| Aluvians
Gharu'ndim
Sho
Ispar
History
Auberean
History
Texts
Rumors |
From the
Through
Sacrifice, Strength event.
 |
Our Bitter Winter |
|
The translated journal of the ancient
slave Farelaith. |
|
Value |
0 |
|
Burden |
200 |
|
Pages |
15 of 15 pages full. |
I do not know what madness it was that possessed us to follow Grael. I could
see the madness and the rage burning in his eyes, his terrible red eyes. I
feared the bloodlust that came over him in the gladiatorial pits. My
brothers all worshipped him for his strength and his ferocity, and for how
he never seemed to let his enslavement bow his head. The pit-masters used
all their tricks on Grael, the same tricks they had used to break my will
and the will of all the other slaves. On Grael, however, it had no effect.
We assumed it was because he was too simple and brutal to understand. I know
now that is not the case.
This savage outlander somehow managed to conceal his true nature from the
pit-masters. Perhaps the pit-masters were not eager to interfere with their
new star attraction. The northern barbarian's savage spectacles filled the
seats time after time, and the Queen herself became a regular attendee of
the combats. Grael's fights became high fashion. And it seemed a common
assumption that such a fierce warrior would, of course, be simple to
control. They never suspected how much cold cunning lurked behind those
burning eyes.
Perhaps I was flattered when Grael came to me in private and asked me, in a
halting but understandable accent of our language, to join the rebellion he
planned. I know now that Grael had noticed how well my brothers fought
together, and how my brothers looked to me for guidance outside of the
bloody fighting pit. He knew that my three brothers, under my direction,
would serve a valued purpose in an operation that demanded coordination and
intelligence.
When we won our freedom from the pit with the takeover of the arena and the
monstrous execution of the Queen, another fear struck me. I realized that we
were still just a band of slaves loose in the capital of one of the world's
great kingdoms; a kingdom that had destroyed my village, enslaved my
brothers, and had similarly eradicated Grael's own fearsome tribe of
warriors. We had killed our masters, but our masters' masters, I knew, would
come upon us with terrible wrath. I knew what the royal wizards were capable
of.
So over the protests of my brothers, I decided we should separate from Grael
and the rest of the rebel slaves immediately after we left the arena. We
took advantage of the first few days of confusion in the city and fled to
the coast. As we escaped the city, we did see the pillars of fire streaking
down from the heavens to burn away the remainder of the rebels. Little did
we know that Grael had escaped, as well. I do not know how he did it. All I
know is that the rebels perished in a fiery maelstrom, and Grael lived on.
For our own part, my brothers and I escaped to the coast. Convinced that we
were being chased by royal guards, we found a ship in a small fishing
village south of the capital and put out to sea. That may have been our
first mistake, because not one of us knew anything about ships or sailing.
We were quickly carried out to sea, beyond sight of land. I no longer know
how long we drifted. I know that I succumbed to heat and thirst before my
brothers did, and that they kept me alive through my weakness.
We finally reached solid ground, parched of thirst and delirious from
exposure, on an unknown shore. Luckily, we landed near a river mouth. Fresh
water and game brought down by Korogaith's axe restored us to our health. We
took some time to explore the new land upon which we found ourselves. Shore
and the distant mountains seemed to have a dark and terrible energy about
it, visible in the sight of the learned. I attributed my misgivings,
however, to the lingering effects of our ordeal. I was more worried about
the coming winter, which could [sic] quite lethal as far north as we were.
We headed inland, to a forest we could see in the distance. We knew that the
woods would provide us with fire and shelter to keep us warm, and fruit and
game to keep us fed. If we survived the winter, we thought we could keep
going long enough to get our bearings and search out our old homeland, far
to the south. On our journey inland, Korogaith found the trail of another
traveler in the woods. Determined to keep all threats in front of us, I
decided we should track this other wayfarer and see what he, she, or it was
about.
That was another mistake. Because after our third day of following this
trail, our quarry came upon us in the night, though we'd gone to pains to
conceal our presence and lit no fires. The shadow that came out of the
darkness to us was Grael himself, untouched by the fiery doom that had
befallen our erstwhile slave brethren. Grael seemed to be glad to see us,
and expressed enthusiastic relief and pleasure at finding us again. He told
us he did not think less of us for fleeing, since he did the same just two
days later. He congratulated us for being crafty enough to survive the city
and to make our way to this new land.
Grael was very enthusiastic about the wild place in which we'd found him. He
named it a land of power, crisscrossed with lines of magical essence. He
said that a voice in the dark called him north, to a source of true power.
The voice promised him revenge. This time my brothers would not be swayed.
We joined Grael in his pilgrimage north to find the voice which spoke to
Grael in the darkness, even as winter advanced upon the land. I did not wish
to follow Grael, but neither did I wish to be left behind. I knew I would
not survive a winter in this untamed land on my own.
The first snowfall came in the dark moon, just a few days after we rejoined
with Grael. He kept leading us implacably northward, and not even waist-deep
snowdrifts would slow his progress. My brothers and I were content to move
through the wide wake he cleared. The day after the first snowfall was
bitterly cold. Even wrapped in furs provided by the game Grael and my
brothers brought down, I was barely able to stand up straight in the
bone-deep chill. I fell into a stupor, automatically lifting one foot after
the other through frozen snow drifts as my mind retreated from the world.
I came to under the dark moon. Neither Grael nor my brothers were visible,
but I could make out an eldritch glow in the woods ahead. Whether it was
hallucination or no, I could see terrible shapes forming, vanishing, and
re-forming in the weird light. I crawled forward, unable to resist the
desire to look upon this evil spectacle. Eventually I came upon a clearing
in the woods. I found Grael and my brothers there.
Grael was suspended off the ground, arms stretched to the dark moon above.
His eyes were glowing as vividly as they had when he'd eaten the Queen's
heart. He was calling out in a guttural tongue, and tendrils of darkness
were forming around him, wrapping around him, extending outward from him...
Toward my brothers. My brothers were kneeling on the frozen ground around
Grael, bathed in the unholy light of the gladiator's transformation.
Baranaith was the first victim of the living tendrils. As the darkness
wrapped around him, he screamed. It was a sound unlike any I had ever heard
him make. The terror in his wail shook me, and I closed my eyes and fell
face-first into the snow, paralyzed. I felt as if some great, malevolent
power had snatched up my brother, and was seeking me out. Then Korogaith's
voice joined his, and so too the voice of strong Hiranaith. My three
brothers were dying or being subjected to the most unholy torment, and I was
too frozen with terror to help them.
When the screaming stopped, I fled. I crawled at first, and then terror lent
strength to my limbs. I made my way to my feet by hoisting myself up the
side of a gnarled and twisted tree. I ran then, as far as my legs would take
me. In my fear of Grael, I did not even look back to see what had become of
my brothers.
-Farelaith |
See the
Temple of
the Stirring Shadow for details.
|