Monday, 1 June 2009

The Crown and Trident

Glasur Oakenshield sat in the corner of the tavern, his face subsumed by the hanging shadows cast by the few sparsely distributed candles. As the wind and rain hammered the small panes of the glass in the window next to him, the Dwarf's thoughts escaped the bustling scene of the town's only tavern ... away to the high peaks of his forefathers, to times-past and to revenge. He was forcefully returned to the present when three strange figures emerged through the bolted door, drenched in rain. The whole bar became silent, much as it had when he had entered the place. It seemed as though the local populace didnt see many people from outside of town, or perhaps they didnt want to have any prying eyes.

As the strangers ordered their drinks at the bar, the Dwarf turned his attentions to the tavern itself. It had seemed such a strange building from the outside. Three different styles of architecture merged together, suggesting that three buildings had been knocked together to create the largest building on the main street near the harbour. The smoke from an open fire had disappeared in the rains as soon as it emerged from the chimney, but the glowing flames and conversation had made the place seem slightly more alive than the rest of the town. Inside the building was equally queer. Three different wooden floors, at different elevations, made up the inside of the tavern. Besides this the swirling staff and the glowing hearth could have been found in any establishment in the Empire.

When he had first emerged into the common room of the tavern, he had moved towards the bar, consciously aware of the many eyes following his movement. The owner and proprietor of the tavern was a sour-looking fellow, with a greying beard. Glasur's attempts to engage in conversation with him were rebuffed and each question was answered by one of the three staff who bustled behind the bar. Far happier than their boss, they were quick to provide ale and a meal for the tired traveller, and had shown him to a room on the second floor of the building, with Relina, a buxom blonde barmaid, even offering some snippets of the history of the town. He had returned to his meal as soon as he had deposited his wares in the upper room. Of the roughly two dozen guests in the bar, three had made themselves known to the Dwarf, appearing interested in his merchandise. A half-elf named Terza, and her two human bodyguards, represented the Goldleaf Trading Consortium, a group of traders looking to negotiate a deal with the new Graf regarding the treasures that were believed to lie just off the coast. The conversation with Terza was quickly followed by one with a Matthias Creel (and three bodyguards), another representative of a trading house with similar interests to those of the half-elf, and determined to know as much about the Dwarf as his rival.

But as the Dwarf was finally rid of these commercial types, the three newcomers made their way to the table, and aware of the figure hidden in the shadows, said in confused unison: "May we join you?".

Saturday, 16 May 2009

Old World Justice

Yuviel pulled herself up to the window on the high tower. Having lingered in the shadows after arrival in the great courtyard, she climbed over the rooftops of the small outbuildings made perilous in the storm, but her nimble feet had kept her safe, and the darkness covered her presence. The wind slammed the rain into the small panes of glass and made her grip difficult on the stone ledge. She used her palm to brush aside the raindrops and caught a glimpse of the warm and bustling room inside...

Graf Fersen sat in his faded robes at the high table of what must have been a dining room. To his left and right sat people that were obviously advisers or local bigmen. They leaned over, whispering into the ear of the Graf, their words hidden from the elf by the panes of glass. And all of a sudden, he was convinced. Nodding, he rose from his seat and shouted a command to one of his guards A door was thrown open, and a young boy and girl were pushed to the floor by hidden hands. Both were dressed in the rags of the lowest human classes, there faces covered in dirt and tears. The boy summoned some courage and pulled himself and the girl from the floor, putting a comforting arm around her. Yuviel glimpsed the hint of common heredity in their sharp facial features, possibly brother and sister. But she realised she had been distracted, and returned to the Graf who stood at the place of prominence, roaring at the two feeble creatures as his male companions nodded their approval of his every word. At the clap of the Graf's hands, two guards appeared from the other side of the room and grabbed the humans, dragging them both kicking and screaming through a door at the other end of the room. The Graf returned to his seat, visibly buoyed, and continued in discussion with his companions.

As she continued to peer into the room, the elf felt a sharp pain in her leg, like a ... stone had hit her. She turned her head carefully, trying to keep her grip on the window ledge, and glimpsed movement in the shadows of the courtyard below. The thought that she had been spotted by a guard briefly passed through her mind, but then there had been no shout. Another stone hit her in the back of the arm. She decided to investigate, and dropped down from the window ledge onto a small roof, before leaping to the courtyard two floors down. A perfect landing on the cobbles below brought the applause of a pair of hands visible from the shadows at the rear of the kitchen. A human male voice was audible: "Congratulations on a perfect dismount! Shame that you stuck-out on that window ledge though". The elf shot back defensively: "I would like to see you try such a thing master human, but I guess that I must hand myself over to your liege the Graf as a result of my failings". The man left the safety of the shadows, revealing a tall and well-built man leaning on a large wooden staff about the same height as him. "I serve no master but myself, but I have sworn to save people like those young children that you saw condemned to death this evening for a crime they have not committed", he replied in a serious tone. Before the elf could question him further, a human woman ran out from the kitchen, her long brown curls flowing in the sharp winds and throwing hairs over her olive colored skin. "Time's up Claus, we leave now, I was spotted behind the curtains. The guards will be here in a minute," she said calmly as if this was a common appearance. "And you've not found another admirer have you?", she said as she nodded at Yuviel.

"There will be time for introductions later, but now there are lives to be saved," replied the man, "and now we need to fly". He grabbed Yuviel and the three characters ran for the gates to the house and out onto the mud track that led down into the lights of the town.

Thursday, 16 April 2009

A Damp Beard

"Damned human roads! How do the people of the Empire expect to become a might race on this world if they cannot build a road properly. How the great citadels of my people, carved into the very rock face of the World's Edge Mountains, put this 'engineering' to shame". This complaint, and many more like it, emanated from a travelling tradesman from Altdorf ... who was actually even further away from his real home. Glasur Oakenshield was in fact a Dwarf. As he trundled along the excuse for a road at less than half of his normal pace, the burly, short-tempered and gruff weapon-maker managed to alienate yet another band of potential companions through his eternal complaining.

The complaints stemmed from a deep sense of loss for Glasur and his people. The boundaries of his people had once spread all across the Old World, and their mines covered a similar area beneath the surface. His great forebears had built the weapons that had crushed the demonic forces of the North with the axe and the cannon. Yet his people were drawn into the civil war amongst the elves, eventually turning on their former High Elf allies. His people went on to claim victory in the War of the Beard, but were weakened so much that the hordes of goblins, orcs and trolls that they had once kept at bay were allowed to grow in strength. It was during this time that his fathers moved to the young human lands and rallied behind the great Sigmar Heldenhammer to crush the greenskins at the Battle of Black Fire Pass. The lands of the Dwarves remain to this day a zone of great conflict, in which war is the only form of diplomacy.

Yet the weapons of Glasur's people also found great use in the human lands, where kings armed with the finest Dwarf weapons created and defended the new Empire. The Oakenshield forge in Altdorf gained a great reputation as the weapon-maker of choice for all allied armies. But its production lines halted when many of the original dwarfsmiths returned to their homelands, answering the call of yet another invasion. Glasur was one of the younger dwarfs left behind, and because of his good negotiating abilities and his keen senses, he was designated the role of wandering merchant. For many years he had carried the wares of his forge around the markets of the Empire, hoping to rebuild the reputation and demand for the great dwarf weapons.

It was selling wares that first drew Glasur to the coastal regions of Middenland, and it was the fine examples of his craft that burdened him so, as he pressed ahead along the coastal path. Further and further he pressed until he reached the small gates of Mandredhaven. Like many of the towns that he had stopped at over the course of the past few weeks, the port town was due to hold a small market and fayre in honour of the Spring Equinox and the changing of the tides so important to the maritime community. Glasur noted that the town actually looked better than it had when he had first set his eyes upon the grey and miserable houses. He even discovered that some of the houses and bustling shops in the centre of the town had been made from quarried stone of high quality. People continued to trudge along the thorughfares of the town, some towards what appeared to be a gathering with the local Graf in the castle at the edge of the town.

The lingering odour of fish and of the salts of the sea clung to Glisur's drenched skin and great beard. He approached a young fisherman at the pier and asked if the weather had forced a change of plan for the market-day. The young man stepped out of his boat to the harbour pier, and beamed at the damp dwarf, "Oh no good master dwarf! The festivities for the Spring Equinox remain in place. Although I must say that I'm impressed with your resilient travels on the road. We have heard that some have had to turn back because of the great storm that is rolling in. Perhaps dwindled numbers, but all the more space to display your fine weapons may I say! If you are looking for a place for food and warm shelter this night good sir, I recommend 'The Crown and Trident Inn'. Best fish in the whole area they say. I may even see you in there in a while myself ... once I've dried off that is!" Glisur heeded the young captains advice and made for the local pub. Beer and a fire appealed after a long trek in the wilderness. As he passed through the streets, the local people smiled and doffed their caps to the travelling merchant. In Altdorf, Glisur might have sensed that the people were a bit too happy and welcoming. But in the rain and lightning of this backward part of Middenland, the tired dwarf put it down to too many hours at sea ... or perhaps the humour of seeing a dwarf with a very damp beard.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Castaway

As the old carriage trundled over the steep passes of the Grey Mountains, the odour of faded grandeur lingered in the nostrils of the half-sleeping stranger. Concealed in the rear trunk of the vehicle lay the female elf Yuviel, formerly of the great House Nedliril. Sitting and waiting there, the glorious yet tragic history of her people seemed now mirrored in her fate. Her forefathers had remained in the Old World after the frightful War of the Beard that led the rest of her people to their island home of Ulthuan to fight the menace of the corrupted Dark Elves. Yet the land that they had settled and that she had called home, hidden in the forests of the human kingdom of Bretonnia, seemed so distant now. The privacy of the woodland glades and vast enchantments had sheltered her from the outside world as a young student, but the call of the outside world that had so appealed to her in previous years had now led her here...

It was in the pursuit of wordliness that she fell from grace with her people. Having been dispatched to the great cities of the Empire to learn more of the ways of man, and to learn under the protection of the merchant houses of Ulthuan, Yuviel was enthralled by the ways of the human races - its alien forms of love, hate, knowledge and religion - so much so, that she would spend hours in the markets and lecture halls of the university-city of Nuln, absorbing the queer rituals of the human mind, and developing an understanding and compassion for humanity. It was this growing separation from the secluded merchants of the city that led to the first questioning of her loyalty. Further whispers and word of a blossoming relationship with a human lover led to her recall to the forests at the foothills of the great border mountains. Here her father Cirdale and the council of the forest elders considered her too corrupted to live amongst the lands of the Neldiril any longer, and it was they that cast her out of the woodland realm, cutting her off from the spirit of the forests, and casting the young elf into the rain and squalor of the Bretonnian countryside.

Save for the passing carriage of an Imperial Graf, her life outside of the protective spells of her people may have been a short one. A mob of peasants, angry at the elven resistance to their burning and slaughter in the forests to pay the feudal taxes imposed upon them by the absentee local earl, took exception to the presence of numerous elvish dignitaries on their lands and began a half-hearted and poorly-led assault on the expulsion committee. Whilst the lives of the high-born were never threatened in the skirmish, Yuviel dodged numerous blows from clubs and sweeping scythes to reach the safety of the passing carriage on the nearby road. Leaping aboard the moving vehicle with a grace that resembled that of her forefathers, she concealed herself in the safety of a luggage container, and lay her wet body against clothes and furs that spoke of faded-glory, her tears the closest things to companions on that long evening journey...

The carriage rolled on through the Grey Mountains and across the River Reik into the borders of the Empire itself. The land was so different to that in the outskirts of Nuln! The small agricultural villages that she had explored in better times were so charming, yet here in Middenland the isolated villages clung to the coast for dear life and the roads were lightly travelled. After many days on the road, a cry from the carriage driver informed the rich passengers of arrival at their destination. Creeping out of the box at the rear of the coach, Yuvial climbed to the rear of the vehicle, concealed from the mounted driver by the large bags of luggage lashed to the roof. Peeping over the mound of bags, Yuviel could scarcely see anything for the endless downpour of rain and the black skies under heavy cloud. Flashes of lightning and howling winds added to the apocalyptic feeling of the tempest, and brought memories of that painful night in the fields of Bretonnia flooding back. But as she squinted her eyes more, Yuviel was able to distinguish the outline of a road stretching into the distance. Or more accurately, a river of mud that twisted between the gnarled trees that lined the avenue. As she turned to her left, flashes of light from the gods illuminated the large cliffs along which they were perilously journeying, and made visible the swells that capped the large crashing waves out in the waters below.

Returning her attention to the road ahead, the elf could just see by the brightest of lightning bolts the outline of a town on the horizon. The buildings were low, and appeared crumbled against the onslaughts of the weather. It seemed just like the other towns that they had passed all along the roads of Middenland, but the small peak-like roofs and the flickering night-lights gave the town a sinister appearance, one that made Yuriel uneasy in her stomach. But as the cart rolled on, past several wayfarers laded with goods for what seemed to be a market-day, the elf sank back into the luggage at the rear of the carriage, and wondered if the skin-crawling dread of the place was actually just the onset of a wicked chill from the endless cold and rains that seemed to plague this forsaken coastline...

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

A Letter

My dearest Earl Rivarol,

What a great pleasure it was to spend time in your lands these past few months. Our time together during your ambassadorship in the Reikland remains warm in my memories and in my heart. It was with sorrow that I had to leave your most noble of lands. Our journey from you passed safely and with little to regard, save a small skirmish between the folk of the woodland realm and some of your subjects in the foothills of the Grey Mountains. It appears that one of the elvish creatures was being banished by his people for a crime unknown. Their heathen ceremony of expulsion brought them into conflict with the pious people of your realm - their much vaunted bows were naught when faced with the steel of Bretonnia!

Oh for some of that bravery here in this land, my new prison. What a place they have confined me to! I cannot comprehend the gravity of the offense that I must have caused to the Emperor to be dispatched to this forsaken part of the Empire! My years of loyal service within the walls of Altdorf seem to have gained me no favour in the eyes of Karl Franz. To our friend Hoch, the great estate of Wetzlar in Stirland; to me, a towering ruin over-looking the feral Middenland city of Mandredhaven!

Apparently my skill at taking the import tariffs in the Reikport has seen me sent here. The town braces itself against the winds of the western coast and those that blow along the Reik. The small hovels that the local population call "home" lie squat against the terrible storms that blow out this way. There is little trade along the river now - most of the great trading ships unload their cargo in Marienburg, and the trade to Altdorf has long since avoided these shores. It is strange that the town still exists after this declining fate. The mayor informs me that any other town would have succumbed to it's fate long ago, but Mandredhaven retains its role as an important source of fish and crops for Middenland, despite the poor quality of water and the soil. It is said that Manaan blesses this spot more than any of his other lovers along the coast.

The men-folk are intent on nothing else but ale and women! Where are the people of peace and prestige promised by the Emperor when he dispatched me from his Court? I feel my role here is to be more peace-maker than patron of the arts. Indeed my first affairs in this place are to listen to the case against two street urchins accused of plotting rebellion against the Empire. Typical examples, I fear, of the "loyal citizens of Mandredhaven" presented to me today by the town mayor. They are accused of having some role in the worsening weather and the low tides that have struck the area over the past few months - I fear another round of accusations of demonic patronage may be beginning. Oh how these terrible acts seem to follow me around!

The strains of the past few days journey have taken their tole on my spirit my dear friend. I am called to dinner and bed somewhere in this tower of squalor that they call a castle. Pray keep me in your thoughts.

As ever, I am your faithful servant,

Graf Fersen von Mandredhaven.