of the corner of his eye.

    But on they fought. Sev barely felt the blade of his enemy scrape across his back before Laerlilly’s arrow found its mark; slaying Sev’s attacker. He heard a cry behind him as Arishaka fell, then Laerlilly herself. Their numbers were thinning, but so too where those of the enemy.

    Then a shout came from behind, “It’s Captain Rashor himself!” Sev was overtaken by two friendly Defenders as they joined the charge. There in front of the Bardic College stood a Defender in gold livery, flanked by two officers. No further word was spoken as combat was joined. The ring of steel on steel echoed throughout the streets as combat was joined. Defender fighting Defender, refugee fighting invader.

    “Dammit all Rashor! You’re beaten; throw down your blade!” yelled Sev at the traitor, but Captain Rashor’s only response was to double his attack. “Don’t think he listenin’“, Mog’s deep voice rumbled as one of their Defender allies was felled by the Captain’s blade.

    “Time to end this then”, Sev said quietly, taking a bead on the Captain. Taking a breath, he let loose his arrow and watched it fly true.

    It struck the front of Captain Rashor’s helm…

    …and ricocheted up into the air.

    “Dammit!” Sev reached for another arrow, but he didn’t need to take another shot. He smiled grimly as Rashor was finally born down by Sy’wyn and Chaevre, the last of the enemy to fall.

    Sev stood there in the silence that followed. Soaked in his enemies’ blood and some of his own, his chain mail torn. Sitting on a pile of rubble, he rested his longbow across his knees, wiping the sweat from his eyes. Suddenly a cheer went up around him from the countless Defenders flooding into the area.

    They had secured Peltarch’s Commerce District. Nearly a third of the city was back in its rightful hands. Spearheaded by a handful of strangers, one of them a farmer that had never even seen the city. There was plenty more fighting to do, but for now Sev could use a rest. They’d need him again soon, this unfamiliar city he now called home.

    “War makes brothers of us all.”



  • The Battle of the Commerce District: The Commons Won

    The anxious rush just before a battle swept through her, and suddenly Lilly was nervous. What would happen? Would they live? Would this simply be a repeat of the previous flight from the city? How many times could they rush the walls before enemy archers killed them all? These and a countless other grim fortunes flitted through Lilly's head as she kissed Mirkali with all the passion of a woman who had accepted she might never see her love again. Why was she going? It was easy to ask, but the answer was always the same.. she had too.

    Looking back, she could hear the shouts of children as the ran giggling in one of their many games, how long could it last? The groans of the wounded in the field hospital never ceased, would they ever see their city whole again? Every day the people's spirits broke just a little more.. if they didn't fight, then all was lost. Lilly couldn't stand for that. She gave her kiss to Mirkali, who marched off as surely as she did, and she prepared herself next to Drelan, her swordbrother. She bid her goodbye to Ocean, she wasn't going and Lilly thought no less of her. They marched back to the fray, back to the front, sure as they knew they walked back to the Abyss.

    As soon as they neared the gates the fighting was fast and furious, archers lined the walls and volleys were launched before any of the attackers could begin to ready to themselves. Good men, women, elves, hins and dwarves fell in that first assault, though the force surged through broken gates, the archers steadily beat back. Arrows flew across the myriad of melees that erupted wherever breath was drawn.. all for naught. From within the city a great force rushed to counter-act the mighty charge, and against the odds the attackers were forced to flee. Their numbers simply couldn't take the courtyard while fresh archer's took the walls and vantage points. Arrows rained down, and the brave forces of Peltarch were forced to flee, the attack broken for the moment.

    In the Nars Pass, the great captains argued and debated over how to carry out the attack. They had to gain a foothold in the city, somehow.. A three-pronged attack was decided. A force to strike the civic district gates, a force to sweep the docks, and one to push from the gates of the original attacks. Against luck and all better judgement, Lilly found herself in the third group, prepared to charge the gates again but with fewer numbers.

    It was only Tymora's whim if they succeeded, but that was all they had to wish for. Lilly could imagine Beshaba giggling all over herself, but her resolve was firm, they would win. Her bow knocked with an arrow, she followed the meager force along the wall to the gates. A cry went up, and arrows hit the ground around them, it was the work of but moments and the returning volley laid the few archers left on the wall to rest. Perhaps the other attacks had struck already, surely they'd not leave the wall that poorly defended.

    It proved true as mercenaries rushed from the gates with swords readied to be bloodied. The fight was fierce, and the half orcs Arashika and Mog did well to stand toe to toe with the sellswords, when the cries ended only the meager force stood. They all rushed inside.

    Into the courtyard, where were they? Would they leave the courtyard undefended? Then the sellswords poured from the commons towards the meager group, and were met with a volley of arrows, bolts, and axes twirling end over end. Then the half orcs were among the fighters again, taking attacks that would have cleaved through Lilly's armor easily, yet dealing twice what they received. Pete was there too, his charming smile gone as he ducked and swung his sword, any vulnerable spot on the enemy feeling his sting and soon enough falling to the ground to feel no more. This fighting was longer, as reinforcements came in from the commons and markets. Archers, even a mage assaulted the group, kept well safe by the wall of fighters.

    Into the commons the fight poured, Chaevre using her spells and blade to wreak havoc among the fighters and most especially upon the mages and archers. Sy'wyn fought as he could and healed as was needed. His spells perhaps the only thing that evened the odds against the onslaught.
    There were other's in the fighting, Elrien, a man named Rome, and a few others she didn't immediately remember the names of. They supported as they could, arrows screaming across the commons to keep the enemy honest if not exactly finding a chink in armor upon every shot.

    Then suddenly, the fight was done, and nothing moved but the now ragged bunch. They all looked around, ready to face hell should it be ready to embrace them. Nothing stirred, the commons was won. The poorly taxed group sunk down for its rest, the wizard, Khel, surely needed it, and Sy'wyn could use the moment to pray. The half orcs no longer bled from what seemed a dozen serious injuries each, though they still would be considerred far from fresh. Rest was elusive, however, as more rushed to the attack from the markets and from deeper into the town. Arrows were loosed, and sword and shield were born again as battle was renewed. Her throat raw already, Lilly began to sing a war chant her Da had taught her, the effect causing the already tiring fighters to lift their blades just a bit easier, to strike just a bit quicker, and to desire victory just a little more.

    Then the battle was over, and they could rest for a moment. Lilly peeled her armor, and offered what meager healing skills she had. It helped little, but it was better than none at all, and perhaps it saved Sy'wyn from expending himself just a little. Then battle was rejoined again, this time a Black Dragon Knight charging followed by renegade Defenders. The battle was furious, at least Lilly thought it to be so; as she scrambled for a position, her boot slipped in a pool of blood spilled by a fallen sellsword, her unhelmed head connecting solidly with the stoned ground of the commons.

    When she awoke, the Black Dragon Knight was dead, and so was Pete. This attack was already becoming costly. Part of her screamed to turn back, to run, to hide.. the other part expected that their could be nothing left to return hearth and home. The group moved Pete's body to somewhere not likely to be noticed by renegade Defenders, and prepared themselves to press on.

    Reinforcements arrived to secure the commons, and the group minus one brave man pressed on. They had gained Ting, a valuable scout. Her report stated towards Renaldo and the Wilting flower stood many mercenaries and Defenders; towards the Bard college were archers and mages, demons blocking either path it seemed as the group meandered through a man-made Abyss once called home.

    "Let us press to the college." Ting was quick to suggest, though she was overruled by Mog and Arashika who simply strode in the direction indicated for the fighters. "idiots.." she could be heard muttering.

    The fight was another bloody one, there were no one sided battles any more. There was only bloody brawls to the death, blood running down the streets as blade met blade met bone made screams.. then silence save the ragged breaths of the ragged group. Arrows stuck from buildings and armors.. the price of power and war only grew, man by man, blow by blow.

    They retreated back to the commons, needing a break and time to consolidate their gains. Not all seemed quite as tired though, as soon Rome came rushing back with at least three defenders after him, a task that almost cost Lilly her life. She tried to protect the man, but her shield rushes and quick swipes with her scimitar failed to find many gaps in the thick shields and armor of the Defenders. She nearly fell.. only Sy'wyn's healing saved her.

    THe next few skirmishes were much like the others, bloody and brutal. Arashika fell to the next one, more men pulled by Rome trying to act as a scout. Then Lilly fell to the next skirmish, the more highly trained Defender's rushing the group on the heels of Rome, and Lilly trying to shield them from the archers. Her parries and shield, even her enchanted armor could only hold them so long before their heavy strikes felled her. She wasn't dissappointed as the Abyss openned its mouth, and she was swallowed.

    In the blink of an eye, it was over, she was back in the commons. Cheers were raised all around, and Mirkali was there kissing her. She had died evidently, though Sy'wyn had raised her, he truly was a hero. She had no idea how the rest of the fighting went, only that the Defender's still loyal to the Senate cheered that the Commerce district was won. Lilly had seen enough though, for her the battle was over.

    She wobbled weakly, and Mirkali held her, she'd have fell on her face if not for him. She felt honestly frightened, the fighting in the streets, her home a warzone. The blood and gore that littered the streets like so much refuse. For the first time it struck her, as odd a time as it was, she knew Breezy was dead, her little white kitten would be among the rubble. It was too much, she couldn't keep trying to fight beside brave men and true heroes like Sy'wyn, and Mog, and Arashika.

    Mirkali talked with her, soothed her, though she barely heard what he said as reinforcements poured through the gates. Corana went to them and checked them, Lilly in her confused state hit her hard across the face and screamed, "Don't you let him die!" pointing at Mirkali. He would try to stay alive, she could have kept him safe by telling him she needed him to stay with her.. but she couldn't bring herself to do it.. he was needed, and he wanted to win back his city. She couldn't rob him of that, he was a true hero too, he deserved to stand with other heroes while she slunk back to camp, covered in blood never knowing if she'd helped one bit. Before she left though, she heard Mog say, "Lilly help a lot." and for some reason, that made her feel better, somehow she was able to make the walk to the refugee camp, her armor still covered in blood.

    She tried to sneak as much as she could in the camp, not by embarrassment, but because she didn't want any of the children to see her covered in blood from fighting. Ocean spotted her though, and rushed to her, hugging her tight despite the bloody plate. They exchanged words and Lilly tried to stagger off to a tent, her friend little relieved at Lilly's state, though greatly relieved she was back at all. Then all went black as the last bit of energy drained from Lilly, and she collapsed.

    It was only hours later when she awoke in a tent with a few children looking at her and waiting with cups of water and a bowl of soup. She couldn't help but smile, and she felt not a single regret for her part in the battle anymore. If she had to give her own life for these children to have a home.. well, she'd died more than once before.



  • The popular young Captain of the Troff Legion was on patrol, east of Jiyyd, investigating rumors of strange white skinned creatures that had been harrassing wayfarers, when a young Legion soldier with dispatch rode up, stinking of smoke, and covered in a haze of fine soot.

    It was one of General Grag's personal messengers, dressed in the dark colors of the army, with a fine and colorful Troff Legion standard flying from his saddle. The messenger was in an agitated and worn looking state.

    "Ma'am!", the soldier cried, nearly falling forward off his mount as he reined it in. The young boy saluted, and fell into an endless stream of words, trying to relay the desperate summons as fast as humanly possible.

    "General Grag requires your presence, with all the Legion you can muster at once, in the Refugee Camp, near Peltarch. The city has fallen, and the situation is grim!"

    Captain Lyte Bry'Gaede was used to tautly worded orders and short notice. The Troff Legion prided itself in having instant response times to terrible situations, but this seemed grim and dire, even for the General.

    She raised an eyebrow, not displaying any other signs of emotion.

    "Ride with me to Jiyyd, Dispatcher, and share any more intelligence you have for me on the way. Then, find a change of horse, and head for Norwick to find any other Legion that might be there."

    Together they rode, snow flying before them, to Jiyyd, where Troff Legion Headquarters sat.


    Corporals Elrien and Lilin were readying a patrol with the young hin-Paladin Private Mia as the Captain and the General's now exhausted looking dispatcher galloped into town.

    With a measured, practiced voice, the Captain issued orders to her young but trusted Corporals.

    It mattered to none of them that they did not know the foe they would face, nor the odds. They were practiced soldiers, they had worked as brothers and sisters together in the past, against assorted enemies, usually outnumbered, and always, they had survived because of their discipline, their training and equipment.

    They mounted up together, and set off towards Peltarch at a trot. They could see smoke ahead, a harbinger of the dark days to come.


    Captain Bry'Gaede measured the refugee camp with a practised eye. It was a huge affair, women and children in pitched tents scattered accross the landscape, with the awful glow and smoke of the ruined, burning city much to close behind them. A singular hill, with a Temple atop, dominated the camp.

    She noted the guards mostly standing with their families, probably in shock from the recent horrible loss of the town. Many of the important remaining survivors, the politicians, senators, lawyers, dog catchers, whatever they were, seemed to be wandering about on the hilltop, and the Captain saw little in the way of organized patrols of the completely vulnerable camp. Something had to be done, and now, to secure the camp borders.

    Unless the enemy was composed of complete idiots, skirmishing parties would be soon raiding the camp, killing the wounded, taking the women and livestock.

    More Legion were arriving now. A pair of stout dwarvsh brothers, their axes gleaming, had stomped into camp.

    She could see that it would be up to her small company to hold the perimeter until the battered Peltarch survivors could rally. She called together her two squads, one under Corporal Elrien, the other Corporal Lilin, and gave them their orders.

    The Corporal's departed with what Legioneers as were available, picketing the likely areas of attack in the hopes of striking any force before it reached the wounded and the families within the refugee enclave.

    As the young Captain set up a temporary headquarters in the southern section of the encampment, CO. Maythor of the Legion arrived. Captain Lyte felt heartfelt thanks at his arrival, for in truth, she wondered how their small and largely young force would cope with any serious attack upon the camp. Maythor was highly experianced, and an extremely tough fighter. She began to brief the anxious officer on the state of the camp, when sounds of a battle reached their ears.

    The sounds came from the north, in the direction of her two patrols. The two officers rushed forward to find that the patrols had indeed encountered exactly what Captain Lyte had feared…a party of skirmishers bent of disruption and destruction.

    The patrols, together with a few men of Peltarch, had stopped the rebel soldiers, but it had cost one of her men his life.

    It was apparent now to Captain Bry'Gaede that these were not ruffians or hired part time soldiers they faced, but hardened soldiers from the city.

    She thought that the next hours would be long ones.

    She was right.

    With CO. Maythor at the front beside her, and the Legion archers on the hill, the little force threw together a small barracade of wagons. A few camp defenders joined them , but it was still a tiny force.

    When the rebel soldiers of Peltarch charged the hill, Maythor fought like a mad dwarf, and soldiers were tossed about as the archers peppered them with arrows. The old dwarf's prowess with old enchanted axe forced them back towards the city, and all stood huffing but still alive.

    A message arrived from General Grag, and CO. Maythor looked seriously at his Captain.

    "I must join the General in his skirmish near the city," said Maythor with an unusually grim tone. The old warrior handed the girl some potion bottles. "Hold here and do not die." The two exchanged knowing glances.
    The officer marched off, pausing once to look back, a serious, concerned look on his face.

    With that, suddenly, the defensive force holding the refugee camp was perilously overstretched. Captain Lyte, well aware that she was probably the best remaining shield left to hold the hill, tightened her helm and planted her feet. Behind her two small squads were countless women and children and arguing politicians. The cries of brave wounded men, who fell in the battle within the city, could be heard, as each Legion member silently counted heads.

    The counts took prescious little time, as there were few.

    The rebel force charged again, towards the egress to the hill. Captain Lyte glanced back to Corporal Elrien, who silently mouthed the word "ma'am", his bowstring drawn tightly to his cheek.

    She let fly the blessings she had been hoarding for this moment, and felt her Goddesses power surround her. It would not suffice this time, and she well knew it.

    "Fire!" she yelled, as a squad of soldiers closed on the few defenders standing ready to recieve the shock.

    Arrows flew by near her, impacting loudly on the heavy armor of the plated soldiers. She raised her thin curved blade behind her and dressed her elven shield forward and grit her fine elven teeth to recieve the incoming blow.

    She did not stand there for long, but the enemy soldiers did not advance upon that hill, their blood mingling with hers on the ground.

    The Corporals carried on, piling the fallen dead rebels in a wall of death, to slow the next assault, and then tenderly carrying their Captain back to the temple on the hill themselves, forcing back tears and relying on a discipline that she had taught them; to continue, to fight with steel and arrows, until the last of them had fallen defending it, if it came to that.

    Legion. It was what they were.



  • Morning. It wouldn’t seem so strange normally. She would rise, have her tea, and talk with Mariston before morning vespers. This morning was markedly different. She awoke to the rancid smell of burning bodies, timbers, and just about anything else capable of flame within a city.

    It was still dark out. She sat up in her tent home…it was comfortable for a tent and there was enough room for she and Mariston. Though this morning there was a third little body hugging a raggedy stuffed dog lying between where Anna had been lying and the big lump that is Mariston beneath blankets and cloaks.

    Anna took the canteen from her pack and sipping deeply of the water inside seemed to sigh in the simplicity of the action. She had a thousand things to do. She simply wanted to sit here and watch her two boys sleep. One…an all too cavalier knight…Mariston Thel was a gem of a gentleman. He made her smile inside and out. The very thought of him blushing would send her into fits of giggling. The other boy…an all too sad little tow headed boy…his name…Matee.

    Matee is the son of a dockhand. He snuck out of the city with one of the first groups of refugees after he watched his mother be “touched bad and put big knife in her.” His father apparently tried to help his wife get away from the stalwart pillaging defender and was strung up on a lamppost. Matee ran and followed and group out of the city.

    Anna found the boy walking amongst the tents late the first night of the war. He was dragging a stuffed dog behind him. She approached him slowly.

    “Are you all right little one,” Anna asked?

    The boy pushed by her, half being brave half crying. She followed him from a distance. He finally sat down and started to cry.

    “What wrong sweetheart,” Anna asked sitting down near the boy her armor creaking?

    “I don’t got no where to go,” the boy said simpering.

    “Where are your parents.” Anna asked half expecting the answer?

    The boy proceeded to tell of his parent’s demise and his escape to the refugee camp. Nowhere to go and no one in his family left alive. Anna smiled warmly and wiped a tear away from his eye with a mailed finger.

    “I’m Anna and you can stay with me,” She smiled warmly.

    Anna took the little boy to the tent she was sharing with Mariston. She was very happy…Alice had snuck out of the city and now Matee was safe. Alice slept in the tent beside theirs. Matee was supposed to sleep with Alice, but he always managed to find his way into the tent with Anna and Mariston and slept soundly between them.
    During the long days, Anna would come back and forth to check on him. He would play with the other children and would sit and listen to Alice and try to snatch things from here and they would giggle and roll on the ground.

    She took solace that at least one small boy and one lonely girl…had found their way out of the city…and now she and Mariston…could give them some kind of life even if it was in a camp. The nature of war is unforgiving. Her understanding of her place in war was far beyond that of the common man. She was a Priestess of Red Knight. She should not have led that charge. She will stick to what she’s good at. Make the maps, order the supplies, treat the wounded, make the plans.

    The day will move on…and the Priestess of Red Knight will do what is needed.



  • As the sun goes down, and night comes over the refugee camp, a small hin flits in between the tents. Any valuables left unguarded dissapear into nothing, and people find drinks they did not keep an eye on to taste foul, as if somebody dropped a bit of skunk secretion in them. Eventually, the hin sneaks up on a bard dressed in blue, looking towards the city. Just when a tiny hand touches the bard's purse, and a finger sneaks inside, a branch cracks underfoot, and the bard spins around, grasping the thief, and suspending her in the air.
    "Oopsies…wassie accident, me stumbles into you, me no steal from you, no?", it said, in a childish voice
    "Dirty thief..."
    The hin wriggles, trying in vain to escape.
    "If I catch you again, you'll taste steel.", the bard points to another man, "You, escort this hin out of the camp."
    "Sir, yes, sir!"
    "Or wait a breath..."
    The bard then reached down, and pulled the hin's hood down, revealing the pale face of a small girl, with raven black hair and large, black eyes. Having inspected her face, he pulls the hood back up, and shoves her towards the man.
    While the hin is taken away, her eyes glance all over the place, looking for a possible route of escape...just when they reach the central fire, her guardian is distracted for a breath, and she slips away into the shadows. A few moments later, a scream is heard across the camp, coming from the pass east of the mountain. For some reason, the hin rushes north, towards the downed man, and stops the worst bleeding, saving him from death. Moments later, a crowd gathers around, and even though she just saved a man, she is still kicked out, hissing at them as she scampers past. Moments later, she dissapears into the shadows once more...but that might not be the last that those living in the camp have seen of her.



  • It wasn't much, the pack full of food. But they brought it from the camp, leaving the babe in Baba Katyas care and tried to feed the commoners in the refugee camp.

    The children were the worst, Jerr thought. They looked . . . lost. Oh they knew where they were but they had been tossed out of their homes and some of them were smart enough to realize the smoke, that smoke that stung the eyes and made them cough, was that of ther former lives burning.

    He watched the 'heroes' fight about this and that, often right in front of the children. The worst were the more cynical of the warriors. Dwarves who ridiculed the efforts, Banites who fought with Bards, and some who just would wander around in a dark cloud deriding the entire effort as useless. Jerr watched people struggle to bring Call back from the dead only to have her wander off and thank not a one of them.

    Talgrath had the patience of a saint, trying to organize commoners and people from other towns into some semblence of order. But trying to teach adventurers to work in an army was like trying to herd cats. Adventurers were, for the most part, individualists. Putting them into random assortments only made for more friction.

    The last of the food went on the tables up in the temple, which now served as a field hospital for Daisy. He looked at the wounded and sighed. The sun was almost up again and the heroes were off to 'probe the defences'. He moved back down to talk to Zyph and they had barely started when a scream cut through the air.

    Running, he realized, this is what makes the difference. While the commoners stood and waited for the worst the heroes ran, towards the danger. "fools fools fools" he chanted as he tried to pass Sierra and Zyph. "We are all fools"

    But that didn't slow his pace, or change his direction.

    MND/Vortext
    Nars Skald



  • Somewhere in the city..

    "You need rest" A defender trusted a thin cup of rations toward her and she held the heated metal between frozen fingertips, allowing it to warm her skin. Grey steam wafting up between her blackened nose, and she breathed in the scent. "The screaming has stopped" she noted "mmm.. he finally died" she gave a soft nod at his words, and dug two fingers in to the meat and potato stew, scooping it up as a make-do spoon and sucking it off her nails. "And the children?"

    "Safe.. but frighten" she took in an exhausted breath "Tell them their parents await them at the camp" she replied, leaning back against the cement wall trying to get comfortable while tucking the cloak tighter about her rusty armor. "Heh.. isn't that a lie? I thought Tyr was the deity of.. "

    "..hope" She interrupted, fixing him with a cold blue stair that left no room for religious debate. He nodded twice, and reached over pulling a blanket off a man curled up in a fetal position. "Don't do that.. he.." the defender forcefully wrapping it around her body by pushing both his hands against the wall on both side of her ".. he passed away two hours ago.. warmth if for the living" he said in a matter of fact tone, getting up and leaving her to it.

    She licked the remaining stew off her fingers and curled in to the comfort of the blanket, trembling slightly at the cold.





  • War & Trade

    Another volley of burning rocks made its way towards the city walls. Another charge of the enemy at the hill, cut down by the defenders. The ramp was just too small. Their large numbers meant nothing, as they tried to get trough the bottleneck and up the hill, cut down by the few defending soldiers and volunteers as they did.

    Devath stood with the frontline, swinging his sword and blocking with his shield as he had learned. Not from training with the tribe's warriors, but trough trial. Why was he here? He was a Shaman of Trade, not a warrior. He was supposed to represent the Heyokarr in this camp. He was supposed to ensure goods arrived properly from the south. But now he was fighting at the front, rushing back now and then to heal the wounded defenders. Heal them, so they could go back and get themselves killed. Such a waste.
    But he had every reason of fighting. Those bastards had killed their Skald, his brother, on sight. Those bastards had started a war which crippled trade in the North. And this angers Her.
    He had vowed to become her Golden Blade, and he would hold up to it.

    The twenty-something year old Narsman shoved his sword into a small slit, a small weakness in the mercenaries armor. Piercing it's heart, the mercenary fell and died instantly, hitting the grass with a soft thud. Devath looked around, as the remaining attackers were defeated. Another wave driven off.

    A few hours later, Dev arrived back at the refugee camp with pack mules, loaded with much-need food, blankets and weapons. He spoke to a few people, most of them children, about his people, and why they fought for them. Why a tribe of savages cares. Why a tribe of horsemen fights for a walled city.



  • In his Rightful Place by the Tower…

    The unique armour of the Magistrate had not been repaired or serviced since his leaving the senate building under attack with two senators by his side. Not once was it penetrated by the now dead traitorous black dragon knight, two disloyal defenders and a handful of Mercenaries that had fallen by his hand on the journey from the site of Koreth's final mistake, his disgrace and the start of his inevitable end.

    Days later he reflected on his situation, standing as he had done many times in his youth before the guard outpost but not the guard healer standing at the lonely outpost with the windblown and stoic guardsmen at his side but High Priestess Daisy, behind him streaked with the blood of the wounded and surrounding with the moans and screams of the injured, dying and those whose wounds were being cauterised by fire.

    "Strange it is, how those of Tyr are so different", as he wondered again about the difference between Koreth and Daisy… "one a a crusader, a tyrant - another a compassionate member of the city with no political ambition". His attention turned from the priestess, who was almost in tears as she tended the fallen back to the sea of tents in front of him. Many times before he has stood with many of the brave of peltarch holding back a sea of Eastlanders as they greedily tried to take the city for their own and yet now… the city was taken by those who were considered its defenders and its servants.

    The basis of the Magistrates role, his satisfaction and his purpose and influence had been taken from him. His city. For a moment he wondered what role was left for him out of his usual civilised company and legal staff. Then he cast his mind back wistfully back to a campaign his unit once fought and he remembered what it was like to be on campaign and he smiled - his life here wasn't like a real-campaign, apprehending cutpurses, fighting in caves and in strange lands against magical creatures.... this wasn't who he was... although it had made him who he was today. This would be a real battle, a real war - against enemies equipped much like himself not against the pathetic kobold race or the brutish lumbering hulks of the ogre species. This would be a fight against those who were the worst kind of scum, traitors and those who turn against their homes and their leaders. There would be honour in this war. He smiled and to those that saw him, the often serious and strict magistrate seeming truly happy since he arrived in the city.

    He stepped from the upper levels and went about the men of the defenders and the civilians folk from other lands approaching him, as a member of the interim city council. He realised his position made him approachable by all, those of the highest divinity and those of the most hated by the majority. He treated them all the same - and many reports soon came in from the legion, the cerulean knights and the defender officers. His long efforts over the years to make himself approachable and able to advise on a number of matters and concerns had paid off. He was valued, but how long would this war continue. "Some wars are without end"… he mused "but this one will end soon", even the high priestess of tempus had faith in him - she knew of his respect for the dead and fallen in battle. "Koreth will fall, one way or another before the blade of a single-minded defender officer, by the blades of his own men or..", he smiled with the thought. "In court, by the will of the city and the magistrates so the city will all learn of this mans treachery and the penalty for his final mistakes".

    "Soon military justice will come to all who betrayed the city, either face to face - or by the hand of the justice of the city of Peltarch. The Jewel of the Icelace will see all who fail her meet their deserved fate."



  • War doesn't determine who is right, only who is left.

    Keira walked near silently about the camp, watching the dirty and miserable refugees huddled near the tents. Most of them frail, weak or wounded. As time wears on, the Defenders ideas of who is fit to raise a sword to retake the city grows lax. She sees the pale drawn faces of men and women, bound by their indecision, scared of the fight to come, yet too scared to leave. Her touch was everywhere, her Truth, like needles under the skin in the quiet times between attacks. This camp wasn't a place of death, yet. That would come later. Now it was a place of false hope, fear, doubt. For all the bravado and the cheers as an attack is repulsed, the Truth creeps up into their minds in the quiet times.

    They see the faces of friends cut down, burning. They remember that the City they fight for is ruined and sacked. Even if they take it, the baker from Silver street is dead, his body contorted in silent agony in the hospital on the hill. One of the traders from the market, executed for food hoarding. A conversation overheard, a merchant counting his gold hidden in the bloodied sling he wears to avoid conscription. He'll leave by nightfall. It is beautiful. There is no need to spread suffering, to cause pain to these people. They do that perfectly well themselves. Even as they delude themselves, blaming the others, blaming the traitors, angry at their past.

    Keira smiles up at the Hospital, a gloriously cruel situation. The commanders know it couldn't be defended. That's why the wounded are gathered there. If the hill looks to fall, the army will leave. Do the healers know? Will they let themselves believe that? Keira smiles again. This is wonderful to see, for her. She watches Magistrate Zyphlin run past, hears him yelling an order to a group of soldiers. All for nothing.

    From the top of the hill (the indefensible hill) the men ebb and flow in the plains before the wall. Like the waters of the Icelace, like drifting snows swirled by the wind. The men attacking look unfamiliar. The defenders and conscripts arrayed to meet them look unfamiliar. Occasionally some armour, or an upturned face, is recognisable. She draws her pale bow easily and looses an arrow into an attacking mercenary. He knows he's dying, she's seen that look in eyes before. He knows he's taken another with him. If we are driven by our fear, we would never fight. Sometimes , she thinks, they're so close to understanding. Then they cast it away, repulsed. Some things are easier to deny than accept. She looses another arrow, wiser now. She watches the man fall, not by her arrow, but the blades of the soldiers. This is not her place. These people will stand or fall. She is irrelevant to their struggle.

    Keira steps back from the line of archers on the hill, ignoring the few questions raised as they continue to loft arrows over the walls into the City. She walks southwards through the tents, chanting one of the Litanies of the faithful quietly. She sees Jerr, the Skald singing his songs to sunset. It's foolish to hope the Sun will return. It's foolish to hope that rain will not fall. She smiles, thinking of the strife to come as she leaves for Norwick. No-one wins. Everybody leaves. Everybody dies. It's only a matter of time.



  • **_The Stand for the Jewel: Part 4

    The Gamble Lost_**



  • **_The Stand for the Jewel: Part 3

    The Decade Long Coup

    ((using linking system cause well, i don't want to flood the forum doubly and the TBTF posts don't get archieved while the town ones do in time 😉 ))_**



  • "Bane?" the inquisitive young child asked. The dark cleric needed only grin and nod.
    "But don't tell mommy or daddy – they won't understand. Just listen child; hearken, and I will teach you..."


    It was a day as any other – more or less. The city had been taken by Koreth's thugs; battle had been waged against them. The priest sat on a broken chair between two tents on a muddy turf of grass. The exiled government organized assaults tirelessly, each ending in retreat. War was about him, the smell of death filled the air. Some, Zanetar knew, would speculate that it was the stench of death that had him so intoxicated... They were wrong, though.

    It was the fear. It was everywhere. Defenders feared for their lives; peasants feared for their families; women feared for their husbands, their children; the children feared as much as any of them, but they were not even certain of what they were in of. Through the wanton chaos of this civil war, Bane had come to bless Zanetar with a sensationally rousing circumstance. Horror and dread were everywhere.

    And there was hatred, too! It cast its shadow in every glance towards the burning city. It rose up over the camp, a black web of distrust and misanthropy in the people. It surrounded Zanetar, too, and his knowledge of this made him all the more giddy. The Legionnaires all glared at him with scarcely contained fury. The bards did not sing songs of encouragement and hope when he passed; they simply looked on, defeated, cursing him silently. Tyrists, Tormites, Kelemvorites, Mystrans, and men and women of countless other faiths – priests, warriors, wizards -- turned their heads to watch him march by, their contempt spilling out of their hearts and feeding his lust for loathing. Even the noble and valiant paladins could not be immune to the despising that coarsed through nearly every breathing thing in the refugee camp.

    There were some, though, who did not hate him. There were the Banites that answered to him, but there were others... There were children. Many fled from him as soon as he approached, startled by the tall apparition of black and green spiked plate and mail. Some didn't, though.

    The Imperceptor sat on the grass, draped in emerald and obsidian holy vestments, watching a dark haired child stand in the middle of a circle of his peers. They spoke to each other, but they all seemed to turn back to the youth in the middle, eventually.

    Zanetar chuckled; this child was the popular one. With the mumbling of a few words and a wave of his hand, the child was overcome with a uninterrupted desire to approach him. The ebon-headed youngster's friends looked hesitantly between each other as their ring-leader left without a word, eventually deciding through unspoken unanimity to scurry off.

    When the effects of the Command spell wore off, the child did not flee. Rather, he cocked his head at Zanetar. He was intrigued by the mysterious stranger.

    And thus a child found the path to power; a child found The Black Lord.



  • _Sitting on the hill overlooking the city he wonders to himself what has brought him here to fight for the people who had turned him away and banished him from his home. He shakes the thoughts from his head as he knows his duty is to fight for all places in this region, this is his home now and he will not let it fall to anyone. He cracks his neck and checks his armor, looking about at all the other soldiers who were about to charge the walls of Peltarch and probably die in the process. He wondered what went through their minds as they prepared to fight this battle that seemed hopeless. There were so many in the city and so little of them, how could they ever retake the city from such a strong force? He really didnt care, he was a soldier, born and breed for war and this would be his time to either prove himself the warrior he thought he was or to die amongst the crowded streets of the city.

    As the order was given he moved his position to the front of the line and waited for the signal to charge. Looking straight ahead he heard prayers go out to all gods of the people who would fight at his side. Strange how these people who would just as soon kill him for his worship stood at his side now to fight for the same cause. He said a quiet prayer to Bane to give him the strength to win over his enemies and looked back at Nicahh and sideways to Allanon, his two only real friends in life and wondered if he would ever see them again. He pushed that thought from his head and needed to concentrate on the battle about to begin, telling himself that this is war and some will die.

    The signal was finally given and all the soldiers cries filled the air, they charged the gates of Peltarch. The sounds of arrows hitting armor and flesh alike could be heard all over as the mercenaries tried to fell all they could before they even had a chance to make it to the gate. A sudden scream filled his ears and as he turned he saw Nicahh, pierced by several arrows laying dead on the ground. Blood lust filled him at seeing her and as the gates opened he saw the mercenaries burst forth he charged screaming and met them head on along with the others. If he could not save her at least he would avenge her death. Spells struck all over and the sounds of battle and the smell of blood filled the air but they did not relent. Pushing their way throught the gates they headed up stairs that led to the walls to finish off any archers that remained.

    Several more groups of mercenaries came out from the city and many met their ends on the tip of his sword. He had to yet watch his other friend die at the hands of these scum, Allanon, always so confident charged into the heat of the battle, after being hit by spells and swords he had finally fallen to the ground dead. He could not let that worry him right now, at least he did not go easy. After what seemed like an eternity to him they were finally forced to retreat out of the city. Screams of "death magic" filled the air as several people fell quickly. They had taken the outer walls but they could not hold against such a force and so gathered their dead and headed back to the camp. The dead did not lay long before being tended to by the clerics of the city. Anger clouded his mind as he sat looking at his friends bodies laying in the temple. He thought he had failed them, yet he hoped what he had done in the battle would give their deaths some meaning.

    His mind cooled as he saw Nicahh and Allanon walk from the temple. He grabbed a blanket and wrapped it around Nicahh and led her off to sit under the cliff. Sadness filled him in seeing her like this but he needed to be strong. He sat beside her for the night and watched her sleep, he was determined not to fail her again. He would make all those fools pay for what they had done. He could be seen on the hill over-looking the city everyday waiting for the next order to charge and walking around and talking with all the soldiers to keep up their morale. He would see this city back in the hands of the senate even if he wasnt allowed back in. To him this is a personal quest of vengeance now. One he intended to see finished_



  • _Roland watched as distant flames licked the skies above his home. On the battlements and in the streets, the wind drove away black smoke to reveal purple standards, set here and there by loyal soldiers. They were a sign of hope; surrounded, outnumbered, but not yet beaten. The traitors had underestimated the determination of a people fighting for hearth and home. He doubted they would ever truly understand, being mercenaries.

    The whole war had taken on a sort of dreamlike quality. Nothing seemed to make much sense any more. The day before, he had seen the ruins of the commerce district near the main gate. Bodies littered the grand boulevard, the blood of traitors and patriots all flowing together into the choking gutters. They fought over every house, every shop, and each step forward was a small victory in itself. Lives were lost over cobblestones. Invariably, the fighting would rage from door to door until one side was finally reinforced and the other had no choice but to retreat. It was the same all over the city. Organized insanity.

    Of course, everything made perfect sense on paper. Many cities had succumbed to infighting and factional conflict. Indeed, Damara had been fighting a disastrous civil war for years. Still, it was difficult to believe it had happened in Peltarch. One day the historians would try to explain how things had gone awry, but the reasons were almost always the same: greed, pride, ambition. Indifference - how many had known of the gathering storm and failed to act? How many had remained silent at the cost of countless lives?

    Roland concluded that victory would not necessarily bring with it many answers, but victory would have to suffice. He spotted a few stragglers, beaten and bloody, following the assorted group of adventurers that was on its way back to the camp. Night fell on the living and the dead, the heroes and the scoundrels, and it deserved a quiet prayer in thanks.

    "Helm has been kind to us this day…"_



  • A young knight sits in a tent a look of concentration on his face as he carefully writes in a battered journal. He pauses every now and then to think and then adds more words to the page.

    Day One

    _Well twould seem the worst fears wert realised. Whence the meeting hadst begun all seemed well. However twould seem that all was not so after a few short minutes a figure I am told is Koreth entered. He was indeed very rude, he complained of the presence of certain people. He then claimed that the senate hadst no validity and began an attack. He was pushed back. We then made our way to the temple, the streets were aflame as an obviously pre-planned attack was begun. Thankfully due to a prior warning, I with Lady Daisy’s aid had set up a refugee camp. I am so very thankful to the Temple of Lathander and of Helm for their kind aid in this. And I certainly didst not expect to see Lady Rith make the journey, twas very trusting of her to aid so much with so little information I couldst furnish her with. Truly she is one of the best of people. I fret for the fate of the boats I tried to hire to aid in the evacuation and hope that they and their crews and passengers made it safely away before the docks became engulfed in flames. There art many dead and wounded…..so many. Lady Daisy is working all the hours Tyr sends her to aid, others aid as and when they can. Tis said we go to counter attack, I am hopeful that we may yet cut this short.

    That didst not go well…many fell and the defender mercenary’s art well skilled.
    The initial charge was not good, we were hit by many arrows from the walls the the doors burst open and we wert charged. Thanks to Sy’wyn I canst write these words for I was struck repeatedly by arrows….causing me to reel back. His timely healing saved mine life. We then breached the gate and made for the walls. All seemed to be going well. However we hadst not counted upon the numbers of our foes and soon the commons filled with them. We fought on our blade red as the cobbles, wave after wave broke upon us and like the sea the wave began to wear away at the rock. Such acts of bravery and skill from those loyal to Peltarch. Then came a lull, we sought the walls for refuge and the barracks for resting and healing. Our foe came again this time it imployed powerful magics of death…many fell. At this point the order to retreat was given, our troops wert bloodies and bruised many carrying the bodies of fallen comrades.
    Maychance we shouldst seek better understanding of our foe. I am most joyful to see Lady Anna well after the battle twas a worrisome time._

    Day Two

    The camp hath entered a certain routine, the hospital is still sorely tested…poor Daisy. There is talk of a meeting this night to decide our way forward. I am much heartened by the aid that hath come to us from all across the lands. So many brave souls and kind acts. I hath tried to keep the spirits of the refugees from flagging, though twould seem others art not so thoughtful. Damnable Banites. The attacks upon the camp seem to hath stopped there hath been none this day, this is good indeed for the folk here need a chance to rest.
    In fact in some of the quieter moments Sir Sy’wyn didst try and teach me some of the Elvin language.

    The knight pauses saying a phrase in his head….bites the end of the quill and writes again

    Which is beyond mine means to write. Ah here comes Sir Roland…..