Thursday, July 01, 2004

New CotW

Chapter I





Dusk had fallen like
a dusty gray cloak about the shoulders of the dark mountain. A streak
of crimson sun showed on the horizon, the last glory of the setting
sun. Its bright white flanks all but drowned in the shadow of the
mountain, a single pegasus flapped broad, feathered wings frantically
against the cold winds. Clinging close to its back, low in the
saddle, was a man, his form muffled by his white cloak and hood. The
winds beat against the pair, making white mane, tail, and cloak
flutter wildly. White feathers were plucked by the wind, whipped
mercilessly about in the air.


Framed bright
against the black stones of the double-peaked mountain, the pair
struggled for their lives against the tempestuous, howling winds.
Ahead was the entrance they were looking for; tendrils of warmth were
whipped about in the air as they slipped through the entrance. A hot,
red glow emanated from the hole, promising an escape from the
wind-whipped mountain.


“Look, Ramal:
the smoke from the furnaces of Parnassus! He is at work now, forging
the sword that will…” The cloaked man’s young,
strong voice carried on as his winged mount nodded silently and set
silver eyes on the view above. The two sharp peaks of the mountains
poured forth pillars of dark smoke. As the two neared the entrance
and Ramal answered his master quietly, a steady, pounding clash
became audible, loudest at the entrance but seeming to reverberate
throughout the whole mountain.


At last, after
almost an hour of struggling against the harsh winds, the pegasus’s
silvery gray hooves stood firmly on the small ledge outside the
entrance. Dismounting, the man clung to the stones as he eased his
way over to the entrance. A sudden gust of wind knocked his hood and
filled up his cloak, threatening to tear him off of the mountainside
and send him hurtling down to his death. His visible breath coming in
ragged gasps, the tendrils of vapor carried away swiftly by the
winds, Ramal lunged, wings folded against his sides, and his ivory
white teeth snapped down on his master’s cloak hem, pulling him
back against the side of the mountain.


Gasping as tiredly
as his mount, the cloaked man patted Ramal’s back in thanks and
ducked through the entrance, followed by the white pegasus. Both had
saved each other’s lives so many times that they scarcely
thought of it now.


Illuminated by the
burning red glow, a massive figure stood before an iron anvil that
was at least as tall as Ramal. His pale, bulging flesh, scarred by
many sparks, and protected only by a linen loincloth, covered
powerful muscles. Even the giant’s hands were not protected by
gloves; Parnassus was fully in tune with his craft and worked by the
sound, smell, feel, and sight of his metal. Tiny ears were
accompanied by a single, large, yellow eye located just above the
bridge of his short, ugly nose.


“Fear not,”
said the man. The wind had revealed a young, perfect face with pale
golden, almost white hair and silvery eyes like Ramal’s, but
there was a sense of power and authority in those eyes, and beams of
golden light burst from his clothes and skin. Parnassus dropped his
hammer and covered his eye fearfully with both hands. “Greetings,
Parnassus. I have been sent to check on your work.”


Still frightened of
the radiant being, the ugly cyclops uncovered his face and picked up
his hammer with a trembling fist. “The work goes well, my lord.
It will be finished by winter,” Parnassus said in a voice deep
and low but stuttering slightly.


Seemingly hesitant,
the white-cloaked young man at last said, “You are to take it
to him yourself, Parnassus.”


With a slight sigh,
the cyclops nodded. “As you wish. Excuse me, my lord; Ares! The
blade is finished!” A smaller cyclops deeper in the cave
standing by a shorter anvil took the beaten blade with his tongs and
began his work. Parnassus shouted again, “Animethus! Bring food
and drink for our guest!” At last he turned back to the glowing
man and his mount. “I began work on the blade right away and
have just finished it. Now Ares will make the quillons, and then he
will pass it on to Disares, who will fashion a handle and pommel for
it and last of all I will…er…ah, here is Animethus. I
must apologize for the lack of proper seating, but if I use a smaller
boulder I can make you a cyclops seat and table.”


The young man found
himself seated on a smooth boulder about half his size, covered with
goatskins, before a table fashioned a stone slab with four stones for
legs. He and Ramal feasted on an abundance of goat’s meat,
goat’s milk, and fried mushrooms, served on skillfully crafted,
silver platters, or in the case of the milk, in silver goblets. Ramal
had not spoken to Parnassus at all or to any of the other cyclopes
except to quietly thank Animethus, and his master seemed not to
notice Parnassus’s awkward hesitance in telling him of the
process of making the sword. He had looked strangely sad since the
cyclops’s blunder, though, and Ramal wondered inwardly what it
was all about.











It was warm for an
autumn day. The sun brightened the reds, oranges, and yellows of the
leaves. Two boys traveled across the plains northeast, towards Redrin
Forest, their clothing blending in with the grasses. Several miles in
the direction opposite to that which they were going was their
village. To the west and the south were broader plains, expanding
eventually west to the Great Sea; centaurs roamed those plains, and
even here in the smaller plains between their village and Redrin
Forest they would have to be careful of the half-horse tribe-beasts.


One boy was shorter
than the other, and wore an olive green tunic, reaching almost to his
knees and belted at the waist. Although they were traveling across
open plains then, the two would soon reach the dense forest, so he
was armed with both bow and dagger; the bow and quiver were slung at
his back, and the dagger was sheathed at his belt alongside his
pouch. In length, the bow was somewhere between a longbow and a short
bow, crafted by the boy himself out of ash wood. The dagger was a
simple affair with a long, tapering, steel blade and sturdy wooden
handle. Alongside his bow and quiver of arrows, which were fletched
with harpy feathers obtained on previous expeditions, was a pack with
provisions.


The other, taller
boy was similarly attired, but his tunic was a dull yellow and his
bow and dagger were more skillfully made. His arrows, too, were
fletched with the dark brown wing feathers of a harpy. Unlike his
companion’s dark brown hair, his was dirty blond.


Thus equipped, the
two friends, both around seventeen years, walked beneath the warm sun
through the grass towards the forest. Both boys were too tired to
talk, and trudged wearily on. It was only a little less than a
quarter of a mile to Redrin Forest. At last, after a silent, sweaty
walk across the short distance remaining, they reached the shade of
the trees. Many of them were aspens or birches, whereas the trees of
Taurus Wood to the east of their village had more oaks and elms.
Arelas, the shorter boy in the green tunic, sat down with an
exhausted sigh, his back against an aspen tree. Eldan, his friend,
sat beside him, producing an apple from his pack and slicing and
coring it quickly with his dagger. Both boys munched contentedly on a
half of the red apple as they talked.


“It’s a
bit late for lunch,” commented Arelas.


“This isn’t
lunch, Arel’ – we already had lunch,” Eldan
reminded him.


“Oh yes. I
forgot,” chuckled Arelas.


“Sure you
did,” teased Eldan.


Ignoring the jibe,
Arelas finished chewing before saying, “I wonder what we’ll
have for supper. I hope it isn’t cabbage, again. What I need is
some harpy meat.”


Eldan laughed.
“That’s disgusting…harpy meat.”


“I wonder what
the worst thing they eat is,” mused Arelas, happy that Eldan
had laughed at his joke.


“Probably
spiders and dead centaurs,” joked Eldan.


“Dead
centaurs…now there’s a thought. But they wouldn’t
dare fly over the plains – they’d get shot down by
centaurs in the blink of an eye,” said Arelas.


“I was
joking,” said Eldan, annoyed at his friend’s slowness.

Chronicles of the World Plot

Okay, there’s a
few basic parts to the plot. For your…convenience they
have been “bulleted”. (Actually, they’re
thingamabobs, not bullets, but, what the heck.)





~Angel is checking
on Parnassus’s progress: Parnassus is making a sword for Janal


~The Chosen One is to
be descended from Erethir


~Arelas is deeply in
love with Limuel, but she gets captured by the undead


~Samael is making a
huge army of undead to kill Erethir


~Janal is gathering a
few adventurers to go carry off Erethir and take him overseas


~King Dannor doesn’t
want Erethir to leave because he’s worried and doesn’t
trust Janal


~King Dannor is
gathering an army to make a last stand against the undead


~Arelas sets off to
rescue Limuel


~Parnassus sets off to
deliver sword to Janal


~Angel sets off alone
to confront Samael


~Erethir is killed
before Janal can kidnap him


~Parnassus reaches
Janal and delivers sword


~Samael’s undead
besiege King Dannor and his army at the last castle


~Korma also loved
Limuel and is slain by undead on his way to rescue her


~Eldan, Arelas’s
old friend, sets off to find Arelas


~Limuel is killed and
Arelas meets Janal and they set off to join in the last stand


~Eldan finally reaches
him to tell of Korma’s death and join Arelas


~Arelas is sorry for
stealing Limuel’s heart away from Korma and sets off to honor
him


~Undead, King Dannor,
Janal, and Parnassus all meet in great battle


~Eldan has set off
after Arelas. They pay respects to Korma together before setting off


~King Dannor,
Parnassus, and Janal are killed


~Undead win battle, led
by Samael’s servant Gronakh


~Eldan and Arelas reach
desolate battlefield with renewed strength from fulfilling quest


~Eldan and Arelas are
devastated


~Though Erethir is
dead, undead prepare to take over the rest of the world


~Angel defeats Samael
temporarily but dies doing so


~Arelas kills Gronakh
in the wake of their retreat


~Arelas and Eldan try
to survive in the decapitated world and one day receive good news…

Chronicles of the World

Chapter I





The white,
brown-dappled flanks of the stallion heaved as he galloped on, up the
scree-covered slope of the mountain. Whipped about by the wind, the
horse’s black and white mane and tail went from being flattened
against its body to pluming in the wind. A gray-green cloak billowed
out as well, fastened at the rider’s throat by two buttons.
Spilling over the buttons and throat of the man was a long, white
beard, long enough to reach his knees; but instead of doing so, the
wispy beard, too, was blown wildly about by the winds.


Heat and red light
radiated from a small, narrow opening in the mountain at the top of
the slope, but its warmth was almost unnoticeable amidst the cold,
fierce air of the dark, stony mountain. The old man drove his horse
on. The stallion’s hooves slipped on a patch of loose soil, but
at a command from the rider’s lips the horse moved on, its
movement suddenly unhindered by loose scree and soil. At last the two
reached the entrance. It was almost a head shorter than the man, and
just wide enough for his horse to squeeze through. After a few
moments of struggling and pushing, the old man and his mount were
inside.


Now a sound that had
been tugging at the back of the man’s mind became almost
overwhelmingly loud: the sound of iron on iron, a steady, single,
reverberating clash that resounded every two seconds or so; and now
the old man saw what he already knew had been generating the warm,
promising glow: an iron anvil and furnace, over which bent a huge
figure, humanoid in shape and standing more than ten feet high. This
figure’s massive arm swung up and down, its fist clutching the
handle of a hammer which smashed down on a red-hot metal blade, held
in place by iron tongs which were gripped in the colossus’s
left hand.


“Greetings,
Parnassus, from Mellar son of Tamuil,” said the old man. His
voice reflected on his tall, straight, thin body, strong and steady
but not as deep as the voice that would answer him.


The giant’s
single eye, located just above the bridge of his short, ugly nose,
turned to stare fixedly at Mellar. He continued his work as he
answered the old man, so skilled and practiced that he could forge
the blade without looking at it when needed. “Greetings, Mellar
son of Tamuil; well met,” Parnassus said in a voice low and
deep but somewhat quiet. With that, the cyclops’s yellow eye
turned back to his work.


Mellar looked
Parnassus up and down before answering. The cyclops was huge and
muscular, but his flesh was thick and bulging, and not a very pretty
sight, scarred where sparks had landed on it. He wore only a
blackened loincloth of once-white linen – even his burly hands
were bare and not covered by gloves, for Parnassus was fully in tune
with his life’s occupation, and worked by the smell, sound, and
feel of his metal as well as the sight of it. At last the old man
spoke again, raising his voice to be heard above the din, “How
goes your work?”


The cyclops did not
look back at Mellar as he answered, “It goes well.” Then,
after a brief pause, he added, “The sword will be finished by
the winter.”


The old man resisted
the urge to escape the burning heat and replied, “So I know by
my holy arts; and may its strength warm both the winter’s snow
and the hearts of men. I will send him to you when it is finished.”


Evidently knowing
whom Mellar meant by “him”, Parnassus looked worried
briefly as his eye returned to the old man. “Can you not come
yourself?” he said, keeping his gaze on Mellar as the man
answered.


“He must come
for it himself, Parnassus. He will not betray you,” Mellar said
firmly.


Parnassus sighed and
looked back to his work.


Mellar brought the
end of his staff down on the stone floor. “May it be well with
you, Parnassus. You must fulfill this task!” the old man
shouted before turning back and going out once again into the cold
winds, goading his horse before him.


Inside the cavern,
sparks flew as Parnassus beat the metal.












Wednesday, June 30, 2004

Races of the World

Centaur


Half
horse and half human, the centaurs are the most savage of the Elder
Races. They feed on raw meat and are skilled at bringing down their
prey with re-curved short bows, composites of strange woods and horn.
The centaurs live in tribes, each tribe having its own distinctive
tattoos. Although the centaurs are also the most primitive of the
Elder Races, they can forge metal and wear light helmets and some
armor on their arms, as well as round, wooden shields, covered in
steel, and short, iron swords.





Harpy








Man








Minotaur


Although
at first glance the minotaurs may appear to be stupid brutes,
minotaur warriors have a deep sense of honor and justice; and
although most minotaurs are somewhat slow-thinking





Pegasus








Satyr








Silenus








Siren