The Wanderer's Tale

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Authors: David Bilsborough

BOOK: The Wanderer's Tale
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DAVID BILSBOROUGH
The
Wanderer’s
Tale
ANNALS OF LINDORMYN
VOLUME I

TOR

 

To black sheep, herd-strayers, wanderers, gaps and cunnans the world over; to all those who know a lie when they see it.
To anyone, in fact, who has taken the king’s shilling and shoved it right back down the king’s throat

Let the gods, senators and ministers fight their own useless and bloody wars

 
Contents

Torca Runes

Vade-Mecum

Prologue

ONE The Moot at Wintus Hall

TWO The Dream Sorcerer

THREE The Wanderer

FOUR The Blue Mountains

FIVE The Valley of Sluagh

SIX Wasteland

SEVEN Nym

EIGHT A Flame from the Pit

NINE Dripping Wet

TEN In the Wake of a Snake

ELEVEN 'Armholes, Not Again!'

TWELVE Cyne-Tregva

THIRTEEN Meanwhile . . .

FOURTEEN Entering Eotunlandt

FIFTEEN The Thieves of Tyvenborg

SIXTEEN Eotun Steps Are What You Take

 
Torca Runes

 

 
Vade-Mecum

V
AAGENFJORD
M
AW
. Tower of Darkness. Throne of Evil. Undercroft of the direst rawgr ever unleashed from the vile hands of Olchor.

‘. . . Unholy Trinity of Darke Angels, Archangels

of Olchor, from Hell have been hurl’d;

Scathur the Herald, the Wolf from the Sea, has ris’n
,

now releas’d from his frozen prison
,

and walkes now upon the wyrld.

Gruddna, the Fyr-Draikke, Engine of Destruction, has from the Pit crawllen.

And Drauglir, greatest of them all, from blacken’d sky has fallen
,

Darke Angel descends where the wyrld ends . . .’

Verge of the world, the northernmost rim of the continent, and beyond that the island of Melhus. A land of turmoil, of fire and ice, where the four elements wage constant war with each other. Winds filled with shards of ice scream like a host of rapacious demons from the very heart of Eisholm, terrible enough to flay the skin. Volcanoes there are too, mephitic behemoths of incandescent fury that cough great pyroclastic clouds upon the seething ice-fields below.

‘. . . For Evil has forg’d its Avatars, and rais’d itself a tower, a kingdom of pestilence, a domain of resplendour infyrnal, and woulde reache oute its claws o’er this wyrld, Lyndormyn (whose carapace yet be so perniciously infest’d), rain in blood o’er lesser orders, and besmear its illimitable darkness o’er all . . .’

Vainglorious in their darksome apotheosis, the unholy trinity judge that heaven will suffer them to go unchallenged:

‘. . . But the clash o’ firmaments resounds, like the baying of Heaven’s Houndes, o’er the beshiver’d ice of the Wyrld’s Bounds, continent’s jagged rim. For we came, warriors grim, Pel-Adan’s finest, in numbers undream’t of in this age or the last . . .’

Vanguard of Unferth-wielder, banners held high, horns blaring in defiance, the multitude of knights valiant journey to the land of fire and ice in ships beyond counting. Relentless, they storm the Maw, thrust on through the Moghol and arrive at last unto Smaulka-Degernerth, the Hall of Fire:

‘. . . Then, earth-shaken, Gruddna did awaken, its coils unfurl’d, and haul’d its scaly bulk from the Underwyrld. Its head uprear’d thru the ebon smog, eyes flash’d like bescarletted stars thru fog, unfolded its wings, wall to wall, o’er the Hall o’ Fyre . . .’

‘Valour! Valour! We can do this. Just keep your eyes peeled for its weak spot, then shoot without hesitation. Don’t hang about!’

‘. . . Thru visor’d helm ’gainst the awful glare did we stare, and the hostages we now saw, hung spiked upon pinions’ claw, the Oghain-Yddiaw, eyelids peel’d bare to afforde them no shield ’gainst the light so bright, blinding them of sight, steaming eyes milky-white . . .’

‘Vizards down! It’s coming in for another sweep . . .
Oh Hell!

‘. . . With a roar that splinter’d this glassy hole, and lay our legions low as a field of hay, upon us the fiery juggernaut did roll. In a rush of beating wings that drove befor it the blackness of Hell’s bowel, the nectar of its maw disgorg’d ’pon our ranks an ichor so foul, which then did kindle from the river of fyre to engulf us all . . .’

Victims now, some have time to scream then die, some to melt into mire, others merely to vanish into vapour.

Oaths, though, have been taken, votive entreaty that can be broken only upon most terrible retribution.

‘. . . In that hall in multitudes did we fall, building a wall of blacken’d flesh, crisp’d meat, a dike of dead, insufferable heat. Yet thru befouling waftings of opiate smoke, tho reel we might, and scream and choke, our crossbows were let fly, loud as tempest’s cry, and the air did sigh with the breath of God . . .’

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