The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 23   The Warlord At War

The Army at the Tower of Vordurus was the largest on the Frontiers, for Brandar had made it so, bringing forces from Baertunas and Angust, and Domosus and Cwellan, and many other places besides.  And he awaited yet additional forces from Baersunthas and Askondor, though he could not hope for more as he was certain all of the Borders north to south were about to come under dreadful attack, which came to be so.

This Tower was located where the Jungle and the Forest met and mingled, though the trees thereabouts, of many kinds, were thinly spaced.  And Brandar divided his forces into three Legions of ten Regiments each, where the Second and Third Legions were positioned upon Lands west of the Tower, while the First he placed around the Tower itself, where he would conduct the defense from its top so that he could survey the Lands from its very great height  --  for upon a clear day he could look from there far into the Forest westwards even without his Elven rod-of-far-seeing.  And with him upon the Tower stood Tomas and the ever faithful Baeren, but also a few trusted Soldiers Brandar used as messengers and aids.

The trouble began one morning when storms moving in swiftly from the west dropped hail upon the region and brought thunderous lightening which set both Jungle and Forest aflame in many places, and where the hail or the lightening killed or wounded many a Soldier.  Then terrible whirlwinds came down from the north; ripping up wide swaths of trees and throwing them upon the Army, while large numbers of Soldiers were carried off by the winds.  And Brandar lost so many men to these storms that most of the North Legion and half of the Tower Legion were slain or swept away.  Indeed, the winds tossed men so high that some disappeared from sight.  And while many a body was later recovered, some of them several leagues away, hundreds of those poor Sereghran were never again seen in the lands of living Men.

With the passing of the hail and lightening and whirlwinds there came heavy rain that lasted several hours, and which, to Brandar’s relief, put out the fires.  And as the rain began to dwindle in the afternoon, at which Brandar commenced to direct the reordering of his forces, a great and nasty flock of winged monsters dropped suddenly from the sky and so fiercely attacked the Tower and its defenders that Brandar and Tomas and Baeren must fight vigorously to keep the Tower from being overwhelmed, while several of the Soldiers there who had not descended quickly enough into the safety of the Tower were thrown from the tower or else clutched by the monsters and carried off.

Here were all of those kinds of creatures which Jesan had encountered but also many more; among them great vampire-bats and ugly Harpies, and strange beasts like the long-toothed Tigers the Emissaries had seen in Dolgondil, but with wings.  And in the midst of this ominous flock flew a horrible Gryphon so huge that it could not have landed upon the Tower without breaking it, should it have desired to do so.

These, together with rat-vultures and Drakes, and Wind Demons and other vile creatures, assailed the Army with devastating effect.  But the Wizard Calaren, by his great magical arts, flew up to meet the Gryphon in the sky and there did battle with it; grappling with it, and smiting it many times with blasts of mystic energy until at last they both fell to their ruin amongst the trees two furlongs to the north of the Tower.

And Brandar, witnessing the fall of Calaren, even as he fought, considered this a tremendously sore loss; wondering what he was going to do without the great Mage.  But lo, Calaren suddenly appeared out of the wrack, flying unhurt into the air to fight then undaunted against the Demons and the Drakes.  And when the Soldiers beheld this they gave shouts of joy and of victory, and fought all the more bravely.

Of course, the monsters soon learned to stay clear of the Tower on whose top stood Brandar and Tomas and General Baeren wielding their magical swords from which they sent lightening-bolts and blasts of flame and other energies so deadly that even Wind Demons were felled by them.  And Calaren was flying to and fro slaying the worst of the winged-ones, and therefore saving many a Soldier.  Yet, just when the men upon the ground began to believe that they may at last get the upper hand there came armies of Durwolc from the Forest, like to a rapidly moving migration of insects, and which attacked with such fury that it would not have been believed if it had not been experienced by the men who fought there.  Then did Brandar from his vantage behold the extent of the forces coming against him, as evening was coming on, and thus did he lose any hope that aid would come in time  --  for even should he yet have had his entire Army intact he would nonetheless have been hopelessly outnumbered.

Here were all manner of Durwolc, such as Gobba and Kobo, and Gress and Trollo, and Giants, and many other monsters; among them Minotaurs wielding axes, and Werebeasts of different breeds, and Alphyn, like huge mutated lions so swift and strong that no number of Soldiers not holding some sort of magic could slay even one.  But worse yet, crushing everything in its path, including the Durwolc, was a great Basilisk Dragon so enormous that the ground trembled beneath it.

Seeing this, Brandar sent Tomas to fight with the Dragon but Baeren he sent to take command of what remained of the Tower Legion; solemnly asking him to make ready to move his forces westward at command.  Then did the two salute Brandar and went down to do their duty, knowing that it could very well mean their doom.

Tomas thus challenged the Basilisk, and they fought long with no quarter while night fell.  But as it seemed neither could slay the other, with many combatants upon both sides being trampled by the Dragon, Brandar was determined to go himself to assist his countryman when the winged monsters renewed their assault upon the Tower; having noticed that Tomas and Baeren were now occupied elsewhere.  And Brandar was hard pressed to keep the Tower clear of those creatures.

Then Brandar, as was his nature, went mad with fury and by the skill that was his alone repulsed the vermin of the airs, freeing the skies above the Tower just as Calaren was chasing away northwest above the battlefield his own winged foes.

Coming down from the Tower Brandar had Baeren reordeer those Regiments that remained near the Tower such that once again did they surround the Tower, though their ring of defense was much smaller than that which had been formed earlier by the Legion.  Then Brandar went to aid Tomas as Calaren continued to fly this way and that, directing and assisting the embattled Soldiery beneath him while the fighting upon land about the Tower continued chaotic and bloody. 

By the magicks of his sword, Beliscaertos, Brandar hacked through the enemy and came to where Tomas ferociously contended with the great Basilisk.  And together the Northrons slew the beast, at which all of the nearby Soldiers cheered and praised them while the enemy there fell back in surprise.  But the two went back to the Tower grounds and met up with Baeren, so that the three renewed their formidable team and went about slaying score upon score of the Durwolc, and the Minotaurs and Alphyn, and a great many other monsters, while the unconquerable Calaren continued directing the defense from above, keeping the sky free of winged creatures.  Then did it seem that the tide had now turned and the Sereghran began to take heart and so fight all the more hardily.

Thus was the Grypon brought down and the Basilisk slain and the Tower saved, and the advantage in numbers of the enemy was also greatly reduced.  Yet, the Warlord’s Army was now down to a third of its former size, and remained surrounded upon all sides to half a league deep in all directions.  What is more, there came more of the Giants, and with them Mages who, to the surprise of all in the Warlord’s Army, appeared to be Men.  And by this it was assumed that the Mages were evil Sereghren, mayhap possessed and therefore enslaved to the Demon Lord just as Duke Vastus had been.

Therefore, at the first sign of magical attacks, Brandar ordered a retreat to the Fortress of Baertunas; deeming that retreating into the Tower would be but to trap them all therein with no chance of escape.  Now, however, only he and Tomas and Baeren remained of the higher-ranking Officers, though the increadible flying Calaren was yet overhead, assailing the enemy’s Mages and thwarting as many of their attacks as he could manage.  Then Brandar asked Tomas to protect the north flank and called to Calaren to defend the south flank while Baeren he asked to remain in the rear of the retreating Army, so that Brandar may cleave a way forward through the enemy, going east into the Jungles; aiming to reach the road to Baertunas.

Loath was Brandar to ask Baeren to fall back, knowing that it was a sure sentence of death.  Yet, he believed Tomas and Calaren would be the most effective at defending his flanks, leaving Baeren to command the Soldiers unfortunate enough to be caught in the rear.  But Baeren took the request in stride, embracing the task with the utmost urgency, and turned to go and command the defense of the Army’s rear.

Leading a frenzied assault eastwards, Brandar again literally carved for himself a path through the enemy’s ranks to provide an escape for his remaining forces.  And that would be held as one of the Warlord’s most valorous of deeds, for the enemy were as thick as maggots upon a long-dead carcass, and never flinched at being slain by the dour Northron; while the night was full wrought, though for a while the Moons lit Brandar’s way and he was glad of it.  Yet, just as Brandar was breaking through, after hours of fighting, the stars and Moons were covered by a darkness coming swiftly from the West.

So it was that Brandar must abandon the Tower to the enemy and make his way to the Fortress of Baertunas, owing that no aid would arrive soon enough to save him.  But when finally he broke free of the enemy he ordered his men to run hurriedly upon the road while he went then back himself to lend aid to the harried Baeren.

Too late did Brandar arrive at the rear of his forces, for as he came within sight of Baeren he beheld the heroic Sereghran being hewn down by a great press of axe-wielding Trollo, with the aid of one of the enemy’s Mages.  And there was nothing Brandar could do to save his friend, not even to take his vengeance upon that Mage and the Trollo, for Baeren was too far away, with many Soldiers between, and the enemy was attacking the retreating Army as never before.  Then many enemy Mages came forth and began to slay Soldiers in ever greater numbers, while the enemy brought torches with which to see their victims in the night.  Thus was Brandar forced to go forth in opposition to the Mages, using Beliscaertos to blast them with the great mystic force of his sword.  And he held the enemy long enough for Tomas and Calaren to funnel the rest of the Army into the Jungle upon the road to Baertunas, at which the two joined Brandar to keep the enemy back while the Soldiers escaped.  And they all came at last to Baertunas, having gone without rest for two more nights and days within the gloom of a stiffling darkness from the West.

Right ill-fated were Baeren and the Soldiers who fell with him, protecting the retreat of their fellows.  And they were later named the “Nobel Rear Guard”.  By their sacrifice Brandar was able to get the remains of his Army into the Jungle, too dense for the enemy to pursue in waves; forced therefore to follow as they could upon the road.

Brandar and Tomas, and the amazing Calaren, kept the enemy from continuing to attack the rearward Soldiers so that they all made it wearily at long last to Baertunas with little further loss.  Yet, the enemy never ceased their pursuit and poured out to surround the Fortress as soon as Brandar and Tomas had entered, shutting its great Western Gate, while Calaren flew above and kept away flying enemies in the sky which had come and flown over the Jungle, keeping the fleeing Soldiers in sight.

The Army of Baertunas had been sent under Jesan’s command to the Border due west of Kombros but for a few Companies Jesan had sent to Vordurus, so the Fortress was left with but a small Army of the People’s Brigades; mostly younger Sereghran from nearby towns and villages, ordered to wait there as reserves under the command of Duke Flaven.  And these were astounded to see the Warlord himself arriving with a frighteningly reduced Army, pursued by what seemed an endless number of Durwolc flowing out of the Jungle from the westward road.  Furthermore, the Warlord’s coming to Baertunas offered to him only a brief respite, for there came such an assault that clearly the old stronghold would offer no lasting refuge, so vast were the enemy’s forces.

The siege of Baertunas lasted several nights and days without interruption, in which the Durwolc launched wave upon wave of attacks; throwing up ladders made from wood they cut from the Jungle, and grappling-hooks with ropes they must have brought with them, and digging tunnels to go beneath the wall, and then bringing great siege towers which they rolled up on wheels to overcome the wall.  And it was counted an awesome feat that the Brigadiers held back the enemy for so long, at first, while the remnant of the Warlord’s Army obtained a day of rest.  For even Brandar and Tomas and Calaren must get some sleep, lest they fall from sheer exhaustion.

Nevertheless, the defenders cause was hopeless, and most of those Brigadiers perished, for there came more of the Wind Demons which swooped down unlooked for to assail the Sereghran atop the outer wall, though Flaven and Calaren were able to keep them from flying into the Fortress itself.  Yet, there came also more Giants wielding great mauls with which they railed against the Gates, while Trollo carried in logs used as battering-rams against the man-sized side doors.

Then tramped many huge Thunder-Lizard Dragons which went about tearing down places in the outer wall itself, even some of the wall’s watchtowers.  And in these ways the enemy broke through and entered the grounds within.  But with that, Brandar ordered his meager forces to retreat into the Inner Compounds and shore up its doors as best they could.  Then Brandar placed Flaven and Calaren in command of the defense of the inner walls while he and Tomas went to make a stand upon the newly rebuilt roof of the Great Hall.  And back-to-back Brandar and Tomas contested the Wind Demons and slew them by the score or drove them away by the power of their swords in an astonishing display of adeptness at using their magicks.  Then the two cleared completely the skies above the Fortress from all winged monsters.  And so did the Northrons bring pause to the siege as Flaven and Calaren, by their own great magicks, were preventing the enemy from breaching the inner walls and the side doors.

Even so, the Fortress would not stand much longer without aid coming soon in great numbers.  But of that, Brandar had little hope, though he knew, from his Aefarin, that help was indeed on the way.

Of a sudden, enemy drums and horns heralded the coming of the dark Dragon of the Forest himself, Balkurmis, whose name means “Devilish Serpent”, and who broke apart the Main Gate and its towers to the dismay of the Sereghran who saw it, and so entered the grounds within and stood before the doors of the First Compound.  But with him Balkurmis had brought many other dragons, some from his very own brood and others of his kind, along with Devils and Demons, and evil Mages of all sorts.  But while the sound of the drums and horns and the howling and cheering of the Durwolc and the bellowing of the Giants and the roaring of the Thunder-Lizards was bad enough to disconcert the defenders in the Fortress, the sound and the sight of Balkurmis spouting flames into the sky was as a death-knell to the Warlord and his surviving forces.

Here would all the Sereghran in the Fortress meet their doom, perhaps even the Lords Brandar and Tomas, and the Wizards Flaven and Calaren, as the size and power of the forces surrounding them now was so much more than adequate that Brandar felt that further defense was futile.  Yet, fight on he would, to his very last breath.

Unexpectedly, just as Balkurmis rose up to strike with fire-breath the defenders in the Compound, a bright ball of lightening sailed in from the northwest and smote the Dragon upon the side of his head, putting out his eye and leaving a long bleeding scar across his face.  Then Balkurmis, in pain-maddened rage, forgetting the Fortress, turned to seek out whoever it was that had dared to attack him.

There, just now engaging the northern ranks of the enemy, strode Aetas and Ergon slaying all in their path, with a mighty following of magical Mariners.  But from the northwest came Jesan with many companies of Soldiers, accompanied by the vengeful Wizard Palphus who had created the ball of lightening and who now sent another; striking Balkurmis upon his shoulder, burning there a second deep wound.

And coming also behind Aetas was Captain Denus leading a vast following of the People’s Brigades.  But beyond these, seen in the distance north, was Admiral Stanon, with the exceedingly wrathful Men of Geranost.

Thus did Balkurmis stomp off and went out to engage the Wizard Palphus, taking yet another lightening-ball upon his chest as he came.  And he attempted to burn Palphus to cinders with a long tongue of his fire-breath as he approached.  But here, though men around him perished in the flames, Palphus stood unharmed and again sent a lightening-ball to strike the Dragon upon his belly.

Then the front lines of the new-come Sereghran drove into the ranks of the enemy with great slaughter.  And for the rest of that day and through the night and long into the next day these forces strove violently against one another, while the men in the Fortress observed from atop walls and houses, and from the windows of towers, and from the roof of the Great Hall.  For the enemy had left off their siege, and had turned fully their attention to their foes in the battlefields north.

Alas, while the coming of Aetas and his Mariners brought the siege to a halt, and the enemy put on the defensive, not all of the magic and might of the Sereghran there would avail to bring the enemy down in short order, not even the magicks of Palphus.   For the mighty Dragon Balkurmis, though wounded many times, could not be slain, and continued to do battle with the Wizard.  And so, the enemy continued to fight on.  

Seeing a stalemate coming, Brandar, by that power of Beliscaertos which his brand alone possessed, transported himself with a word of command to just behind the Dragon, as the beast had halted before Palphus, towering above the man with the intention of pounding down upon him and then tearing him apart by tooth and claw.  But then Brandar climbed swiftly upon the Dragon’s back ere the monster kenned what was happening and drove Beliscaertos deep into the creature’s back, between its broad shoulder-blades.  And with that, as Balkurmis lifted his head, howling in pain and surprise, Brandar spoke another word of command and suddenly the monster’s innards blasted out, to leave a great bloody hole in its stomach.  Then Balkurmis, heaving a last strangled spout of flame, fell ungracefully with a thud upon the ground whilst Brandar withdrew Beliscaertos and leapt deftly from its back, landing lightly upon his feet, at which he turned to stand victorious by the flaccid hulk as all the nearby enemy stood back in amazement.  And thus did the dreaded Dragon Balkurmis, Lord of the Forest, live no more.  

In the moment Balkurmis fell the Sereghran there kenned that a terrible weight had been lifted from them, while the enemy hesitated and seemed to lose their will to go on.  But next, a clean wind blew in from the East and soon swept away all of the smoke and fumes, and the ash and soot, and the darkness, and the horrible stench in the air.

Naturally, the enemy were dismayed at the fall of the Dragon.  And a deep ripple of doubt spread rapidly throughout their ranks.  But the Sereghran roared in triumph, then returned to the fight with a new sense of purpose; believing the field was now theirs.  And the enemy began to fall before them in ever growing heaps.

Brandar and Tomas went out, clearing a way through the enemy, and met soon with Aetas and Ergon.  And glad indeed was that meeting.  Then the four went about slaying others of the Dragons and all the Thunder-Lizards they could catch, while other Lords and Officers that had come led battles against the demoralized enemy.  And Flaven and Calaren emerged from the Fortress leading the remainder of the Army of Vordurus and survivors of Baertunas, fighting so vigorously that none could withstand them, be it Dragon or Drake, or Devil or Demon, or Giant or Trollo, or any other monsters within the ranks of the enemy.  Yet, the fighting nevertheless went on long and brutally.

Thus did it seem for a while that a wide victory was now assured to the Sereghran that day.  But the tide was, at length, to turn once again, because of the immense number of enemies there, and because of the many Mages and other minions of the Demon Lord and also the winged creatures which had returned in even greater strength than before.  And after two days more the Sereghran grew weary and began to waver, here and there, and thus began to fall more and more.

A numberless host of Durwolc and many Mages had been placed upon that field, and remained a potent threat despite the fall of Balkurmis.  So, the war was not yet won, and battles raged on; continuing unrelenting and more widespread as the days and nights progressed.  And there was to be no stalemate.

Here were row upon row of Gobba and Kobo and Orgu, along with Gress and Trollo and Ukros, led by fell Giants of the kind named Yhutoros, whose name means “Long-Boned Beast”.  And here too had come anew many Minotaur and Devilkin, and Werebeasts and Vampires.  But worse still were Demons of Fire, named Nsurudin.  And there were now Korligen in the south, hearded by Swamp Drakes, and in no small number.  Then more Wind Demons had come, leading Gargoyles, and yet more Harpies, and many another winged monster nigh as fearsome.

Therefore, at dusk of the fifth day of fighting, though Balkurmis lay dead, it seemed that a grand contest was yet to be decided, for not even the powers of Brandar and Tomas, nor the majesty of mighty King Aetas, nor the magicks of the Sereghran Wizards, nor the valor of the Mariners and Soldiers and Brigadiers, nor even the wrath of the Men of Geranost would be enough to defeat the enemy at Baertunas at that time.

But ere the first Sun sank beneath the horizon here rode Medhyos from the south with the Army of Baerhesperos.  And to his east rode Lord Phaedus leading the Army of Baersunthas.  But following these two mightiest of Armies was the Elf Lord Turlin of Askondor leading many Companies of the Lowland Elves, wild eyed and fey.  And the arrival of these forces was enough to tip the balance.

The enemy was routed as the dark of night descended upon the corpse-littered ground around the Fortress.  And the foul Durwolc were the first to turn and run, followed soon by all of the other monsters, no matter how fearsome  --  for the magicks of the Lords of the Southlands was too great for them to counter.  So, the Durwolc fled into the West pursued far into the deepest regions of the Forest, which took many days.  But when Brandar would chase them even unto the mountains those Lords counseled against it.  And Tomas said:  “The Warlord has won this fight, and has himself slain the feared Balkurmis.  Now is the time for resetting the Borders and for healing the wounds of war.”

Brandar heeded their words, declaring a great victory for the Sereghran, and returned to Baertunas where all of the Sereghran there cheered him, and praised the victory, and gave to him the highest of all honors which they had to give, and also Tomas, naming the two Northrons the “Saviors of Baertunas”.  But praise was also given throughout the Lands to Aetas and Ergon, and Jesan and Denus, and to Admiral Stanon and his Mariners, and to all of the Soldiers and Brigadiers who survived, and also to Medhyos and Phaedus, and to all the brave Elves of the Southland Realms.

That war was named “The Victory of the Warlord Odaron” and as the “War of the Saviors of Baertunas”, and also as the “Freeing of the Borderlands” and as the “Last Frontier War”.  But it was not widely celebrated because of the number of those who had fallen.  Indeed, later in the Lore of the Serghran was it renamed the “Odunas Palagas”, which is the “Devouring Assault”, as it had devoured so many a good Sereghan.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 24   The Seven Reunite 

Brandar called for a long period of mourning in which he performed many solemn ceremonies in memory of the fallen; the dead of Geranost and Akouyein, and Vordurus and Baertunas, and of Jesan’s Rise, and of all the nameless confrontations on the rest of the Borderlands.  But he was especially moved by the memory of General Baeren, Knight of the Realm, over whose grave Brandar openly wept.  After three weeks of mourning Brandar threw a lavish feast, by tradition of the Sereghran, then a week-long celebration, both of which were echoed in all the Lands, although the celebration was subdued and in many places lasted not the whole week.  Yet, the tale of how Brandar had slain the Dragon of the Forest was the talk of the Sereghran for many months.  And when the other five Northrons heard the tale they were all the more determined to go and join up with Brandar and Tomas.  With the fall of Vastus, King Strabos had the traitor Raeden arrested, along with all of his supporters and other disloyal conspirators in Sunthakis.  And the King placed them in his prison together with the evil Mage Striglis, and all those traitors of Baertunas whom he deemed should be jailed with them.  Then Strabos set to making ready to go to the Frontier himself, deeming Brandar would have need of his aid.  But it took him longer than he had wished, being delayed by affairs of state.  Then news came to him upon his Aefarin that Korligen were coming into the Southlands at the same time that the enemy was attacking in the west.  And Strabos viewed the Korligen the most dire of the threats and thus split his Army; sending Soldiers to Baersunthas and Askondor and taking only half of his Army westwards through the Jungle.  But so late was he arriving at Baertunas that he found the war was done and that he could do little more than aid in reordering the Lands.  Even so, the forces he sent into the Southlands helped greatly with hunting down the Korligen, and that was no trifling effort.  Furthermore, Strabos would leave a great many of his Soldiers upon the Frontiers west, to replace those who had fallen whence he later returned to Sunthakis.  And these Brandar gladly put to use, together with many a new recruit, in securing the Forest for the Sereghran.  And soon did folk begin arriving for the purpose of establishing settlements in the Forest.

With the Kings Strabos and Aetas and other Lords dwelling in tents upon the grounds of Baertunas ere they returned to their homes, and as they busied themselves with the repairs to the Fortress and healing hurts to the People, Brandar separated his new Army into Divisions which he spread along the Border north and south of the ruins of Vordurus; for the Tower had been destroyed soon after he had abandoned it.  But he vowed to himself that he would never again flee in the face of an enemy.  And he ordered that the Tower must be rebuilt as soon as could be, and also the Tower at Geranost.  Then he sent Scouts into the Forest to keep watch on any Durwolc and other monsters that may yet be lurking therein.  And next he ordered monuments to be erected in memory of the fallen; upon the sites of all of the major battles of the war.

Jesan was promoted to Royal Baron by Strabos, though Brandar asked him to go again to his Rise upon the Border west of Kombros and there command another Army.  But Strabos and Aetas promised to build there a Fortress from which Jesan could rule his Barony.  And they gave to him much wealth in gold, as befits a Baron of the Borders.

Ergon was made an Admiral in the Navy of Baerakis, which was to be restored, in time, to its former strength.  But he was tasked, for now, with rebuilding the Tower at Geranost, assisted by Palphus the Wizard.  And the Armies sent there were Soldiers from Sunthakis, though the Men of Geranost also returned with Ergon.

The forces Brandar obtained from Phaedus of Baersunthas he placed south of the ruins of Vordurus, while a much larger force of the Lowland Elves given to him by the Lord Turlin he placed at the Tower of Dhwinos.

Flaven remained as Duke of Baertunas, while Calaren desired to remain in the service of the Warlord, and was became close in friendship with Brandar, next only to Tomas himself.  And these four were responsible for finalizing the ordering of the Borders, and ensuring that they remained safe from further attacks from the West.

Brandar and Tomas were thereafter counted among the greatest of Heroes of the Sereghran, and became so popular that their deeds were put to song and voiced about in all the Lands for many years.  And try as they might to ignore their fame, they could not wholly set it aside, for they were often applauded loudly where-ever they went.  So it was that they began attending many a feast and festival, and giving speeches, and spake also of their deeds, though Brandar most often had Tomas do this.

Upon the time when repairs to the Fortress of Baertunas had neared completion, Strabos and Aetas held a secret meeting with Brandar at which no others were allowed to attend, not even Tomas.  And they renewed their view that they held Brandar as a fellow Royal, a King, where he had the right to choose any third portion of the Lands of the Sereghran to rule as he would but for the territories of the two seaport cities, as Strabos had promised, though Strabos now said that he hoped Brandar would choose the Borderlands.  But Brandar surprised them, turning down their gracious offer, saying:  “Honored am I, and you are very generous.  But I must release my claim upon you and repent of the bargain we made beforehand, for things have changed in my mind.”  And Strabos and Aetas were dismayed by this.  But Brandar continued:  “Nay, I shall take not any of the Lands which are rightfully yours, but rather, if you will, grant me grace to remain as your Warlord in no settled Kingdom, so that I may gather forces to be used in extending the Borders into the Forest.”  And very pleased were the two Kings, standing and shaking Brandar’s hand and clapping him on the back.  Then they made a toast to him.  But when they had sat back down he said to them:  “Behold!  The Dragon is slain, and the Durwolc defeated.  And Modeus is humiliated but has not now the strength to retaliate against us.  He is weakened, yes, but shall not remain so forever.  Now is the time to strike, ere he can rightly defend the Forest against us.

“Is it not he whom the Sereghran fear most?  ‘Modeus the Cruel’ you name him.  The Demon Lord who rules yet all manner of evil creatures roaming at will not a week’s ride from the Borders we have lately reformed.  How can we let that continue unabated?  More especially as we are owed war-guild for all of the slaughter he has caused.              

“Grant me the muster I need; strength enough to enter and take the Forest which he thinks his own.  This is your chance to stretch out your hands and seize those Lands!  Yea, even to extend the Borders to the very feet of the Mountains themselves.  Then shall the Demon find it that much more difficult to assail you in the future.  And should the Forest be won, then that land only shall I claim, which will not then impinge upon your own great kingdoms.  Nor shall I own the Borderlands, which should become settled by the Sereghran, as indeed they are now among the Old Frontiers.

“New Towers shall I build, away in the West.  And any Sereghran who wishes to come into the Forest shall I welcome, and I shall protect them as their King, where my rule shall be as new to the Sereghran as is the Forest itself.  But should the effort be vain, and Modeus keep his hold on the Forest, then shall the Borders upon which we sit stand as ever they have for all of these years.  And while many a Sereghan may fall in such gamble, though I would have none with me who do not willingly follow my orders, may we do Modeus such harm that he shan’t trouble you again for another thousand years.”

Now, Strabos and Aetas were astonished at Brandar.  But they took his words to heart and gave to him all the support that could be managed in the way of Soldiery, and weapons and armor, and silver and gold, and nigh anything else he desired.  And when the Tower of Vordurus was finally fully rebuilt, there dwelt Brandar and Tomas and the Wizard Calaren, and began making Brandar’s new Army ready for war.

Ere the two Kings departed for their homes they gave Brandar a feast, at which Strabos announced Brandar’s intent.  And  then everyone cheered, whereas the news spread like wildfire in the Lands.  Then the People were convinced all the more that the Northrons had been sent by the Gods to help them extend the Frontiers into the West.  So, straight away, young Sereghran came to join the Warlord’s Army, and many older men besides, with a mind to someday lay claim to their own bit of Forest.  And as this became common knowledge, ere long Brandar offered to all who served and partook in ventures to capture the Forest grants of land therein.  Therefore, no shortage of Soldiers did Brandar command as the time to go forth approached.

Thus, while Brandar was busy swelling his forces after Strabos had returned to Sunthakis and Aetas had gone home to rebuild his Navy, Ergon at length, with the aid of Palphus, completed the rebuilding of the Tower at Geranost and began there also the building of his own great Armada, while Palphus did Brandar place in command of a large Division of mounted Scouts, assigned to constantly patrol the Grasslands in the North.  Then, upon a day roughly three months from Brandar and Tomas entering the new Tower at Vordurus, called thus the “Warlord’s Tower”, all five of the remaining Northrons arrived to join up with the Frontier Army.  And that was a joyous occasion, for the Emissaries were together once more.  Then, after spending some time eating and drinking together, and drinking some more, as at their first sundering, though now with joy rather than sorrow, they all solemnly vowed never again to be parted  --  although, as the Fates would have it, through no fault of their own, they would later be separated again.

Here were Brandar’s cousins Alak and Daram, and the princely Erek, and the elder Khalen, and gentleman Rosth.  And they were clad as Royals, with each leading forces of their own from the Houses into which they had married, with Khalen’s the largest of them all.  So, Brandar and Tomas were much the more glad that their friends had come.  Yet, when Brandar made to give orders that their swords must be remade as Strabos had done for he and Tomas the five suddenly drew forth with flashes of light issuing from their blades and crossing them shouted:  “Hail, Brandar, Warlord Odaron!”  And when the blades had touched they emitted sparks and then glowed with silvery auras, just as the brands of Brandar and Tomas would do. 

After sheathing the swords Khalen explained that the swords had already been reforged by the High King’s Smiths, and enchanted by his Mages soon after Brandar and Tomas had departed from Sunthakis that dark and rainy night over a year apast.  Thus were all of the Northrons’ swords of the same fashioning, but with some magicks unique to each, at the request of the five.  And this is what those magicks entailed.

It has been said what the powers be which are inherent to all of those blades, as these were the very weapons which were to become the Magic Seven of the Palaklar, in later days. And there, it was explained what were the powers of Brandar’s sword, Beliscaertos, and Tomas’ sword, Bhelewual.   But now shall be given those which were not then said.  

Alak’s sword is named Bhagharak, which means “Sword of Winter Breath”, for it could spit a blast of cold frost which instantly freezes anything upon which it impacts to a distance of sixty yards.  Daram’s sword is named Bleikaran, which is “Sword of Mysticism”, as it could shoot to one furlong’s distance a spear of mystic energy which penetrates to three feet within its target.  Erek’s sword is named Bhargillos, which means “Sword of Light”, for it could emit a beam of hot sunlight which does great harm to any evil thing of flesh or of spirit to a total distance of half a furlong.  Khalen’s sword is named Blarafulon, which is “Sword of Devestation”, as it could cause a magical explosion at its target out to a full furlong.  And Rosth’s sword is called Bheflados, which means “Sword of Magical Force”, as it could shoot a burst of energy nigh as powerful as Brandar’s mystic blast, exploding upon its target out to two furlongs distant.

This completes the telling of the magicks of the Northron’s Brands.  But none were more pleased than Strabos to know that the Seven Emissaries, the Newcomer Heroes of the Mists, would be together wielding such potent weapons upon the Borders of Arzultaur.  For these swords were among the most powerful of that Age of the world.  And the Inheritors of those brands would go on in the very next Age to aid in the establishment of the greatest kingdom that had ever been to that time, mine own beloved country Andaria.  Yet, Brandar’s sword, Beliscaertos, as has been said, was the mightiest of them all.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 25   Brandar Takes The Forest

Brandar’s Generals and Knights, and Captains and Officers, and Counselors and Advisors, all but Calaren, took to debating among themselves how best to use the five Northron Volunteers which had come west; imagining that these were Brandar’s peers.  But Brandar rejected their counsel, intending to replace the Counselors and Advisors, though appointed by Strabos, with these very Northrons.  Yet, that notion caused such an uproar that he attached the Northrons to his Company as Errant Generals, for he already had in mind ways in which he wished to deploy them.  And thus did he keep the Seven together without disrupting the royally-appointed attendees, who would thus thereafter be less welcome at his official meetings and altogether unwelcome privately.  However, the Tower was then taken over entirely by the Northrons, by Brandar’s order, though with Calaren allowed to remain, while the Officers and Officials were to find lodgings as near or as far as seemed fit to them.  And while this caused much in the way of consternation, Brandar was not in the least concerned with their protests, and ordered things just as he wished, saying:  “This is how it shall be.  And if you do not approve then I give you leave to go and complain to Strabos in Sunthakis.  But then he shall inform you that my word is as law upon all of the Borders, by his own decree.”

Within two years of the Devouring Assault, Brandar’s new forces at Vordurus were as great as had been arrayed before the war.  And there with his fellow Northrons he prepared to enter upon a campaign into the West.

By reports from Scouts he knew that the Forest contained no enemy forces large enough to oppose him.  And the Grasslands were altogether free of Druwolc, and all other monsters.  Brandar’s Main Force, therefore, he mustered west of Vordurus with two somewhat smaller forces, his Flanks, placed one to his north and the other to his south.  And he ordered them to make ready to march into the Forest girded for war.

Calaren was in command of the North Flank while Ergon held the Coastlands and Jesan was in charge of the Southward Flank.  The Lords Flaven, Medhyos, and Turlin were to guard the Borders between Vordurus and Magadinos, while Phaedus must hold the Borders above the dreaded Swamplands, south, to prevent another invasion by the terrible Korligen.  And upon a sunny morning Brandar rose and declared that a great Westward Expansion had begun.  Then, together with his six fellow Northrons he led the Main Force into the Forest followed closely, to northeast and southeast, by his Flanks; wide Regiments moving upon parallel routes.  And that is how Brandar entered to take the Forest from the Demon Lord, Modeus.

Those woodlands stretched across many leagues east to west, from the far-flung Borderlands to the Foothills of the distant Mountains.  But the Mountains had no other name, for they were the only mountains upon Arzultaur.  Neither had the Forest another name, lest it were, beforehand, the “Domain of Balkurmis”.  And while the Forest had aforetime been full of foul monsters and fell beasts, and countless Durwolc ruled by the late Balkurmis, the vassal of MorLome, Brandar deemed that the most numerous of all of those creatures had been killed in the Devouring Assault.

True enough, the Forest was taken with no great battles having to be fought.  And Brandar discovered the very den of Balkurmis beneath a hill that he named the “Dark Mound”, by its appearance, and which was located at the very feet of the Mountains.

In that dank hole Brandar fought the brood of Balkurmis and slew every one, but not the Dragon’s mate, a great Dragon in her own right, who fled north to hide in another den by a wide lake that known as the “She-Dragon’s Water”.  And how this was known to Brandar is that he ordered Scouts to follow her, but not to attack, and return to him with news of whither she had fled.

Now, Balkurmis and his mate were not winged dragons, but were nevertheless very large fire-breathing serpents, and highly magical.  Yet, the She-Dragon had been expecting the return of her lord and had therefore had time only to put a light spell upon the den of Balkurmis, ere she fled Brandar’s Army and hid in her own den beside the lake.  Thus did Brandar send for Calaren, ere he entered the great den nigh to the Mountains, and asked him to dispel any curses or other magic that might be there.  So Calaren came and after going in to inspect its den’s deeper recesses Calaren came out unharmed and pronounced the den safe to enter.  And with that, Brandar ordered that the bodies of the brood inside must be brought out and burned, which required a whole day’s labor; for the brood were many, and some were nigh as large as their mother.

When this was done, the den was free to be explored, and thus did Brandar and his Company go and search out its ways.  And it happens that much wealth was had from the den of Balkurmis; for the Dragon had long been gathering and piling up his hoard.  Thus was it Brandar’s by rights, for slaying the evil creature.  And he was glad to have it, though he gave much of it away.  Indeed, there was so much wealth that the Seven became positively rich because of it, as did Calaren and Jesan, and also all of the other Officers who had come into the Forest.  But to every Soldier who had come Brandar gave a year’s wages in silver and gold, above the promotions they received, each with a hefty raise in pay.  And this brought them much joy, while buying for the Warlord their steadfast loyalty, so strongly did he find favor in their eyes, and so too their families.

Of course, all of the Soldiery of the Forest Campaign had come of free will, for love of King and country.  Yet, a little treasure, here and there, never hurts the cause.  And these gifts were more than enough to inspire them.

Now, the way to the den of the She-Dragon was revealed to Brandar by his Scouts, who said that they had seen her descending into it, beneath a large hill by the eastern shore of the lake.  Therefore, Brandar led his countrymen and a rather large Company of Soldiers to do battle with the She-Dragon.  But when they came upon the hill, Brandar ordered the Company to remain outside while the Seven Northrons went in.  Then it took all seven to slay the serpent, for she was mighty, and fought fiercely; being enraged at the slaying of her Lord and her brood.  But slay her they did, after all.  Then Brandar came out and ordered his Soldiers to drag her corpse out to the lakeside, and there burn it to ash; tooth, bone, and all.  And this was soon done. 

Thus were Balkurmis and his mate, and all of their brood, utterly destroyed.  Then did the Northrons enter again into the den; again commanding the Soldiers to wait.

In this den, in a vast but odorous cavern beneath the lakeside mound which would later be named “Dragon’s Den Hill”, the Seven found yet another treasure-trove in the form of an high pile of immeasurable wealth, greater even than that which had been found in the den of Balkurmis.  Yet, it happens that the She-Dragon, fearing that Brandar’s Army would come soon, placed a terrible curse upon the hoard.  Thus did the Seven, unaware of the strength of the curse, fall under its enchantment.  And it would nearly doom the Seven when they gazed by torchlight upon the hoard, enthralled by the dazzling glint of flames reflected off the gold and silver and jewels, and the myriad other treasures piled so tall  --  for there was nothing to prevent them from being ensnared, and they were so caught up in the spell-magic that they forgot everything but the sight of the treasure.

Suddenly, the Northrons went mad with lust and greed for the treasure; running forth to go playing upon the pile like giddy children upon a heap of candy.  And they all forgot who they were and why they were there, and what should have been done ere they inspected the hoard.  But when Solders outside, hearing shouts of joy within, entered to see what was afoot, they too became ensnared.  Then more and more came and fell under the curse, so that the cavern became crowded with Soldiers shoving and pushing each other about, arguing over some trinket while standing knee-deep in others.  And not a few were coming to blows.

For a time, therefore, neither the Seven nor the Soldiers realized that they had been caught by an enchantment.  Indeed, the Northrons made their way to the top of the pile and there drew their flashing swords, threatening anyone against coming near their imagined portion of the treasure; even Brandar his own kinsmen, Alak and Daram.  But Tomas had stepped back while drawing his sword and felt something sharp prick his ankle.  And bending slightly to discover the offending object his Wizard’s Gem, the Blue Jade which yet hung upon a chain about his neck, and which was normally kept inside of his garments, as all the Northrons wore their necklaces, hung out as he bent to look at the object.  Then the jadestone seemed to grow heavy and to drag him down towards the object, which he found was a long dagger with a bone handle carved in the likeness of an eagle’s head.  But lo, he recognized that knife, for he had seen it in the belt of a Scout whom Brandar had sent into the Forest ere the war and had never returned.  So Tomas was amazed at finding it here.  Meanwhile, his fellows, and all the others in the cavern, continued threatening one another, with some of the soldiers now engaged in fighting.

Trembling and sweating, feeling the Jade pull him downwards, he took up the dagger and gazed at it, whereupon he believed he heard the voice of the Scout from the blade, saying:  “Beware.  Beware the hoard of Dragons.  Beware.  Beware.  Beware.  …”.  So the voice kept saying; growing quieter until it was gone.  And the Jade pulled him to his knees while he continued to hold the dagger in front of him.

Then was Tomas of a mind to remove his necklace, as it was pulling him down quite strongly.  But when he touched the gem, a clear head was suddenly his out of all the men in the cavern.  And he kenned the truth, whereupon the weight was lifted.

Well it was that Tomas healed himself of his madness.  And he quickly removed his necklace while yet holding the dagger and presented his gem for Brandar to grasp, and who took hold not seeing it for what it was in the fog of his accursed greediness.  Then was Brandar cured of his insanity.  And he and Tomas went about aiding the other Northrons; finding that each of their gems had this power when brought close to the dagger.  And by this, after testing the Gems, the Seven discovered that the magic of the Wizard’s Gifts, thought lost forever, had returned.  But they could not cure any of the other men in the cavern, not even when using the healing of Erek’s Emerald.  Then Tomas put the dagger in his belt, desiring to keep it, for it had saved him.

And because of the press of struggling men in the cavern Brandar had his fellows made use of the power of his Pearl of Giant Strength to move men aside and make their way out of the cavern, then up through the great passages which connected it to the outside; for the gems were close enough that each of their magicks were available to their sisters.  But ere they had gone out Brandar noted the dagger in Tomas’ belt and bid him leave it behind; fearing that it may yet be cursed, though it had brought the Seven out of the enchantment.  So Tomas reluctantly left it just within the entrance to the den, with a prayer of thanks to the dead Scout who had owned it. 

Outside the den the Northrons found that the curse had spread like a plague, so that nigh all of the Main Force were violently clamoring to enter, brawling brutally, with some drawing blood with their weapons.  Then Brandar sent Erek and Khalen to fetch the Wizard Calaren, who was with the North Flank encamped in the Forest but a furlong due east of that place.  And Rosth he sent to scout upon the land west of the lake; fearing that enemies may come not knowing that the She-Dragon was dead.  But Alak and Daram and Tomas he sent to subdue the Soldiers coming to blows in their madness, and to heal them of wounds.  Yet, the three met certain Officers and other Soldiers who held some magic against the curse, and these aided them in their efforts.

Erek and Khalen soon returned with Calaren and ten of the Wizard’s Guards.  But when Calaren heard the clamor through the trees ere coming within sight of the hill he bid his men stay behind while he went ahead.  And the two Northrons stayed with them.  But ere long they heard the noise settle down, then Calaren came and signaled for them to come, though he gestured oddly at them as he did so.

Here they found most of the stricken Soldiers fast asleep, for Calaren could think of nothing better than to cast a spell of sleeping upon them, though the Northrons there were unaffected, as were a few men who held a magical item or weapon that protected them against curse and spell alike.  And Calaren had cast a spell upon his Guardsmen, to prevent them from falling under the curse.  Yet, Soldiers also there were who had avoided the sleep but remained under the curse, so that these must be caught and restrained by the Northrons and by Calaren’s Guardsmen.  Then Calaren asked the Northrons to bring out those who were sleeping inside while he ordered his Guardsmen to position themselves about the hill as watchmen.

At length, after the den was emptied, Calaren alone entered in, insisting that no one come with him.  But minutes later there was a low rumble from the hill, then a calm ensued where not a breeze could be felt thereabouts.  And shortly afterwards Calaren emerged from the den then turned and pointed a small crooked wand at the entrance.   Speaking an arcane word of power he made the wand send forth a blast of force that smote upon the arch above the entrance, at which it collapsed and fell down, so that the entrance was sealed; covered completely by dirt and rubble and stone.  And as it was caving in, all of the ensorcelled men suddenly came to their senses, and their minds were cleared, though they recalled not their madness.  Then were they amazed when told that they had been so thoroughly bespelled but could not even remember it. 

“Now,” said Calaren to Brandar, “the door is shut, and the enchantment has been bottled up.  Let no-one henceforth attempt to retrieve the treasure therein, lest they gaze once more upon the hoard and fall again under the Dragon’s curse.”             “Too bad we could not get any of the treasure out,” said Tomas.  “Indeed,” said Calaren.  “But I could not dispel this curse as I had that which lay upon the hoard of Balkurmis  --  for this was much too strong.  Therefore, it is well that nothing was brought out from below, as even the least coin shall forever carry the enchantment.  No doubt, that was the Dragon’s wish; that her curse should spread throughout the Lands once we had looted the den.  Such cannot be allowed, ever.  The entry must remain sealed, come what may, lest some magic greater than the curse is found, someday, which can be used to negate its power, and so remove its glamoury.”

Just in time did Brandar’s forces awake from their sleep, for Rosth came riding up swiftly, saying:  “A great force of Durwolc are marching hard along the western shore.  And they are heavily armed and armored in livery well made and burnished.”  But when Calaren heard a description of that enemy, he said:  “These are not the Dragon’s thralls, but servants of the Demon Lord himself.  They must have marched all the way from his Castle in the North.  And they shall be a tough lot to engage.  Very tough.”

Nevertheless, leaving one Company to guard the hill, and sending Calaren back to his post, Brandar led his Force around the southern end of the lake and defeated the Durwolc; chasing the survivors into the Grasslands west of the river, which itself drains northeast from the lake into the Great Northern Bay.  And that course was formerly referred to as the “Demon’s River”.  But upon Brandar’s return, as he rode along its western bank, he proclaimed that it marked the new Northern Border of Arzultaur.  And he named it Kelebros, meaning “Hollow of Warmth”, as the river flowed among long and wide slews which cut across sun-drenched meadows of the Grasslands. 

And that is how Brandar extended the Sereghran’s Frontiers into the Forest, setting the Borders North along the East Bank of the river Kelebros, from the Bay to the Lake, and in the South from the Lake to the Fortress of Magadinos along a great arc following the edge of the Eastern Foothills.  But the lake Brandar also renamed, calling it “Baeren’s Lake”, in honor of his friend Baeren the Knight.  And he envisioned a mighty city upon its shores which he intended to build himself, and make it his capital. 

By the treasure obtained from the hoard of Balkurmis, Brandar was now able to continue repairing the hurts to the Lands and the Sereghran People brought about by the ravages of the Devouring Assault.  And he gave generous grants of coin and land to any who wished to establish homesteads and clear farmland and build settlements in the Forest.  Then he called for artisans and masons, and carpenters and craftsmen, and other tradesmen, offering them exceedingly high wages to move to the Forest and begin for him the building of a grand new Tower and township by the Lake, which he would name Deunomis, meaning “Barrow of Wicked Treasure”.  And in time, everything was done as he wished.  Then was he called the “Lord of Deunomis”, for he took up his crown there; declaring himself King of the Forest.  And he became one of the most respected Kings of the Sereghran in that Age of the world, the Aforetime of Men.

So it was that Brandar made himself a King by his own hand upon Arzultaur, the Hidden Continent, within the Enchanted Mists.  But he had achieved many other titles by which he would become known throughout the world in later days, when he was sung of in some monarch’s hall, or portrayed upon the stage, or toasted in a tavern.

Here had he slain dragons both in Andaria and Arzultaur, among whom Balkurmis was perhaps the greatest.  But also giants he had felled, including Gar the Otog during the Long Siege, and numerous others in the Devouring Assault.  And he was already the Honorary King of the Dunjularians, and High Chieftain of the Exiled Northrons of Andaria.  Thus did he and his Six Northron Volunteers make it through the ranks of the Armies of MorLome during that Siege, and thereafter sailed upon the Wide Yerhiesc to come at last to the Hidden Continent.  Now had he established the Third Kingdom of the Sereghran.  And he ruled for several generations of Men with honor and wisdom.  But more there is to his story, as shall now be told, for Modeus was not done with his warmongering.  And now he held especial malice for Brandar; holding the Northron chiefly responsible for his defeat in the Devouring Assault, and the loss of his stranglehold over the Forest.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 26   The First New-Frontier War

Brandar established what quickly became known as the New Frontier, which encompassed the Forest and much of the Grasslands, from the Great Northern Bay to the Southern Wood, and from the Eastern Foothills to the Fortress of Baerhesperos.  Then he ordered great Towers to be built along the New Frontier and placed every ten leagues along the East Bank of the River Kelebros, but from there every hundred leagues south of Baeren’s Lake.  And to relieve the burden of taxation upon his subjects, and foregoing assistance from the other Kings, he paid for all of it out of the unimaginable wealth he had obtained from the hoard of Balkurmis.  And many a good Sereghran were glad for the work, and came from all over Arzultaur to take part in the building of the Towers.  Yet, the grandest of all was at the southern end of Baeren’s Lake, with Brandar naming the territory there Deunomis.

That Tower was encompassed by a mighty wall, from water’s edge to water’s edge, along an arc long and wide enough to hold also all of Dragon’s Den Hill.  But the ends of the wall, its “arms”, were to go far out into the Lake, with iron spikes along their tops so that they may not be surmounted but by raft or boat.  Yet, along the shore within the two arms was another wall with spikes of its own, behind which would be set catapults designed to toss bags of burning oil far out upon the Lake.

Thus did Brandar build a Fortress there, containing the greatest Tower which the Sereghran had ever known, and from which he would send armies north and south to protect his Lands.  And naturally a very large town grew up there, while many a wealthy Sereghran came also to built houses nigh upon the remaining shores of the Lake.

Even as those works were in progress, Sereghran came in great numbers to the Old Borders, now called Central Arzultaur, and also to the Forest as far west as they dared; claiming homesteads and making settlements, and clearing land for farming and ranching.  And some went into regions east of Baeren’s Lake, deeming that the Warlord would protect them, though Brandar warned them all by messengers  --  to those he became aware of  --  that lands west of the New Frontier were not safe, for he could not assure their safekeeping should they venture too far beyond his borders.

This would prove disastrous to those who ignored Brandar’s warnings, as there came to Brandar, ere one new Tower was completed, several Scouts reporting that the Durwolc were increasing in numbers in the Foothills and the Highlands, and in the Southern Wood, and were also mustering on the Grasslands northwest.  But one there was who had ventured into the Mountains, who said:  “All of the Mountains are swarming with Durwolc and other monsters, and many fell beasts, who are all excited by great bloodlust, as if they are under some devilry.  And they are moving now towards the Forest.  Then I myself barely escaped, and warily made my way here to reveal these things to you.  But many of my fellows, I fear, shall not be returning to their homes.”

Thus, the enemy attacked not three years after the Devouring Assault.  And this war was called the Koros Heidaras, which is “War of Burning Trees”, as a large part of the Forest was burned therein.  But other horrible wars would follow, one after another, for many years to come.  And these all-together would be named the “Wars of Odaron’s Frontier”, of which there were five; each in its turn more deadly than the one before.

Here, then, is given an account of the First New-Frontier War.

In the North, people perceived that the lands about the Demon’s Castle were growing dark and gloomy, even in daylight.  Then the darkness began to swell outwards; seething out steadily from the Castle in its center.  But it also contained choking mists, black in color, comprised of swirling vapors that would go forth from the darkness to flow far and wide across the Lands.  Yet, neither would wind nor rain nor any weather at all affect the darkness, nor its ghastly emissions, nor halt its growth.  And any who breathed the black vapors of those mists were made ill, with the children the most vulnerable, so that many died at length of various maladies.

Now, the darkness continued to swell until it reached to three leagues east of Kelebros, where it seemed to halt its advance, much to the relief of the Soldiers of the North Flank, at that time spread rather thin along the Eastern Bank.  For those who daringly ventured into the darkness, whether under orders or foolhardily on their own, had never returned.  So the Soldiers began to name it the “Smothering Darkness”, and the “Demon’s Mists”.  And its height was so great that it could be seen from the river.  Brandar thus feared that an attack must be in the offing from out of the Darkness, and he sent Scouts to keep watch upon it, as he made ready his forces all along the Borderlands.  Yet, too soon came that assault.  The first of five terrible New-Frontier wars.

Upon a time in the middle night a Scout came riding breakneck to Deunomis from the north.  And hurriedly dismounting, seeking Brandar, excitedly said to him:  “Durwolc are pouring from the Darkness, like hornets from a stricken hive.  And they carry torches, the light of which cannot be seen until they come out.  My friends were taken ere they could escape, and I alone came away, as I was farthest from the edge of the Darkness.  Yet, I was but a hair’s breadth from death.  And the enemy must now be close, and shall be upon us at any moment.”  Then word came that two more Scouts had come to the Borders at different places, giving similar accounts.  But no other Scout who Brandar had sent to keep watch on the Darkness was ever seen again.

Calaren was in command of the North Flank, and was charged with overseeing the building of the new Towers along Kelebros, so that his forces were, at that time, divided into Companies set every ten leagues along the river, from the Coast to Baeren’s Lake.  And Calaren was at that site which lay thirty leagues from the Bay itself.  Yet, having learned by messengers, and from Brandar by his Aefarin, that an attack was coming, try as he might to get his Soldiers and Mages prepared, they were spread along too long a front to be effective against a truly great invasion.  And he was not then surprised when none of his forces withstood the assault.

From the Darkness, in front of countless Durwolc, there issued many Elemental monsters in the form of huge whirlwinds which crossed the river in numerous places; wrecking havoc upon his Soldiers and then upon the Grasslands.  And Calaren would later learn that these monsters decimated two Companies at the sites forty and fifty leagues from the Bay.  Thus, the enemy came upon rafts across Kelebros unhindered in those places.  And while many turned north or south to fight with the rest of the men of the Northern Flank, some ran headlong eastwards, making it far into the settled Lands.  But men said of that night that the enemy were so innumerable upon the western side of the river that their torches could be seen a full league deep, from the Lake to the Bay.  Yet, the enemy also came across at many other places, and engaged whatever Soldiers opposed them.  And with the dawn, while Soldiers all along the river were fighting losing battles, there came such thick black mists from the Darkness that the Suns were dimmed, and the Grasslands were covered in a deep and dark haze.  And the mists caused many a man to grow so ill that could hardly fight, and therefore fell to the enemy.

Consequently, doing as much as he could to save as many as he could, Calaren’s forces were then falling left and right, and despite his great magicks, he could not save his northern-most Companies and was in truth able only to keep the Company he was with from being as swiftly destroyed as the rest of his not insignificant forces.  Thus did the Durwolc cross the river and began to ravage all the Lands beyond.  And they chased down and mercilessly slew every Sereghran they could find.  But also did they burn crops and farms, and homes and villages, and everything else in their paths  --  and there was nothing that could be done to stop them.  Then also did they set the Forest ablaze.

*****

Brandar’s Main Force was assaulted with even more strength than the doomed Northern Flank.  But among the Durwolc who came against Brandar out of the Foothills were terrible Stone Giants, and Rock Demons, and vile things which we now name as Ghouls and Gangyn and Galabus.  And there were wolves and wargs, and bears and mountain-lions, and other wild beasts; all of which must certainly have been placed under enchantments that made them seek and devour the Sereghran  --  for there were Mages herding them, evil Men who served the Demon Lord.  But there were also many of the most horrible flying monsters; Harpies and Gryphon, and Gargoyles and Gremlins, and Dragons and Drakes, and flocks of other unspeakable horrors.

Thus was Brandar pushed steadily east by the press of his foes, so that he must finally make a stand upon Dragon’s Den Hill with his Main Force at half of its original strength.  In these straights, therefore, he contemplated a retreat to the east, though he had sworn to himself that he would never again flee in the face of an enemy.

*****

While commanding the Southward Flank a few leagues from Deunomis, Jesan was so hard pressed to keep his Army from being routed by Durwolc flooding both from the Foothills west and the Woodlands south that he decided to order a run to the north, owing that half of his forces had been felled in very short order.  And it was all that he could do to make it himself to Dragon’s Den Hill with but a third of his Army, after having spent a day and night fighting while moving; having to turn at whiles to engage in battle, so close was the pursuit all the way.  But this was later considered an outstanding feat, as counted among the battles of that war, due to the vastness of the forces pursuing him.  Yet, Jesan himself made it to Dragon’s Den Hill and Brandar was indeed grateful that at least a third of Jesan’s forces had made it, for he was desperate for reinforcements.

*****

From the Southern Wood and the Foothills came huge crowds of Durwolc into the southernmost regions of the Forest.  And among them were Mages urging masses of wolves and wargs before them.  And these had caught and killed every Scout and Patrol which had been assigned to keep watch upon those lands.  Thus was the enemy able to go into the Forest over a wide region in the South, where they slew many settlers; burning the Forest as they came, raging through Brandar’s Realm.  Indeed, the enemy made such a stab into the Forest there that a fourth of its timber was destroyed by their fires.  Yet, Medhyos, leading the Army of Baerhesperos, savagely drove into the invaders, slaying over the course of many days all the enemy which had come from the Wood, and most of those which had come from the Foothills, thus chasing but a small count of the surviving Durwolc westward into the hills.

Meanwhile, Turlin was gaining a victory over another army of invaders a mere six leagues south of where Medhyos was making camp upon the edge of the Foothills.  And Turlin drove his foes deep into the Southern Wood.  But thereafter communing upon their Aefarin, these two Lords agreed to meet and ride north to the aid of Brandar and Jeson, who had become stranded upon Dragon’s Den Hill with no hope of escape.

*****

Brandar and Tomas and Jesan stood upon the hilltop, using their magicks to fend off attacks from the airs above while the other Northrons, and what few Generals and Captains and Mages remained, went about keeping the Durwolc from fully overrunning the Hill.  But the count yet standing from both Armies there was now but a fifth of what they had been, and was continuing to shrink.  Then Brandar considered a break towards the east using Tomas and Jesan to hack a way through, while Brandar would hold the rear, though he told them not that he intended to make there a last stand to give them time to flee; imagining the songs that would be sung of his sacrifice.  Yet, while Brandar was thinking this thought, even as he fought, Calaren, far to the north, was himself standing fast with what few forces were left to him.  And he did battle there, determined to fight even to the felling of the very last of his men, for he was such a mighty Wizard that he could not be slain, and could by his arts rise and fly away in the end, and so escape the battle unharmed.  But not, he resolved, until all was lost.

Yet, when Calaren had less than sixty men about him there rode Ergon from the northeast with a large following of magical Mariners.  And from the east came Flaven with a Company of mounted Knights leading the Army of Baertunas striding afoot, followed by a huge force of the People’s Brigades.  And these were so much more than were needed to defeat the enemy thereabouts that they slew the Durwolc, and even the Mages among them, in amazingly large numbers, and drove the survivors howling and screaming into the river, with a mere few scrambling up from the far bank to flee, at length, desperate and fearful back into their Master’s Darkness.

Then Flaven and Ergon left the Brigadiers under Calaren’s command and rode south ahead of the Army of Baertunas to the aid of the Warlord at Deunomis; knowing that Brandar was soon to be whelmed.  And while they must engage other Durwolc upon the way, causing a delay in that errand, ever did they prevail and march on.  But as the two came to the northern end of Baeren’s Lake, here they found that neither of their Aefari were being answered by Brandar nor Medhyos, nor even by the Elf-Lord Turlin.  Then did they sorrowfully deem that those Lords must somehow have been slain.

But lo, as Ergon and Flaven later approached Deunomis, here were those very Lords laughing and drinking upon Dragon’s Den Hill, celebrating a victory, while Tomas and Jesan and the other Northrons had gone to chase enemy survivors into the Foothills.  Then Brandar explained that he had been rescued by Medhyos and Turlin, though they had all been too busy fighting to answer their Aefari.  And with that, all five of those Lords began to celebrate, and got roaring drunk.  So ended the First War of the New Frontier.  And it was held then, and long afterwards, a very great victory indeed.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 27   Other New-Frontier Wars 

The Sereghran had peace for more than twenty years after the First War of the New Frontier, during which time Brandar ruled as King of the Forest and completed all of his designs, both for the Border Towers and for Deunomis.  And while Brandar was now a King, he remained also as Warlord.

Meanwhile, Ergon had rebuilt Geranost, but also built a port upon the shores of the Great Northern Bay, naming it Agereis, which means “Heavy Waters”, as the port is close to the mouth of Kelebros, which constantly deposits a dark silt into the Bay.

Calaren was now in command of all of the Towers along Kelebros while Jesan was in command of the Southern Borders, from Deunomis to Magadinos.  And both of those Lords had been given large Armies of mostly young Sereghran which Brandar had equipped with highly magical weapons; from the Generals to the lowliest of Soldiers.

Brandar, of course, remained in command of his Main Force at Deunomis, which had become greater than any Army the Sereghran had ever before arrayed upon their Borders.  And Brandar had placed his fellow Northrons in command of the Divisions of that Army, which were each huge, well-trained, and also highly magical.  Furthermore, the Six were appointed as Errant Generals, whom Brandar decreed must be held as higher in rank than any other General on the Borderlands, even those chosen by Srabos and Aetas.  But Tomas was the Warlord’s Second, and thus outranked even his fellows.

Naturally, while Brandar dwelt in his Tower, now called, as might be expected, the “Warlord’s Tower”, the other Northrons had built houses near to it for their families whom they had brought from Sunthakis; even Tomas, who had married that handmaid he had known before, and who had now given him three fine children.  And Brandar had also found a woman that he loved, close kin to Flaven, though he refused to be married; for he desired to return to Andaria, some day, and find there a wife from among the Exiled Northrons, as was the long-held tradition of the Chieftains of the Dunjilarians.  But while Brandar’s mistress, Vearta, cousin to Flaven, was uncomfortable with the arrangement, she agreed to it for her love of the Northron King.  Later would she bear for him a son who was destined to become a Hero in his own right, but that is another tale.

Therefore, the Lady Vearta, of royal lineage, became known as the “Warlord’s Consort”, and was highly honored by the People, though not a Queen.  Yet, she was treated as such.  And Brandar gave to her all the authority of a Queen.  But it happens that she would later become a Queen in truth, with a wide and devoted following.

As it was, while Brandar and Vearta never married, she bore to him three lovely daughters, and she was very happy, for Brandar took no other lovers, and they would remain together for well over two-hundred years of the Suns.

Now, the Forest had come to be filled with settlements, while the entire length of the Borderlands had become farming country.  And Deunomis had grown so that it was like a small city, with many dwellings for Soldiers and Citizens within and outside of its wall.  Yet, Dragon’s Den Hill remained bare, as Brandar would at times set there his grand Pavilion, in which he conducted ceremonies and held feasts and celebrations, and would have his most important official meetings and convocations that required a large space in the shade or shelter from rain.  But otherwise the Hill was kept open to the sky with a well-managed covering of grass, and with flowers about its base.

Besides the Warlord’s Armies on the New Borders, the Kings Strabos and Aetas maintained other large Armies upon the Old Frontier, most especially at Vordurus and at the rebuilt Towers of Angust and Geranost, and at Kombros and the three Duchies; Baertunas. Baerhesperos, and Baersunthas.  And Duke Phaedus at Baersunthas was charged with keeping the rivers Thinoss and Saronoss free of Korligen, and from any other dangerous creatures.  But he was aided in this by the Elf-Lord Turlin, who kept large forces at Askondor and Akouyein and Dhwinos.  Yet, besides the forces at those places, and at Baerakis and Sunthakis, the High Elves of the Northern Coasts kept armies at Windmere and Linguonon, while the Dwarves in the Southlands, nigh upon the Eastern Coast at Kindol, near Dragon’s Cliff Bay, constituted an Army of their own, for they would one and all take up arms at need.  But there were also the People’s Brigades, which had never disbanded, but had grown as independent militias of which the largest were at Torquere and Domosus, with smaller Companies at Trabus in the North and at Cwellan and Mhinos in the Midlands, and also at all three Duchies.  Indeed, the militias had become so popular that the smallest village could boast that a good number of their folk were “registered” members of their local Brigade.  And while they were honored, they were not as well trained, nor as magical, as the Armies.  Nevertheless, those men and women felt blessed by their memberships, and practiced often, and held games of skill, such as horsemanship and sword-fighting and archery.  And long were they happy.

Thus, due to the great peace which ensued after the Devouring Assault, the wide prosperity the People enjoyed in that time, by extending their Borders to encompass the Forest, and the numbers of their Soldiery and Mariners and Brigadiers, the Sereghran became proud of their place in the world; deeming themselves mighty.  And the study and glorification of war became a preoccupation with them; so much so that they took to sending their sons and daughters to spend at least one year in service of the Warlord upon the New Frontier.  But Brandar, having come to consider such practice bothersome, would say:  “We are Warriors, not wet-nurses!”  Yet, he eventually consented after all to the establishing of training camps, called “Academies”, for the younger recruits.

This then is how the Sereghran were positioned at the coming of the Second War of the New Frontier, during which many of those recruits would fall; much to the sorrow of their kin.  But that war was won by the Warlord.  And he would win the next and the next, with each more destructive than the previous, so that he was victorious in the first four of the total of five of those Wars.  And while the fifth was indeed yet another victory for the Sereghran, Brandar would not see its end, for he was captured therein, and taken to be imprisoned by Modeus in the North.  And this is how that came about.

Here, the horrible Darkness upon the Land of Modeus had never cleared, nor moved nor shifted in the twenty-odd years of peace following the First War of the New Frontier.  Indeed, it became ever more dense.  And its edge grew all the more well-defined; making a great circle which went unbroken upon both land and sea.  And as no Sereghran who entered it were ever known to return, the Soliders who must stand watch near to it named it the “Deel”, which means “Dark Dividing”, for they came to believe that it was the very door to the UnderRealm itself, come upon the face of the world by the deep powers of the Demon Lord.  But no mystical nor magical eye could pierce the Darkness, nor any Wizard’s spell disperse it, so ever-present was that barrier, wrought by the most dastardly of fleshly Demons in that Age.  But in later days, in Weyilendeh, Tingor the Eld declared that the Deel had been summoned by Modeus to stand as the Demon’s mocking answer to the God’s own Enchanted Mists.

Now, as for the beginning of the Second War, it happened one day that Brandar and Calaren, while riding and hunting along the River Kelebros, noticed a dark cloud rising into the heavens from the vicinity of the Demon’s Castle.  And it moved east, despite the prevailing winds, but also kept expanding in size.  Then it passed overhead where it blocked entirely the light of the Suns.  And its shadow instilled in their hearts a deep sense of dread, until it had continued and thereafter made its way to the Jungle Lands.  But the fear lingered for so long after it had passed that the two deemed that war was once more coming to the New Frontier.  So, upon Brandar's return to Deunomis, he ordered that all the families of the men-at-arms upon the Borderlands, including his own, must remove themselves to the Old Frontier, or go into the Jungles, until the war was done.  And just as they made it to those parts the invasion began, with more numerous enemies than had come in the First War, and which therefore resulted in the deaths of many a Soldier, and the destruction, once again by fire, of great swaths of the Forest.  What is more, the dark cloud which Brandar and Calaren had seen they learned later settled upon the Jungle Lands past the Old Frontier, carrying with it a plague that rapidly swept through the Sereghran, with devastating effect. 

So dire was that pestilence that more of the People died from the malady than would fall in the war.  Therefore, the Second War of the New Frontier was named the “Flueres An-Bhunus”, which is the “Crushing Sickness”.  And it killed a full quarter of the People of the Jungle Lands, and left many others with lingering sicknesses. 

Nevertheless, Brandar won that war, though it was not celebrated due to the count of those who had fallen.  And twenty-one years later the Third War was much like the Second, with yet again more numerous an enemy presence and widespread disease, and flames in the Forest.  Thus also, but only ten years after that, the Fourth held to the same apparent plan with similar results, though also more destructive, to some extent, than the former.  So it was that Brandar perceived a recurring pattern in the manner in which Modeus was making war upon the Sereghran.

With each war, the Sereghran would inflict bloody victory over the enemy; driving what survivors remained deep into the Southern Wood, or pursuing them far into the Foothills, or even into the Highlands, or chasing them into the Deel out of which the enemy in the North always issued.  And yet, because of those victories, and the years of peace and prosperity they enjoyed between, where it had been over forty years since the Fourth War, the Sereghran grew rather haughty and over-confident; imagining in their pride that Modeus would ever be too weak to defeat them utterly. Then a great many began to speak of extending the Borders into the Southern Wood.  And nothing Brandar and the other two Kings may say would dissuade them from such foolishness.  So, it came about that the People’s Brigades began to place Companies in the South much too near the Highlands, expecting from there to embark upon a Quest of Expansion into the Wood.  But Brandar had grown suspicious, over the years; believing, at last, that all of the New-Frontier Wars to that time had been but tests of the Sereghran’s strength, and also designed to trick them into adopting just such a sense of superiority, whilst the enemy mustered secretly within the Darkness behind the Deel and must therefore be achieving some unknown vastness therein, and also in the Mountains and on the far Wastern Coastlands, where the Sereghran never tred.  And in this respect, Strabos agreed with Brandar, though Aetas was not so convinced.  In any event, Brandar encountered much opposition when he warned against the Expansion, over which he had no control.  Then many of the Lords of the Lands, all of them those who owned not an Aefarin, resisted his advice to strengthen the northern forces instead of sending so many Brigadiers and also Mercenaries into the South.  And they took to drawing up secret plans for invading the Great Southern Wood, and discussing how they would divide amongst themselves the new Lands they would obtain thereby.

Thus, after forty and four years since the Fourth War, the Fifth and final invasion was sent against the Sereghran, where nearly all of the People’s Brigades, despite Brandar’s pleas, had been concentrated in the South along the Borders near the hills and the swamps.  And as this war involved a more dire and terrible onslaught than any that could have imagined, many folk would not believe reports of it whence it had begun.

The Sereghran were confronted by an enemy more vast and more determined, and more evil than ever they had dreamed in any of the worst nightmares in all of their very long lives.  And in that war all of the Sereghran People, and even the Seven, were to come face-to-face with their everlasting doom.  For this was no mere test but was in fact a well-planned, long prepared, and continent-wide invasion in which the Sereghran’s defenses were breached in many places with the coming of the very first wave of many incomprehensible assaults.  But as the Sereghran had but a brief warning in the form of a great earthquake, they were largely caught unprepared for what was to come; thus reaping the consequences of their lack of faith in their Warlord.  Indeed, many Brigadiers, and all the townsfolk and villagers, and settlers and homesteaders who heeded not Brandar’s warning to flee eastwards after the earthquake were summarily slain without mercy everywhere the enemy came ravening over the Lands.

Nevertheless, the worst losses were among Brandar’s Northern Forces, owing that more of the enemy emerged from the Deel than came from the Foothills and down from the Highlands and the Mountains, and even the Great Southern Wood combined. 


The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 28   The Fall Of Agereis

By the time of the Fifth War, many Sereghran had come to dwell in the Forest and in the Grasslands east of Kelebros, so that there were small and large farms and ranches, and many villages and townships from Geranost to Magadinos, and from Deunomis to Baerhesperos.  And all those people felt safe, since Brandar commanded the largest Army the Sereghran had ever known.  And there were significant forces stationed at each of the new Towers all along the Borders and elsewhere.  But the Old Towers in Central Arzultaur, such as at Vodurus and Dhwinos and on, were now centers of commerce; some with townships but others as trading-posts, for Brandar had built roads through the Jungle and the Forest to connect the New with the Old Frontiers.  And all of the People near the New Borders believed that they could seek haven within the Old defenses should the Durwolc again come against them from the West.

Now, the First Wall of Deunomis established the southern end of Baeren’s Lake as a Fortress, being fashioned much like the Outer Wall at Baertunas, except that it had only one Gate facing east.  And while Brandar had named the Territory there Deunomis, High King Strabos had named the Fortress as Vortunas, which simply means “Far Fort”.  But the land between Brandar’s Tower and the Gate, all but Dragon’s Den Hill, was filled with the houses of the other Northrons and other Officers, and members of the Warlord’s Company, with some portions for the homes of Officials of the town which had grown up about the Fortress, though most of the town lay east of the Gate and the Lake.  And the Hill was ever ringed about day and night by well-armed Soldiers, and therefore remained reserved for Brandar’s Pavilion, which, whenever it was there the People knew that great matters were being discussed within, or that Lords of the Lands were gathered inside for a feast or celebration or ceremony, or all of them.  So, whatever was going on would be the talk of the town until the Pavilion was taken down.  And upon the Hill’s westward slope, Brandar had erected a great statue in the likeness of his late friend Baeren the Knight, facing the Lake with a hand to his brow, as if seeking for the enemy, but with the other hand upon the hilt of his sword.  And though the First Wall of Vortunas had been severely breached during the Third New-Frontier War, Brandar afterwards ordered that it must be replaced with a wall so great and magical that it could never be breached.  Hence, by the time of the Fourth War, it was finally completed.  And it was indeed a sight to behold.

Tall as the Warlord’s Tower, it stood fifty strides thick along all of its length, from shore to shore.  But another great wall was built upon the lakeshore within the arc of this grand wonder, to block enemies crossing the lake upon rafts from entering into the Fortress from the Lake.  And there remained only one Gate in its East Face, comprised of two massive iron doors, fifty feet high, and protected by a tremendous portcullis.  But upon the outer Faces of the wall were fastened great shields, with the coats of arms of the Lords and Generals, and Knights and Captains, and other Warriors who had fallen in the other three Wars of the New Frontier.  Consequently, the People began naming it the “Marsken”, which means “Shield Wall”.  And the Wizards Flaven and Palphus and Calaren together placed such powerful and everlasting magicks upon the Marsken that Flaven proudly proclaimed:  “This shall stand to the end of the Age.”  And it proved to be so.

Brandar dwelt in his Tower with Vearta and their now grown daughters, but the Tower had become known also as the “Tower of Vortunas”.  And the People took to referring to what was encompassed by the Marsken as “Inner Deunomis”.  Thus, the Tower later became more widely known as “Vortunas at Deunomis”.  And that is its name in the Lore of the Sereghran which Brandar brought with him back to Andaria.

It happens that Ergon’s Fortress, Agereis, built close upon the eastern shore of the mouth of Kelebros, had a watchtower of its own wherein dwelt Ergon with his own family.  But Ergon now commanded an Armada of ships in which he had a mighty vessel named New Pavanar, while the Northron’s small ship, Wingaron, had been brought there and was being maintained by Ergon’s family.  And Ergon had built great piers going out from the beach to nearly a furlong into the ocean, so that his ships could be tied there and boarded or disembarked without longboats.  And while ships could not sail up Kelebros, smaller craft could be sailed or rowed up and down the River between the Lake and the Bay, so that Agereis became a right prosperous trading-post.  But of course there were numerous boats for fishing and pleasure upon both the River and the Lake, and in all of the waters of the Sea thereabouts.  And often the Northrons would take Wingaron sailing for the joy of it, and for “fishing trips”, but ever without their wives and mistresses.  Then would they drink their fill and remember their adventures.  Yet, their women took it well, for it gave them chances to meet and engage in gossip or to go shopping, and also drink wine without their husbands and consorts being around.  And this became a happy routine for all involved, so that none ever complained of it.

By the coming of the War, many of the Emissaries’ sons and daughters were grown and healthy, and had been trained in the Army, including the women, among whom were all three of Brandar’s daughters, though his son had not yet been conceived.  And as the People had named the Seven Northrons as Newcomers, they took to calling their progeny the “Newcomers’ Kith”, though these proud individuals mostly hated the name “Kith”; deeming it beneath their station as high-born Sereghran.

Then the sons of the Northrons, even the very young, were referred to as the “Princes of Deunomis”, while the daughters were named the “Royal Dames”.  Yet, both Prince and Dame were trained as Knights of the Realm, though the Sereghran had never before known women as Knights, while there had been a few Warrior Maidens in their history.  This came about because Brandar insisted that his daughters must be taught how to defend themselves properly.  Consequently, upon hearing of this new change in tradition, many Sereghran women made their way to the Frontier to sign up with the Armies; sometimes escaping abusive parents or husbands.  And one there was who said to Brandar:  “Thank you, Lord.  A great chain of bondage have you cut from our ankles.”  Then Brandar issued a decree throughout the Lands that any able-bodied individual, be they male or female, may come and join with his Armies.  And thus were his forces made more like the traditions of the Northrons than of the Sereghran.  But as this became a source of contention among the folk of the Three Kingdoms, both Aetas and Strabos issued their own decrees, stating that Brandar had every right to order his Lands in any manner he chose, as long as he was loyal to the wider Realm, and so held Strabos his liege.  Then did the People thereafter largely take the situation in stride. 

When the Sereghran began to collect in the South, thinking of Expansion into the Wood, many Frontier Soldiers withdrew from the Armies to join with the Brigadiers who were mustering near the Highlands.  And in this way Brandar lost critical strength in the northern reaches of the Forest.  But there was nothing he could do to stop them, for he had no authority over the People’s Brigades if they were not willing to submit to his rule, and the great dream of the Sereghran is that their Lands should encompass the whole of the Hidden Continent.  Indeed, the Lords who supported the Brigades proudly proclaimed themselves “Expansionists”.  And while Brandar sympathized with that lofty goal, he considered such a venture a foolhardy endeavor, for the Brigadiers had no way of knowing the strength of the enemy in the Highlands and the Mountains.  Yet, many there were who sought greedily to claim large parcels of the Woodlands for themselves.  So it was that many former Soldiers who had moved to the South came to rue the day that they took their leave of the Armies and joined with the Expansionists.

Upon a calm and sunny day forty-four days into the forty-fourth year since the Fourth War of the New Frontier, a tremendous earthquake occurred, seemingly coming from the Demon’s Darkness, and which shook the whole of the Continent.  And so strong was the quake in the North that the three Towers of Kelebros closest to the Deel were thrown down, killing not a few Soldiers within and around those Towers.  But as the quake died away a current off the coast at Agereis drew ships towards that portion of the Deel which lay on the sea.  And as the first of those ships were about to reach it, the current suddenly reversed, at which a huge wave came roaring from the Deel as it were some kind of monster in the form of a foaming mass of water with a mind of its own, bent upon destruction.  Furthermore, riding upon this great wave were Elementals in the form of waterspouts, howling with voices like the sounds of the winds in a typhoon.

Completely destroyed was a third of Ergon’s Armada, and drowned were all the Mariners aboard those hapless ships.  Yet, Ergon’s ship New Pavanar and similar large vessels were carried east over the ocean, though Ergon was not aboard at that time.  And while those ships were overturned, with all of their masts broken off, New Pavanar and two of her sister ships were not sunk by the wave.

Wingaron, however, was lifted up by yet another wave from the north, a low but steadily-moving hill of water that bore Wingaron away and then set it gently a good distance inland; much to the amazement of survivors who witnessed this most strange of events.  And none could explain it, except to say that the Gods must have saved the Northron’s ship from destruction that day.  Yet, terrible was the demise of so many other ships at Agereis.  And the Coastlands were not spared, as the wave moved up and over the lands, destroying everything to as far as three leagues inland, and which covered three-hundred leagues of coastline.  And Ergon, seeing the coming of the wave from his Tower, feared that it may topple the Tower itself, so tremendous was the wave.  And as the great wall of water approached, he ushered his family, and as many Mariners ashore as he could manage, to the top of the Tower and thus saved them, as the Tower held fast, though it was engulfed to a depth of more than two-thirds of its height.

Less fortunate was Stanon at Geranost, as he was not in his own Tower and was taken with his fleet when the wave sped across the Bay and rose up to slay every living soul in its path.  And while the Tower there also stood fast, even submerged to its turret, many another structure thereabouts was destroyed.

Great were the numbers of Mariners at sea and ashore, and of Garrison Soldiers and Brigadiers drowned in the swirling waters.  Then untold numbers of farmers and herdsmen, and townsfolk and villagers, and fishermen upon the Coast, and others in the Grasslands were to get washed away by the wave, or perished in the flood-waters, with many who survived getting caught in lakes of sucking mud or in perilous mud-flows, or dragged thereafter towards the sea by the swift and staggering outflow.  And thus did the Coastlands remain strewn with the bodies of both animals and Sereghran long after the waters had receded.  And in the remaining few weeks, the rotting corpses attracted so many vermin and beasts that these also presented an added threat to those who had survived to then.  Of course, crops within range of the flood were ruined, while fresh water sources were poisoned by the decaying dead so that many survivors were sickened, or otherwise thirsted or starved to their deaths.

The giant wave created so much flooding and came ashore with such force that Kelebros flowed backwards and burst violently from his banks.  Then Baeren’s Lake swelled so out of bounds that the streets of Deunomis were for a time knee-deep in filthy water, which went immediately beneath the Gate and flooded the inner grounds behind the Marsken, whereupon many dwellings therein had their lower rooms drenched.

Here, it must be said that, shortly before the water emerged from the Lake, Ergon used his Aefarin to call upon Brandar and described to him what occurred even as it was happening.  Then Brandar called Stanon and beheld a terrible sight, which he would never forget to the end of his days.  For Stanon turned his Aefarin so that Brandar beheld there the coming of the wave, like some nightmarish horizon-wide, mountain-high blue-green and white-foaming cliffside, moving swift and unstoppably to fall upon the viewer.  Then was there nothing to see, as Stanon, undergoing a horrible death, let loose his Aefarin so that the gift sank to the bottom of the ocean, never to be found again.  But users of remaining Aefari could, if they wished, later call upon that device, ever resting beneath the waves, and behold the realms of the deeps.  And at whiles, when a storm would churn the waters or currents were just so, and the Aefarin resting there turned a certain way, then could bones of dead men be seen through it strewn upon the bottom of the sea.

Just as the wave was falling upon Admiral Stanon, a mighty thundering issued from the Darkness behind the Deel, and rolled swiftly across all of the Lands, after which terrible storms came suddenly from the Deel and out of the North from over the sea, and eastwards from the Highlands, and up from the Great Southern Wood, all with giant whirlwinds and deadly lightening, together with fist-sized hail then torrential rains.  Yet, beneath the storm-clouds came untold ranks of Durwolc, themselves perishing from the raging winds and awful lightening and the devastating hail.  But so vast were their numbers that their storm-slain were reckoned but of small account.  And across all of the New Frontier, north to south, the enemy overwhelmed the Sereghran; showing no mercy  and entering into the Lands unhindered in many places, and therefore sacking and then destroying many of the Warlord’s new Towers.

In the far North upon the sea came once again the Leviathan which Aetas had wounded in the First War not a hundred years past.  And so forceful was the Leviathan that it smote upon the ships of Agereis which had survived the wave, and like a wholly mad serpentine God from the most ancient legends of the Elves.  But with it the Leviathan brought Sea-Serpents and many-legged monsters and other creatures of the Deeps, many of which were known from before but others there were which the Mariners had never yet seen.  And from the water’s edge swarmed countless things of various sorts, among them those spider-like abominations with their poisonous spines, and hordes of Holgygros, and great gatherings of other horrible denizens of the sea.  But all of these came so swiftly and densely, and so unending, that they covered the Coastlands for league upon league east and west of the mouth of Kelebros, moving steadily inland against the receding floodwaters.  Thus, Sereghran who had not yet been killed by the wave or the flood or by other means were now set upon and devoured by these most ravenous and evil of monsters.  And there was nothing that could be done to save them.

Next, out of the Darkness flew huge flocks of winged creatures which came both east and south to assail the Sereghran upon both land and sea, and at the Towers and Fortresses, and in the Grasslands and the Forest; going as far as Baertunas.  But from the Deel poured yet more of the Durwolc, as if there were no end to them.  And with them were Giants and Dragons, and Demons and Devils, and all manner of other monsters and beasts.  But here too were creatures which the Sereghran had never seen before, and for which they have no ready names, and of which, to this day, they have no ready means of describing them faithfully.

Hard pressed was Ergon atop his Tower at fending off the flying creatures.  And, even as he fought, he beheld with shock the destruction all around; kenning that those within the Tower were no match for the enemy there amassed.  Therefore, waiting until the floodwaters had gone down enough for an escape from the Tower to be possible, he gave weapons to his family, even the smallest child, and to his servants, and led them down and out upon the enemy-infested grounds; ordering the Mariners with him to form a ring about his family and his servants, as the Mariners each held mighty magical swords. And gathering to himself also any survivors he came across, which were few, remaining alive due to their having some magical weapon or device, else being Mages, Ergon, by the powers of his own enchanted sword hacked a way to the nearest pier and with those Mariners and Mages made it safe for a time.  Then Mariners and Mages from the ships that had not been sunk and were yet tied to that pier disembarked and came to him.  But those aboard ships tied to other piers could not be saved.

Thus, Ergon ordered those now with him to make their way south with the women and children in the center, while he guarded their rear.  Yet, as he was about to set foot upon land, fighting all the way, he and twenty of his Mariners were separated from the rest, and there he did battle not knowing what was happening to his family.

Valiant indeed was that stand.  And Ergon saved his family thereby, though he knew it not, for the enemy were intent upon Ergon and the Mariners yet standing on the pier, while the Mariners and Mages protecting his family made good an escape, due to the enemy’s numbers lessening southwards, though they made it to the muddy Grasslands with but one living servant and a mere five Mariners.  But other Mariners and a handful of Brigadiers that had somehow survived at Agereis were also saved by Ergon, as the enemy turned all of their attention to him; giving those men their own chance to flee, else these too would have fallen.

Ergon held the pier until the Leviathan and its Serpents and many of the flying creatures, and numerous monsters upon land which had emerged from the Deel together with a great Basilisk, assailed the men on that pier and then destroyed all of the other piers and the remaining ships, and the Tower, and all other structures that remained near the shore.  And within days the monsters upon land drove very far inland, invading the Grasslands southward, as Holgygros made their way up Kelebros and an army of Durwolc marched southeast, intent upon besieging the nearest Towers of the Old Frontier.

So ended Ergon of Agereis, Admiral of the Fourth Navy of Arzultaur, Hero of the Realm of Aetas and Savior of the Seven Northron Emissaries.  And so ended Ergon’s Armada with Agereis and its Tower.  But so also perished the good Admiral Stanon at Geranost, with nearly all of its folk.  Yet, at the least, Ergon’s family had been saved.

By a strange quirk of fate, one Company of the Men of Geranost had also been spared, having been away on patrol when the great wave had crashed down upon their homes.  And going stealthily around the floodwaters while avoiding many monsters upon land and hiding from Durwolc hordes, they fled into the Jungle without being captured, but then rode south and later east and came at last to Baertunas, where also Ergon’s sad and weary family would later arrive.  But that Company afterwards took such vengeance upon the enemy that Modeus, at length, put a great price upon their heads.

Thus were Agereis and Geranost taken by the enemy in the beginning of the Fifth War of the New Frontier.  And this event is named the “Fall of Agereis” and also the “Demise of Ergon and Stanon”, and other names besides.  But it is also viewed as one of the most devastating and sorrowful events in all Sereghran lore.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 29   The Arrival Of Aetas

No sooner had the floodwaters receded than the Holgygros preceded with manifold and sundry Korligen up Kelebros and went teeming forth to attack all Sereghran they could find.  And by the time the creatures had come to the Third Tower already were there large armies of Durwolc and other monsters coming from out of the Deel and from the Foothills and crossed the river in-force upon rafts.  And over the course of a few weeks these assailed Calaren’s forces along the entire length of Kelebros and laid siege to Soldiers trapped alive within those Towers which had not been brought down by the earthquake.  But so many of the enemy had come that any Soldiers caught in the open were slaughtered, no matter their strength.  And the enemy also mustered upon the Grasslands but from there marched south and east to bring ruin upon the Lands for days on end.  And Calaren was powerless to stop them despite his magical prowess  --  for the enemy’s ranks were far too vast.  Indeed, hopeless seemed Calaren’s plight, as he beheld a mere handful of his largest Company survive only to flee in fear to the east pursued by the Durwolc in such numbers that the end of them could not be seen north or west.

Camped with a full Division upon the Grasslands thirty leagues south of Agereis, he and his men had risen from the earthquake to do sudden battle with an influx of evil winged creatures.  But soon was he also fighting Durwolc who had lately crossed the river and assailed his forces with the utmost abandon.  And he was at a loss as to how he could preserve his command, as the enemy were so strong and ruthless that the Division he had positioned upon the field had been whittled down to the equivalent of only three Companies in less than a day and a half of fighting.  But he alone, by the great magicks that he knew, was able to protect those survivors, for the time being.

Meanwhile, unknown to Calaren, all of the River Forces had now been defeated but for a remnant of the Division protecting the Sixth Tower; for there happened to be there a good number of specially adept Mages, and these brought about a stalemate upon the field about the Tower.  Yet, that Tower would not stand much longer if aid came not soon.  Then aid did come, as a number of the survivors of Agereis had come together in the Grasslands a few leagues north of where the busy Calaren now stood.  And heading south they came upon the battlefield where Calaren was struggling to keep the last of his forces alive.  But these Men of Agereis were noticed from afar by the enemy and therefore must make a desperate charge, hoping to cleave a way through to join with Calaren’s men, and with them fight their way east.  Yet, at the moment they engaged the enemy here rode up the Cavalry of Vordurus, whose commanding officer had seen smoke rising above the battle in the distance and came as swift as his riders could manage over the damp and boggy Grasslands.  And those Horsemen wielded thick lances and long pole-arms and heavy axes, and sharp and magical swords with which they smote upon the enemy so mightily that all of the Durwolc there were dismayed and fell back.

Then was the tide of that battle turned in the Sereghran’s favor.

Calaren’s surviving forces were saved; for, seeing the coming of aid, they made their way northeast and joined with the Men of Agereis and the Cavalry of Vordurus, while the enemy held back, waiting to see what was to happen next.

Calaren now begged of his saviors to go with him west to discover whether any of his River Forces yet lived, rather than making a run eastwards straight away.  And while the Men of Agereis were reluctant to do this, the Cavalry leader agreed, and they made their way to the Fifth Tower, with the enemy tracking them not a hundred yards distant to the north and the south, and also from behind.   But when they finally came close enough to see the Tower, going a night and half a day without rest, they found that it had been destroyed, with its ruin surrounded by a great crowd of Durwolc who were engaged in mad revelry, but who instantly left off their merrymaking as soon as being aware of the Sereghran coming nigh.  Thus, Calaren and his fellows turned south to make for the Sixth Tower, for that was their only course, as the Durwolc now attacked from all sides, and that Tower, ten leagues away, was their only hope.  So they fought every step of the way.  But these Sereghran were hardy and held magical weapons, and had with them one of the greatest Wizards in all of the Lands.  So they made it wearily at last to that Tower with little further loss, and joined the besieged forces there. 

Here then was occurring a relentless siege.  And after three more days of fighting Calaren had with him less than one eighth of the forces he had commanded along the River Kelebros, while the Cavalry were down to a third and had lost all of their horses.  But the Survivors of Agereis fought like madmen and had lost but a tithe of their number since meeting Calaren and the Cavalrymen in the Grasslands.  Nevertheless, even these mighty fighters would not remain fit after the food and water in the Tower ran out, which would happen within just a few more days.  Thus did it all seem vain until new Sereghran forces afoot arrived, at long last, from both the east and southeast, so that the enemy must forego their siege and fight upon the fields about the Tower in defense of their flanks.

Here were the Armies of both Vordurus and Kombros with a number of Divisions of People’s Brigades from there, and from Torquere and Domosus.  But here also came the Army of Baertunas led by Flaven himself, followed by sizable forces of the Brigadiers of Baertunas and Trabus, and also Gemma, and as far away as Bergereh.  And these forces, over the next few days, fought the enemy so dynamically that the Duwolc, and all of the other monsters thereabouts, broke apart, with many retreating towards the river, though great loss was inflicted upon both sides, and Flaven, at first, could not make his way to Calaren until after a half day and full night of fighting.  But it seemed, in any event, that the Sixth Tower was doomed nonetheless.

However, with the coming of dawn, King Aetas strode down from the north afoot, covered in the mud of the Grasslands and leading an incredibly magical army of Mariners, with Mages and Soldiers of the Army of Baerakis.  And later that day, there marched from the east a mighty force of the Elves both of Windmere and Linguonon, followed by yet more People’s Brigades from Dolon and River Town, and other towns and villages of the Coastlands.  Thus, with these forces behind him Flaven was able to route the enemy and drive them before him, and made his way to the Tower as Aetas was hacking his way through from the north.  Then did these Lords come to the rescue of Calaren and his survivors at the Sixth Tower of Kelebros.  And they met upon the battlefield north of the Tower, just as the enemy was being routed.

Next, Aetas and Flaven and Calaren, together with many followers, pursued the surviving enemy across the river.  And thereafter they spent many days clearing the enemy from both banks of Kelebros, including Korligen and the dire Holgygros.  Then northwards they moved, and came at length to the coast; slaying all the other creatures that had emerged from the sea at Agereis, and all monsters and Durwolc that had come to Agereis from the Foothills and from the Deel.  But when that was done, the Lords rested not, but went about cleansing the Grasslands on both sides of the river, nigh even to the Deel itself; deeming that no enemy should remain to attack their rear whence they turned south to go to the aid of the Warlord at Deunomis.

Now, Aetas ordered that their forces must not remain in the Grasslands beyond Kelebros, but must hold its eastern banks from the Bay to the Sixth Tower, and then march along the river south, freeing the rest of the river on their way to Baeren’s Lake.  And upon that march, so deadly and magical were they that Durwolc fell before them in heaps, and no other monsters could stand against them, be they Dragon or Drake, or Devil or Demon, or any other creatures besides.  Thus did they arrive at the Lake within eight days from the Sixth Tower, and were instrumental in bringing the war to an end.

***** 

Upon seeing Stanon killed by the giant wave, and having Scouts speak of enemy hordes to the west, Brandar knew that Deunomis was to come under attack.  So he called to Aetas and Strabos by means of his Aefarin and asked them to send more forces as swiftly as possible.  And his expressed hope was that Aetas would go to Ergon while Strabos marched to reinforce the Army at Deunomis ere it was too late.  Yet, his hope was not to be realized in the manner he desired.  Far from it.

Due to the distance to be marched, Strabos would be slow to arrive.  And Aetas, having laden his ships with Mages and Mariners and Soldiers, and launching his entire Fleet from Baerakis, came in time only to find the enemy feasting upon Ergon’s carcass, and upon those who had died with him.  There also, the Leviathan was reveling in victory in the midst of the bloody waters of the Bay.  But Aetas, who wept at the sight of Geranost as he passed, for there were many bodies and broken ships and dreadful carnage everywhere upon both land and sea, and wept yet again upon seeing the destruction at Agereis, nevertheless, even with tears in his eyes, did battle with the Leviathan, as once had he done before, and inflicted such harm upon that Devil that the creature was forced to flee merely to save its fleshly form.  And the few Sea-Serpents that lived after the Mariners and Mages aboard the King’s Fleet slew two thirds of them, slithered rapidly away closely following after their master.  Then Aetas and his Mages and Mariners and brave Soldiers aboard-ship went about slaying all that they could catch of the many-legged monsters, and the other creatures which had come from the deeps, whereupon what few remained sank beneath the waves and did not return for fear of the divine wrath of the god-like King Aetas and his men.

Thereafter, finding nowhere to make land at the ruins of Agereis, for the piers had been destroyed and the beaches were swarming with mutant insectile things and ravenous beasts feeding upon the dead, Aetas sailed east by the way he had come and disembarked at a place mid-way between Agereis and Geranost.  And he marched across the Grasslands knee-deep in mud, using pikes to feel for quicksand, at which he reached the Sixth Tower of Kelebros upon the fifth morning of his coming ashore; having struggled night and day without rest for the last three days of that journey.

Naturally, Flaven had also received a summons from Brandar upon his Aefarin.  And mustering as soon as could be, he came to the field of battle at the Sixth Tower just as Aetas was coming down from the north.  Thus were Calaren’s survivors preserved, and Kelebros thereafter made clean, and the Grasslands freed of evil-ones.  Yet, today that victory is spoken of as a time of dire sorrows and deep mourning.

Then Aetas and Flaven and Calaren marched south with what forces they deemed could be spared from guarding the river, knowing that Brandar was in need of aid, while Strabos was yet riding through the Jungle Lands.  And that is how these Lords came at last with the intention of saving their Warlord and the beleaguered forces at Deunomis.  But while they won there a great victory over the armies of Modeus, it would be a sad day for Brandar and his fellow Northrons, as shall now be told.  

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 30   The Battle Of Deunomis 

As great as the battles in the North had been, Deunomis was to receive by far the most grievous assaults from the West in the Fifth War of the New Frontier.  After recovering from the earthquake, not yet knowing of the plight of Ergon, for Ergon had no Aefarin, and feeling that something more terrible was about to befall, Brandar quickly called for aid from Lords who indeed held Aefari, knowing, however, that most would be long in coming.   Then he ordered that all of the People of Deunomis not in the Army or the Brigades must flee to the East.  And he sent word for those in the Forest likewise to go as soon as could be.  But Vearta he sent to lead the People of Deunomis and take the wives and small children of the other Northrons; hoping that they would all reach the Old Frontier in time to be saved from the coming invasion.  Yet, try as he might to get the grown Northron Kith to go, not one Prince nor Dame would leave Vortunas; deeming it cowardly to do so.  But the Kith were persuaded in this by Brandar’s daughters, where the eldest said to him:  “To run like dear from hunters we shall never do!  Are we not Dunjilarians by heritage, and Warriors by training?  Nay, we stand with our King, whether he wins or loses this fight.  And I say, woe shall we heap upon any who comes against the Kith of the Seven.”  And from that day forth the Princes and Dames took up the name “Kith” as a venerable badge of honor.  Thus did the Northron’s grown sons and daughters remain, and aided in the defense of the Realm, while Vearta led the People east upon the road to Baerhesperos.

Terrific storms came from the North and West, lasting days, and under whose thunder and lightening, with whirlwinds and soaking rains, and deadly hail, the Durwolc and many winged monsters came and assailed Brandar’s forces with such ferocity that the first wave alone decimated entirely four full Divisions in the forces comprising the Front Lines arrayed along the eastern edges of the Foothills.  But when the storms had passed, the fighting raged on, where the sky was dark and the air thick with ash and smoke from volcanoes which Modeus had caused to erupt in the far-off Mountains, just as he had done in the First War, though much more intensely.  And the smoke and ash coming forth stung the eyes severely, and caused harsh coughing fits.

From the beginning of the assault the enemy forces included tremendous numbers of Durwolc herding packs of wolves before them, but who were themselves driven forth by Giants wielding great bullwhips.  And with them came tall Devils and Demons, and Gargoyles and Vampires, and Ghouls and Gangyn, and other creatures.  But after a few days of fighting there came Dragons by the score, among whom the mightiest was an enormous Black Dragon named Drakonus, an older sibling of the vile Dragon Balkurmis, though Drakonus was a winged dragon, and ruled the whole of the Western Coastlands and all of the Mountains, and was the very dragon which the Northrons had seen from afar when first sighting the shores of the Hidden Continent.  And Drakonus had come to avenge the slaying of his brother, Balkurmis, so that he fell upon Vortunas with more fury than even the greatest of the whirlwinds; alighting upon the Tower and burning everything he could reach with his fire-breath.  Then, rising up and whirling about, he swooped down and set ablaze every house within the Marsken.  And from there he burned down the whole of the town, and then set to flame the Forest within sight of Dragon’s Den Hill.  And the flames from the Forest conflagration rose so high that they twirled together into an incredible fiery spiral.

Dreadful indeed had that assault become.  Well it was well, therefore, that the People were many leagues away whence Drakonus had come to the battlefield.  As it is, not all of the Soldiers inside the Marken perished in the flames, since the evil Drakonus could not break the Warlord’s Tower wherein the Seven and the Kith remained unscathed with many a fortunate Soldier who happened to be there and who had moved away from the windows and doors as soon as the burning was begun.  And still others there were who found shelter in cellars or within houses made of stone, or other places where the flames could not go, and so escaped the wrath of the Dragon.  Thus did a third of the Warlord’s Company live on.  And these later made the enemy pay a hundred times over for each of their fellows who had been burned to their deaths.

What is more, Drakonus found that the Marsken was absolutely indestructible, so that not even he, with all of his might and fire and magic, may open the least breach through which the Durwolc may enter.  Yet, he held this no great hindrance, as all the Fortress was in flames.  And he flew over it with a mind to land near the burning Pavilion atop Dragon’s Den Hill  --  for the assault had come at a time when Brandar was planning a feast and the holding of war-games upon meadows to the northeast of Deunomis.  But as the Dragon was about to come down, he spied there Baeren’s tall statue upon the Hill’s western slope and so he fell upon it, crushing it, and took to stomping joyfully upon the rubble.  And with that, Drakonus sat himself down to rest and admire his handiwork; spouting great streams of fire-breath into the air just for fun.

Meanwhile, Jesan had called to Brandar upon his Aefarin, saying:  “The whole of the South is under attack from flying monsters and Durwolc upon land too numerous to withstand.  And we shall surely be destroyed if aid comes not soon.”  Yet, there was naught Brandar could do but repeat his pleas to the other Lords of the Lands.  And while Medhyos was indeed but two day’s away from where Jesan fought, Strabos would be quite long in coming and Phaedus was himself under attack by Korligen which had once again emerged from their swamps and were moving north in great numbers.

Therefore, Jesan abandoned his post and with a much reduced Army made his way north, fighting all of the way in an attempt to meet up with Brandar’s Main Force, although he acquired heavy losses in that effort.  Then were the People’s Brigades in the Southlands left open to attack from both the West and the South, as they had all gathered along the edge of the Highlands expecting to engage in an Expansion west.  Thus had they no choice but to stand and fight, so swiftly had the enemy come upon them from those very Highlands.  And they perished one and all.

Yet, Wisemen among the Sereghran would later say that the sacrifice of those Brigadiers kept the enemy from overrunning the Southlands as readily as might have been, as the enemy’s main strength had been concentrated in the North, especially at Deunomis, which allowed the Lords in the South the time needed to muster for a proper defense of their lands.  Even so, dire was Brandar’s plight, for he was fighting Gobba and Kobo, and Gress and Trollo, and Dire Wolves and Wargren and Wargs; all ushered forth by various breeds of Giants.  And with them were Minotaurs and Devilkin, and Fiends, and many another monster, together with mutated beasts led about on chains.  But there too was a huge and horrible Gorgon, with great Stone-Demons in her train.  Yet, worst of all was a terrible Hydra, towering and magical, with ten ugly heads from whose mouths spewed all manner of vile concoctions; poisonous vapors, burning fluids, caustic vomits, and dead men’s blood.  And this beast slaughtered many good Soldiers.

It happens that the great Wizard Palphus was with Brandar’s Main Force on the fields before Vortunas and was therefore not at the fall of Agereis, as he was on a visit to test a new spell he had devised against the curse of Dragon’s Den Hill.  Thus, when the earthquake occurred, he knew that war was begun.  And deeming that his magicks would be needed, he went to the aid of the Main Force ere Drakonus began burning everything up.  Therefore, Palphus strove with the Stone-Demons and the Gorgon, and with the Giants and the Hydra; keeping those powerful monsters from utterly destroying the Main Force.  And this is what he was about when, to his amazement, he was joined there by Jesan coming from the south with the survivors of the Armies of the Southern Towers.  But the Main Force was so steadily being reduced, due to the press and might of the enemy, that only those who wielded some potent magic were able to stand there at all.  And the enemy moved to surround them, including Jesan’s forces, and even the Marsken itself, as flames two furlongs high began to rise from the Forest.  And thus was there little hope of an escape to for anyone there, though Brandar had long since decided to keep his inner vow to never again flee from an enemy.

At length, the Main Force was hemmed close against the Marsken and was surrounded upon three sides, with Palphus fighting the Gorgon and Jesan contesting the Hydra.  And as Soldiers and Mages had been falling in staggering numbers all along, what stood now were so magical that the enemy was checked at last.  Yet, while the Gate was not a hundred paces away, it was quite out of their reach.

Seeing this, Drakonus was of a mind to smite the last of the Main Force, desiring that Palphus and Jesan should be first among them to feel his piercing claws.  And as the rest of Brandar’s forces had by now come under attack, the Dragon deemed that victory was at hand.  But as he rose to fly over the Marsken seven lightening-bolts struck him suddenly from the side so forcefully that he was thrown against the great wall’s inner surface and gave a great wailing cry of surprise and pain.  And never before in all his long life had he been so wounded by any of the Sereghran.

To the Dragon’s amazement, in the very midst of roaring flames yet unburned and healthy stood the Seven Northron Emissaries, with Brandar and Tomas at the fore.  But all of the Seven’s brightly glowing swords were poised to strike again.  And with his all-seeing eyes the Dragon knew that these men bore beneath their tunics secret magicks hung upon each of their breasts, and against which he had no power.

Great indeed had the Seven become, wearing their magic necklaces and wielding adroitly their magical swords, by which they went unharmed among devouring flames.  And the Dragon could sense that he would not defeat such Warriors as long as the Seven should stand together and fight so dauntingly as one.  Nevertheless, Drakonus was a very old and evil Dragon.  And he was not so easily slain by any magic, for his black scales were nigh as impenetrable as the Marsken itself.  Thus, while the lightening-bolts had caused him pain, they were not enough to slay him.  And he sprang so suddenly onto the Northrons that their next strikes went wild.  Then the Dragon knocked Brandar and Tomas aside and attacked the others by tooth and claw.  And were it not for the protection of their swords several of the Seven would have seen death there, as the might of the Dragon was nigh the greatest in the world of that Age.

So did the Northrons struggle with Drakonus as with no other monster they had known, many times striking the beast with magic and blade, but to no avail.  Even so, neither could the Dragon slay these great Men, try whatever he may, because of the protection of the swords held firmly in their grasp, and due to the powers of their Gems.

Then Brandar, kenning the ultimate futility of this struggle, made use of that magic which only Beliscaertos holds of all the Northron’s Brands; deeming that the time was ripe for a surpassing blow.  And with a word of command Brandar smote Drakonus in its belly with a terrific blast of invisible mystic energy so devastating that the monster was thrown back and slammed against the inner face to the Marsken, with a large and agonizing patch of fully burnt and charred scales in its middle.  And so startled was Drakonus by this that he gazed upon Brandar unbelieving  --  for no creature had ever hurt him so sorely until Brandar smote upon him once more in the very same place, at which he began to spill blood upon the ground.  Then was he so frightened, for the first time in all his wicked life, that he could not comprehend it.

The Dragon kenned that here was a magic that could slay him, after all, should he continue to fight on.  He therefore leapt into the air with a parting spew of his fire-breath in Brandar’s direction, and winged himself away, giving a deafening howl of rage and frustration as off he flew, whereupon he went to circling above, far out of the sight of the Northrons, and as the fires within the Marsken began then to die down.

Brandar’s fellows cheared him, and slapped on the back, and saluted him.  And young Erek cried out:  “Hail, the Warlord Odaron!  Yea, our great Dragon Slayer!”  But Brandar then calmed them, reminding them of where they were, and said:  “The beast is not slain, but bides his time and heals himself, no doubt devising some wretched plan of vengeance upon us all, even as we speak amidst these flames.  And who knows what the Demon Lord, his master, yet has in store.  Let us go, therefore, and perform our charge.  For the Sereghran have need of our arms as never before!”

Subsequently, while Drakonus was pondering from above how best to defeat the Northrons, Brandar went about giving orders to survivors within the Marsken, making the Kith remain in the Tower “to guard and defend it against capture.”  Then the fires thereabouts began to go out, though the Forest continued to blaze even higher.

Setting a small group of survivors the task of putting out fires that remained by obtaining water from the Lake, Brandar ordered Soldiers from the Tower, and gathered surviving Soldiers who were wandering the Grounds thereabouts, and had them muster behind the Gate and there make ready for a charge onto the battlefield beyond.

Here, one of the men was a Knight who carried an ox-horn, and was now the highest ranking Officer in the Warlord’s Company, other than the Six Northron Generals.  And Brandar bid this one to blow upon his horn as other Soldiers opened the Gate.  Then did the Northrons lead through the Gate a valiant charge with Brandar and Tomas at the fore.  But their only hope was to carve a path by which the survivors of the Main Force could enter the Fortress.  Yet, the sudden presence of the Seven on that field was enough to free up the survivors while the Warlord’s reduced Company stood guard over the Gate.  And thus did Brandar get most of the survivors into the Marsken, though these amounted to but a sixth of the forces Brandar once commanded there.  Yet, unknown to Brandar and the others outside the Gate, Koligen came up from the Lake and attacked those who were fetching water with which to quench the fires.  And lo, as the survivors of the Main Force entered and looked about, here was battle being fought and lost upon the Lake Wall.  But when those Soldiers went to the aid of their friends, suddenly large numbers of Durwolc came clamoring over the wall using grappling hooks and ladders which they had brought upon rafts.  Then a great battle erupted amidst the flames and embers and the rising smokes of Inner Deunomis, in which many a Soldier, saved from the enemy without, fell to the enemy within.  But Brandar would not learn of this until long afterwards, for he was soon to be captured alive, to the stunned surprise and dismay of all of the Sereghran there, even after he slew the Hydra.  And this is how that came about.

Barely a Band of the Warlord’s Company remained outside the Gate, along with Palphus and Jesan and the Seven.  And while Brandar and Palphus strove with the Hydra, Tomas and Jesan fought with the Gorgon, doing their best to keep from gazing into her eyes.  But the other Northrons stood against her dour vanguard of Demons.  Yet, so terrible and fierce and cramped had those struggles become that this last of the Warlord’s Company must turn and defend themselves from the Durwolc ere they could enter through the Gate.  Then were they slain by Giants wielding great spiked clubs, swift and fey, and who cared not of Durwolc killed by the mad swinging of their clubs.

The Gorgon’s lower body was as that of a great serpent, but her upper body was as that of a woman with six arms, but no legs, while her skin was scaly and a dark green in color.  And with two hands she used bow and arrow, but in two others she held shields, while in the last two she held a spear and a great axe.  But instead of hair she had a head full of poisonous snakes ,whose venom would kill a man within seconds of being bitten by just one.  Yet, her most potent weapons were her eyes.  For, with but a moment of gazing into them, one would be changed swiftly into a statue of stone. 

Close beside the Gorgon and her Demons stood the Hydra, huge and unconquerable.  But when the last Warrior in the Warlord’s Company had fallen, only Palphus and Jesan and the Seven stood between the enemy and the Gate.  Seeing now a chance to break through to the Gate, all of the enemy surged upon the nine, who would later be named the “Defenders of Vortunas”, though the fallen Company would be counted with them, while Palphus and Jesan and the Seven would also be named the “Seven and the Two”, and the “Nine Defenders”.  Then Brandar called to those within the Gate, even as he fought, and ordered that the Gate must be closed and locked with the Nine outside, as not one Defender could pull back without relinquishing the Gate. 

Thus was this deed named the “Last Stand of the Warlord”.  And while the Nine Defenders did battle with the Gorgon and the Hydra, the Durwolc thereabouts pulled back and made a ring about the combatants, then took to jeering and cheering, and howling and cursing, and making bets; as if the fight was a cruel sort of gladiatorial sport.

Palphus stood then before the Gate fighting by the power of his great magicks, holding no weapon but a wand.  Yet, he was decidedly the most powerful person upon that field of battle, and slew even the greatest of the monsters that came against him.

Jesan stood nigh Palphus to the Wizard’s right, by virtue of his prowess and the magical weapons he carried, chief of which was a spear named Acusos, which the Duke Flaven had made for him.  And that was a supremely mighty weapon.

Now, it must be said here that, among the Defenders, Brandar and Tomas were set apart in the Lore of the Sereghran, being the Warlord and his Second.  But the other Northrons were named the “Five Fellow Northrons”, which was the title they had been given in Sunthakis.  In any event, the Seven were held as responsible for keeping the enemy from storming the Gate, as they stood in a semicircle about Palphus and Jesan.  Yet, by the desperate nature of the fight, the combatant groups began to move apart just as the Gate was being barred from within.  Then Brandar and Palphus took to struggling against the Hydra while Tomas and Jesan fought with the Gorgon, and the Five defeated each and every one of her Stone-Demons.  But as the last Demon fell, the Gorgon suddenly slithered aside to allow the Giants to pounce unexpectedly upon Tomas and Jesan, at which the Gorgon came at the Five from their left.  And so quickly did this happen that three of the Five were turned to stone ere they were aware of their plight, while the remaining two were swept aside by the Giants.  Thus did those three stand as solid as cold granite statues; posed each as if to strike with their swords.

Rosth and Erek and Alak were those who had been turned to stone, holding their swords as if frozen in the very act of making a hacking blow.  Yet, only their flesh had been made stone.  Their swords and garments, and their armor, and also their necklaces, remained unchanged, though no enemy could remove those things from the statues owing to the great magicks of the swords, which, even now, kept their wielders from being wholly ravaged, and which caused a mere touch to one of those swords, and even to the statues, to inflicted great pain upon the monsters.  And those imagining themselves stout enough to keep fast a hold upon a sword or statue or necklace soon died. 

Meanwhile, Daram and Khalen were forced by the Giants to make their stand a good distance northeast of the Gate, while Tomas and Jesan must do battle against the Gorgon, and with yet more of those terrible Giants.

Filled now with rage and desperation at seeing their friends turned to stone, Jesan and Tomas smote upon the Giants that had come against them and swiftly slew them all, to the great displeasure of the Durwolc thereabouts.  Then the two turned upon the Gorgon and slew her with many a hack upon her ugly head of snakes.  And that feat astounded the Durwolc.  But so wrathful had Jesan become that he wielded Acusos as an axe and cut off the head of the Gorgon.  Yet, as he struck, a spout of green blood spattered his leg, at which the liquid ate its way swiftly through his armor and clothing and entered his flesh, so that he fell in a swoon from the poison.  Then must Tomas fight viciously against the Durwolc, who rushed in with a mind to chop the fallen man to pieces.  But so daunting was Tomas that the enemy pulled back.  And Tomas, in tears, deeming that his friend may die, feared not his own plight as he bent to his knees in sorrow, and there in the midst of all of that enemy prayed to the Gods that Jesan would not be slain in this manner.

Dharam and Khalen at length felled the Giants which had swept them out onto the field.  And going back-to-back they fought their bloody way over to protect Tomas as he lifted up Jesan and bore the Knight towards the Gate.  Yet, when the three were but twenty paces from the Gate an evil befell which none could have foreseen, nor would have believed had they not seen it, and which nearly cost all of them their wits, the battle, and their lives in that moment, as their fearless leader, Brandar, was taken by the enemy.  And there was nothing they could have done to prevent it.

As the contest with the Hydra wore on, Brandar got it into his head that he would do this wretched worm as he had done the Dragon Balkurmis, when he, as the new Warlord, took the Forest for his own.  And while Palphus strove with the beast’s many heads Brandar used the magic of his sword, which transports him whither-so-ever he wishes within sight, and he thus placed himself upon the monster’s back with but a word of command.  Then he buried Beliscaertos deep into the creature’s back, squarely between its shoulders.

The Hydra was so startled that it paused, lifting its heads in bewilderment.  Then, with yet another word of command, Brandar caused the blade to emit its great blast of mystic force and blew out the whole chest and belly of the monster; heart, innards, and all.  Thus did the beast give out agonizing cries as it fell over sidewise, kicking its legs and flailing its tail, with each head then screaming in sorrow, though soon lying dead upon the ground.  But Brandar was thrown as the Hydra fell, and had made the foolish mistake of letting loose his otherwise mighty grip upon Beliscaertos, while the enemy there left off from fighting; gazing despondently upon th Hydra whom they had formerly named the “Bane of the Sereghran”, but who was now anything but.

Down swooped Drakonus, having come silently from above in hopes of finding a chance to strike at the Northrons.  And he clasped Brandar in his talons as the Warlord reached up to pull the sword from the Hydra’s back.  Then the wicked Dragon bore Brandar high into the air as swift as an arrow shot into the sky.  And, turning against the wind, he made off in the clouds to take Brandar as a prize to his master in the North.  But trying to release himself, Brandar found that his Pearl of Giant Strength would not give to him the strength to break free.  Thus was he helpless in the grip of his bane.

Drakonus had laughed at the spears and arrows which came at him from atop the Marsken, and which bounced off his scales.  And he laughed at the lightning-bolts and fireballs and other magical attacks which smote upon him as he flew.  Then did he laugh all the more at Brandar’s struggling and cursing, and the Warlord’s helplessness without his magic sword.  And there was nothing to keep the Dragon from carrying Brandar even to the Demon Lord’s Castle, deep within the Darkness behind the Deel.  But by the strength of the Dragon’s grip, Brandar found it difficult to breathe, so that he soon fell into a swoon and knew no more for a while.

Of course, the wicked Durwolc cheered for vile Drakonus, then renewed their insults and jests, taking heart in the capture of the Sereghran’s Warlord.  And when Tomas beheld Brandar being taken away he fell again to his knees, as Jesan took his last breath.  Then,l gently laying the Knight upon the ground, Tomas kenned that Jesan was dead.  But he bowed low over the body of his friend and wept bitterly, heedless of the enemy; blaming himself unjustly, saying softly to himself:  “If only had I warned him of the blood.  I could have warned him of the blood.”  But this came of the madness of his grief, for he could not have known that the blood of the Gorgon would be so deadly. 

Daram and Khalen were likewise dismayed, but remembered that they were in the midst of a vast gathering of foes.  And so, with tears in their own eyes, they bade Tomas to raise himself up, ere the enemy finishes their wicked cheering. 

Palphus, however, was the first to recover from the shock.  And thus did he place himself between the remaining Northrons and the enemy, using his magicks to keep the Durwolc back whence they came forth once more.  Then he ordered that the Gate must be opened but a crack to allow the Northrons and himself to enter, while he keeps the enemy back.  Then did Daram pull Tomas through the Gate while Khalen dragged Jesan’s body in after them, at which Palphus, fighting hotly managed just to get himself in as the great portcullis was falling, crushing several Gobba, at which the great Gate was quickly barred from within.  And due to the magic of the Marsken, the portcullis stood fast against the hammers and battering rams of the enemy, and against all of the spell-magic cast against it.  Thus had those within been saved.

Palphus next made his way to the top of the Warlord’s Tower, seeing that the winged monsters were renewing their assault. And he is held responsible for protecting the survivors within the Marsken from those creatures, for he used what inner strength was left to him to cast a fantastic dome of sparkling energy above the Fortress, and which burned any creature that touched it.  But then he collapsed from exhaustion, and was taken down to be set upon a bed deep within, where he slept for three full days.

The survivors of Deunomis were now trapped within the magic Marsken.  And they could do little more than mourn sorrowfully their dead, while the enemy laid siege upon the Fortress.  But as the Marsken could not be breached, nor its Gate broken, nor the Dome of Palphus dispelled, the enemy eventually pulled away and made camp upon the grounds thereabouts, to wait for the inhabitants to starve to death.  And they sought to crush the statue forms of Rosth and Erek and Alak, along with other hapless victims of the Gorgon’s gaze.  But lo, the magic of the Northron’s swords protected the three so that the brands could not be taken from them, nor even the necklaces beneath their tunics taken from them.  Neither could Brandar’s great sword be drawn by hand from the dead Hydra’s back, since Beliscaertos inflicted deadly pain upon any evil monster who so much as touched the grip.  Ultimately, therefore, the enemy secured chains about the be-stoned Northrons, and another upon Beliscaertos, holding the chain with cloth rags, and dragged them all northwards, around the western shore of the Lake, and then out of the knowledge of the Sereghran within the Marsken observing from atop the Tower.

Seeing this through the confusing sparklings of Palphus' Dome, Daram and Khalen and all of the Kith were of a mind to lead a sorty through the Gate and retrieve the three statues, along with Brandar’s sword.  But Tomas forbid them, deeming rightly that the survivors there had not the strength both to defend the Gate and set upon such a task.  And he feared that opening the Gate may break the spell which kept the protective Dome above the Fortress.  Thus did the Last Three Northrons and their Kith, and the surviving Soldiers, watch dolefully from the safety of the Fortress as the statue forms of Rosth and Erek and Alak were dragged unceremoniously away.  And the three Northrons within believed that they would never again see the four who had been taken, nor their lord Brandar.

This then is how Brandar was unexpectedly captured, and three of his countrymen turned into stiff stone statues, and the noble Jesan of Sunthakis was killed, and the valiant Knight who blew the horn, and so many other good and stout Sereghran, while Tomas and Daram and Khalen lived behind the Marsken with the Kith and Palphus, and what was left of the Army at Vortunas, along with precious few of the people of Deunomis.

But this unhappy event is now called the “Second Sundering of the Seven”.  And it was later to be viewed as a dismal day for all the Sereghran, for an end had come, it seemed, to the Warlord Odaron.  They knew not whether some other Warlord may rise in the next thousand years.  And thus did they spend many days in mourning, deep and forlorn.

*****             

Brandar awoke and immediately kenned that he was yet being held in the grip of Drakonus.  And once again, despite even the giant-strength imparted to him by the Wizard’s Gem, the pearl which hung by a silver chain about his neck, he could not get free.  Then the Dragon, sensing the Northron’s struggle, did but squeeze so hard that Brandar passed out yet again.  But this happened a few more times, ever with the same result.  And in this way Drakonus carried Brandar through the Deel and far into the Darkness, and off then to the North; landing at last upon the scorched and slag-strewn earth before the gate of the vile Demon’s Castle.  And there, in the heart of the Demon’s realm, where unspeakable horrors abide, and fires leap from pits and fissures all around, but light is subdued by the dense choking Darkness, the Dragon called for Modeus to come out.  Then was Brandar placed unconscious before the Demon.  And Drakonus said:  “A gift for thee, my Master.  From the folk of the East.”

Thus did Modeus order his minions thereabouts, being Trollo, to strip Brandar of his clothing and search them, where they found and took the necklace, giving it to Modeus.  And they bound Brandar with chains, at which he awoke and struggled futilely, then beheld the Demon Lord and was surprised that Modeus, in the flesh, was much like an ordinary Man.  But Brandar spoke not, waiting to see if he would be slain.  Yet, Modeus slew him not, and merely had his minions take him to the dungeons beneath the Castle.  And there was Brandar imprisoned; chained to a wall in a dark and stinking cell, awaiting he knew not what fate. 

Oddly enough, however, his trousers were thrown at him as the Trollo left the cell, bolting the door behind them.  And Bandar put them on, valuing the clothing more than the Trollo could have guessed.  Thus was Brandar shown pity in a place where none should be, so that this small turn was indeed a strange thing, by all that is known about the ways of the enemy.

Many times thereafter was Brandar brought from his cell to other rooms where he was tortured by the Demon about his body.  And often would he come to the brink of an agonizing death.  But Modeus would also cast spells upon his mind, for the seeing of horrible visions and nightmares, and apparitions, and for the believing of twisted delusions.  And Modeus often repeated lies to Brandar about the fates of his countrymen, and about Vearta and his children, and all of the Sereghran, and even about the Andarians far away, of whom the cruel Demon seemed to know everything.  Then Modeus once said to him:  “The pitiful Sereghran have lost to my legions, and are even now slaves of my very own slaves.  And your sweet young daughters are willing whores in temples to my honor, which have been built in all the wide world, while Vearta, your love, takes my minions to her bed with such wicked joy.  Ah, she is so sloven.  But your Andarians have been destroyed by my servant MorLome.  And Rillguman laid waste.”  And so on and so forth for hours and days, and week upon week, with no end in sight.  Thus was Brandar made utterly wretched, and bereft of his strength and his will, and seemed doomed to go mad from his torments, and from the stench of his wan and lonely cell, and the shear horror of the dungeons.  And verily did he believe not that he would see rescue, nor find any means of escape, nor survive the plenilune in his accursed confinement  --  except that he kept deep within his heart one small and imperishable glimmer of hope.  A secret that gave him hope. 

That bit of hope allowed Brandar to survive, irregularly provided worm-eaten bread, muddy water, and maggot-infested meat occasionally tossed into his damp and filthy cell.  And Brandar was, at first, repulsed by the meat, knowing not its origin, so that he let it go to waste on the floor.  Yet, when his hunger grew unbearable he took up the meat and so ate it, even the worms and the maggots, and also caught and ate all of the rats and insects which happened to come his way.  And hence did he obtain life- giving sustenance, all the while wondering how long he must endure this dolour.  Then not a few times did he contemplate suicide, but would come to his senses after finally remembering what gave to him a last morsel of hope.  “Yes, my Father’s gift,” Brandar would say to himself, and at times upon the rack.  And while the Demon ruthlessly meted out all of the pain and glamory and threats he could manage without killing the man, this “gift” he never understood.  Then did he count it as but the delusional ramblings of a ruthlessly tormented soul.

*****

Vearta wept right bitterly upon hearing the news of Brandar’s capture.  And she went into mourning as if widowed, though the Last Three Northrons said that they believed not that their friend Brandar was dead, and that they must therefore go into the North, some day, to find him.  But the Kith vowed also to go with them.  And no-one could dissuade them from this resolve, though the Three had forbidden them outright. 

*****

Drakonus flew back to Deunomis and thereafter made many an attempt to break through the Marsken and dispel the magic of the wall, and do away with the Dome of Palphus.  But finding at length that such efforts were vain, he grew wrathful and thereat ordered a sweeping invasion east into the countryside, though the Forest itself was yet in flames across many and very broad regions.  And he gave little thought to the Wizard Calaren, who had been stationed to the north of Vortunas, seeing upon his flight that Calaren and his forces were surrounded at the Sixth Tower of Kelebros.  Neither did he believe that aid would arrive from the East in time to save the Frontier, for he could have had no knowledge of the Aefari, and could not guess that Aetas and Strabos and other Lords would have been alerted and were all already on the move.  And though Lord Medhyos he expected to come within days, the Dragon kenned not the vastness nor the magical might of the forces which were on their way to challenge him.  Indeed, quite out of character for such a crafty Dragon he assumed that his capturing of the Warlord had given him victory.  So, he let down his guard, a thing such a Dragon, of any breed, was not normally disposed to do.  And in this can be seen the hand of the Gods as well.

Down from the north sooner than expected came Aetas and Flaven, with Calaren, and many hardy Mariners and Soldiers, and Brigadiers, followed soon by a force of the High Elves of the Northern Coasts.  But the most valiant company were the Men of Agereis, whose hearts burned with the memory of their Lord Ergon’s sacrifice, and at the loss of their homes and so many of their families.  And they were strong and fell, and fought as men more fey and wrathful than any others; running headlong to do battle with the most dreadful of monsters, heedless of their own danger.  In truth, they surpassed in valor even the Guardsmen of King Aetas and of the High Elven Lords, and all the Knights of Baertunas, and the Mariners and Soldiers and Brigadiers.  And only the three Lords, Aetas and Flaven and Calaren, could cause the enemy more grief than they, the very smallest of companies upon the battlefield there.   Thus, whence news later reached Modeus of his defeat at Deunomis, he put a price upon their heads no less than that of the Lords themselves.  But he would never be required to pay that price.

It happens that these Sereghran had lately fought several battles as they made their way south with the Kelebros on their right.  But they drove on and did not halt until coming around Baeren’s Lake, finding Vortunas under siege.  Then they broke upon the enemy like the Demon’s own wave upon the Armada at Agereis, and that was the beginning of the end for the invasion. 

Also, from the Forest in the northeast came the company of the Men of Geranost who had escaped the flooding.  And they were nigh as vengeful as the Men of Agereis.  Thus did the Durwolc fall unerringly before them.         

From the east rode next Medhyos, leading a great army of his Soldiers, and an even greater force of Brigadiers.  And he fought his way to the Fortress with such courage and power that any enemy he encountered, whether the strongest of Dragons or the most fearsome Devil, or any other monster, was promptly and brutally slain.

Up from the South rode Turlin of Askondor at the fore of the greatest of the companies of Elven Riders which had ever been assembled; followed by a large army of Lowland Elves marching afoot.  But to Turlin’s right rode Duke Phaedus, with the mighty Army of Baersunthas, and yet another respectable force of the Brigadiers.  Consequently, the forces coming up from the South were so great and wide, and magical, that every company of Durwolc they came across did not even attempt to fight, but turned-tail and ran off to the west.  Then did the Gate of the Marsken open, and out strode Tomas and Daram and Khalen, followed by the Kith and the Wizard Palphus, and many of the other Mages and other Survivors of Deunomis.  And all these comprised such a force to be reckoned with that they swiftly cleared the field before the Gate and thereafter moved east to meet up with Medhyos, and so trapped whatever odd monsters who happened to be in the way as if between the hammer and anvil.  Then happy would that meeting have been but for Lord Medhyos hearing of Brandar’s fate, and that of the Northrons who had been turned into stone and dragged away.

Last, but not least, there came from the southeast a substantial force of Dwarves from Kindol behind whom trotted the Dragon of the South, the good Red Dragon whose name is Raudrogos, with a wingspan a furlong across, and whom the Dwarves even worship as a God.  But Raudrogos was, indeed, the mightiest Dragon the world has ever known.  

Arriving to find Drakonus the Black flying right haughtily above Vortunas, Raudrogos the Red lifted himself up and flew to meet Drakonus in the sky.  Yet, being instantly ware of Raudrogos the moment those great wings were spread, the cowardly Drakonus was so startled and filled with mortal fear that he abandoned the war and flew swiftly to the west, in an attempt to flee.  But Raudrogos had walked there with the Dwarves upon land for the purpose of catching the Black as unawares, as the evil-one most certainly would have detected him from afar had the Red flown to Deunomis from his den within Dragon’s Cliff Bay.  Thus, Raudrogos pursued Drakonus far into the west and disappeared from sight while the Dwarves waved him goodbye, and cheered him on, and praised him.  But then did the Dwarves turn their attention to the Durwolc.  And their countenance was grim.  Yet, with the sudden retreat of Drakonus, and the arrival of so many new foes, the enemy who had remained lost any semblance of determination and were summarily defeated, for the Sereghran there were so full of rage that they spared not even the weakest Durwolc who prostrated themselves, begging for mercy.  But no mercy was shown, as they all deserved death, and would have shown no mercy to the Sereghran.

Unfortunately, the winning of the battles on the New Frontier meant not that all of the fighting was done, for many of the enemy which had come through the Borders early-on entered the Grasslands and the Forest unchecked.  Thus, it thereafter fell to Strabos to root out the invaders, which he accomplished in but five fortnight's time.  And when the Borderlands were at last wholly under Sereghran control, not a single one of the enemy who remained in the Realms of the Kings, by hiding for a while from the High King’s Soldiers, would ever come out alive to flee into the West.

Of those named as Defenders of the Gate, there remained now only Palphus and the Last Three Northrons.  And these, together with the Kith, led a small army to the North upon the trail of the enemies who had dragged away the stone forms of the three Northrons who had become victims of the Gorgon.  But at the last they found that the trail went beneath the Deel itself, at a point roughly twenty leagues west of Kelebros.  And many in their army were quite opposed to entering into that foreboding wall of darkness, without knowing what lay beyond.  Indeed, none but the Three and Brandar’s Daughters wished to go on.  Then did the wise Wizard Palphus counsel them against it, saying:  “Your Warlord would not have you do something so rash.  Rather, let us return to Deunomis, where the two Kings must declare what is to be done.  Mayhap you can persuade them to lend you such forces as seems fit for such a task, for this army which we brought are likely not enough.  Remember what has issued from the Deel.  We should, for now, not take such a risk.”  And this was considered good counsel by the rest of the Kith, and so was it done.

When later the Defenders reached Baeren’s Lake, the sky was bright and warm.  And they beheld the Red Dragon coming out of the West.  Then he alighted before them, and spoke to them of his recent venture, saying:  “I pursued Drakonus even to the Mountains by the sea, and did battle with him from one end of the range to the other.  But the Gods granted to me the victory.  And I threw the carcass of the Black into a flaming foss, from which he shall never again return to trouble the world of living things.  Drakonus the Black is no more.  And all of the odorous and belching volcanoes of the Mountains were quenched when fell into them.  So do I fly now towards my home upon a clean westward wind, and wish to thee also the blessings of the Gods.

“Proclaim, therefore, the fall of Drakonus throughout the Lands. But do not forget his master in the North.  He is the last bane of your folk.  And you shan't be free whilst the flesh he has donned lives on.  But while many may fall should next you presume to smite him, that is your best course.

“I, for my part, go now to my den in the South, for I am weary as never before.  Farewell my friends.”  With that the Dragon rose up and flew away.  And the Soldiery there cheered and saluted the awesome and noble beast as he began his long flight to his home in the far Southeast.  But the Defenders and the Kith were disturbed by his words, and so stood in silence while watching Raudrogos fly off; not knowing what to do.  As it happens, the army of Dwarves had gone far into the Highlands in pursuit of fleeing enemies.  But they had returned and were camped half-a-league south of where Raudrogos had stopped to speak with the Defenders.  And when the Dwarves heard that the great Red Dragon had defeated the Black, they spent the rest of that day feasting in honor of the victory, to which celebration they also invited the Defenders and the Kith, and any other Sereghran who wished to attend.  But early the next morning, the Dwarves marched south upon the road by which they had come.  

Turlin and Phaedus had also pursued fleeing enemies deep into the Southern Wood.  But coming out of the frith, they stationed forces on the Borders, and set about reordering the devastated defenses at the Towers of the South Frontier.  Meanwhile, Aetas and Calaren took to rebuilding the defenses along the Kelebros, and at both Agereis and Geranost.  But Palphus, together with the three remaining Northrons and the Kith, began mustering new armies at Deunomis, in hopes that the Kings would allow them to enter into the Deel in an attempt to take back the cold statues of their kin, and perhaps even to rescue Brandar, if he may be found alive within the Demon’s chocking Darkness.

When Strabos was done clearing the Lands of invaders, he then called for a Moot of Lords to be held upon Dragon’s Den Hill, where it must be debated what course the Sereghran should take.  And there came all the Lords of the Lands, from the least to the greatest, who talked and wrangled, and thus mulled and reasoned over the issues and problems at hand.  But to be fair, they also brought many witnesses from among their Peoples; townsfolk and villagers, and settlers from the Forest, who had been harmed or adversely affected by the war.  And everyone was given a chance to speak, and to declare what they deemed was for the best.

Long, therefore, were those speeches upon the Hill.  And all was not said until twelve days had passed.  But the Defenders said their piece last after the Kith, by the design of Palphus, who had declined to speak.  Then Tomas stood up for all the Defenders, echoing the sentiments of the Kith, though brief was his appeal when compared to those of many others who had spoken.  And Tomas said to the Kings:  “In the North sits the Demon, Modeus; the foremost foe of the Sereghran.  And this has been true since the coming even of your Founders through the Mists.  But we Northrons have now aided you in five wars against him.  Indeed, this New Frontier was won for you by the hand of our kinsman, Brandar Odaron, King of the Forest, your Warlord, who may yet live beyond all reason, in some dark dungeon beneath the cruel Demon’s Castle, away behind the Deel.  And if live he does by the will of the Gods, he should not be forsaken, but deserves to be saved.

“Much did you give to us Northrons when first we came to you in our youth, as you hold.  Long ago, I agree, does that seem to me now.  And much have we given in return by the blood which flows in our children, and our efforts in defense of your Realms; extending them into the Forest.  Yet, as long as this Modeus sits safe and unchallenged in the fastness of his slade, then this new land is not, and shall never be, truly free of him.  Nay, ‘tis but rented from him, and paid for at the cost of scores of war-slain Sereghran.  Therefore, grant to us such forces as seems enough to assail Modeus while he is weakened by this defeat.  Else, give us leave to lead what free volunteers would go with us into the Deel, where we shall serve as spies, if you will, in search of the secrets of the Darkness, and to retrieve our kin, dead or alive.  But if not this, then I shall go myself to discover the remains of my countrymen, at the least; or perhaps even to slay the Demon Lord, if that should be possible.”

Then Daram stood, saying: “I shall go with you.”   But likewise Khalen rose, saying:  “And I.”  And the Kith, as one, took to their feet, saying:  “And I.”  With that, there was silence; as everyone was waiting to see what the Kings may say.  Yet, neither Strabos nor Aetas said a word just then, but sat and gazed upon Tomas with a mixture of awe and appreciation.  And after a brief while, in which the Kith and the Northrons took to their seats, a low and disordered murmuring began to grow among the Lords, and then among all of the other folk thereabouts.  Then did the murmuring grow into a clamor, where the Lords and Ladies, and Officials and Officers, and all of the Soldiers and People there took to arguing this way and that.

Finally, Strabos stood and let loose a great flash of light and a crashing boom from the top of his magic scepter, at which the crowd settled down.  Then he spoke solemnly but loudly, saying:  “Everyone has spoken.  Now is the time for thought.  What course we should take is not yet clear.  The Northrons, of course, are correct in saying that our enemy has likely been weakened, so that now is our best chance finally to destroy him.  Yet, to go in any strength into the Deel from which no Sereghran has been known to return is not a venture to be taken lightly.  Indeed, who knows what lurks within the Darkness.

“If only the Warlord had not been taken, then he may have been so bold as to enter into the Deel on our behalf, to search out its ways.  But alas, he is gone, living or dead we know not, though his Second has offered to seek him out.             

“We Kings shall herewith debate this cause in private, and shall soon deliver to all of you our decision.  And rest assured that we shall consider all that has been said.  Go then, all of you, back to your homes.  And think upon what you have heard.  But know that whatever is decided, it shall be for the future wellbeing of all of the Sereghran, which is our foremost aim.”  Then Strabos sat down, indicating that the Moot had come to an end.  So, all of the attendees began to pull apart and to disperse, but only slowly did they go their own ways.


The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 31   Mustering For The Assault

The two Kings remained long in the Tower of Vortunas, together with the Dukes Flaven, Medhyos, and Phaedus.  But few other Lords stayed in Deunomis, having their own affairs to attend to, and desiring not to dwell in tents upon the ground.  There were, however, the Wizards Palphus and Calaren, and all of the living Officers and Soldiers whose homes had been destroyed thereabouts.  But here also were the Kith and Lady Vearta, and the Last Three Northrons, now called the “Defenders”.  And there remained the proud Men of Agereis and the Company of Geranost and other parties who wished to be present when the Kings at last decided upon the Defender’s request.              

Two weeks after the Moot of Lords the Kings had not yet made their minds, despite having been closeted often in a certain room within the Tower and at whiles calling for various individuals to come there and be questioned.  Meanwhile, the Kith repeated many times their vow to go with the Defenders into the Deel.  But none were more vocal than Brandar’s daughter’s, who were supported in this by Palphus.  And not even Lady Vearta could change their stance, though tearfully would she plead with them for fear of losing them.  Neither were the two Kings against them and of whom Strabos once said:  “This is to be expected of the Dames, who sprang from the loins of Brandar Odaron.  His boldness of spirit they have inherited from him.”

Then the Kings, after another few days, called for a meeting in the Main Hall of the Tower so that all of those noted were in attendance when King Strabos declared:  “The Defenders are correct in assessing that the Demon has been weakened, and that we shall likely have no better chance of assaulting him victoriously within his realm away in the North.  Thus have we decided to grant to the Defenders’ request.”  Then all of the people in attendance cheered while some raised their swords and voiced battle-cries.  Yet, Aetas motioned for them to be quiet and said:  “The Defenders are in the right, ‘tis true, but such action shall require the full mustering of the Sereghran; no less than the entire strength of all Three Realms gathered to mete out a final stroke so heavy that it cannot fail!  For, it is certain, we believe, that Modeus has not shown his full strength, though it seemed that this may be so.  Nay, the West is yet rife with Durwolc and other vermin, regardless of our victory.  And who can say what evil lies beyond the Deel.  Into the Darkness we cannot see, and thus cannot ken what fearful horrors await therein.”  “But into the Darkness we shall go, nonetheless,” said Strabos.  “All of us.  And not as spies, nor assassins, but as conquering crusaders bent upon the destruction of our foes; as so oft’ the Demon has sent invaders against us.  And if indeed Sereghran or Northrons are to pass the Deel in search of the Warlord, or upon another task, and risk never again returning to these Lands, then it behooves us to discover why the Demon hides himself in that Darkness.  What is more, not unthinkable is it that he shall again expand outwards the circumference of the Deel, so that, in the end, it may come to encompass even the Mists themselves.  So say we, the Kings of the Sereghran.  And so shall we publish in our decree.”

Hence was the decision made, to launch an all-out assault upon the Demon Lord.  And the decree was posted and went forth upon the lips of Heralds calling for all Sereghran fit to fight to take up arms and muster upon the Grasslands east of Kelebros.

This is the form of that gathering, the Greatest Mustering of the Sereghran.  The Full Muster was to be in two parts, where Strabos would oversee the Muster By Land while Aetas would command the Muster By Sea.  And the Muster By Land was gathered upon the Grasslands, though Strabos deigned to lead the Army of Sunthakis himself at its fore, while Aetus would mass an armada off the coast of Baerakis.  And upon an agreed-upon time, the two Kings would enter the Deel at two locations; one upon land west of Kelebros, and the other upon the waters to the northwest of Agereis.  And while Strabos was to move west and then north within the Darkness, and so come with his Army from the south to the Demon’s Castle, Aetas was to make landfall upon the coast above the Castle, and would therefore come down from the north with his Mariners, and with Soldiers who would be ferried aboard the ships.  Consequently, the intention was that the Kings would besiege the Castle from two sides.  And thus would this become the very greatest venture the Sereghran had ever undertaken.

Slow was the mustering of those forces.  And the Defenders and the Kith grew restless and impatient with the Kings; seeing every delay as that much more time given to Modeus to build his forces and ready unknowable defenses within the Darkness.  Nevertheless, ever would the Defenders and the Kith surrender to the will of the Kings while doing everything they could to aid in hastening the mustering upon land.

At length, when over a year had passed since the Victory at Vortunas, the Full Muster was ready.  And the Sereghran set forth to engage in the most spectacular and glorious war in all of their history.  Indeed, it would be the most tremendous conflict the Sereghran would see in all of that Age, and was named the “Crusade Against Modeus”.  Long, therefore, are the Tells of the battles therein, where wide and terrible fights were fought, both upon land and upon the sea.  And many are the songs sung of the valiant and heroic deeds of the Sereghran Warriors who survived, and more of those who fell in the war.  Here, however, the stories are given in brief, as gleaned from accounts in the Lore of the Sereghran at Romin, based upon the Tells in the Annals of the Kings at Sunthakis which Brandar had asked Andarian Scribes to pen copies of the copies he owned.

The Muster By Sea was such a vast armada that its end could not be seen to the north or to the east, even from the crow’s nests of the tallest of ships nearest the shore at Baerakis.  Yet, Aetas was sad that the Fleets of Agereis and Geranost had been lost, and could not therefore be added to this gathering, as it would thus have been half again as large.  Even so, this was the greatest armada that the Sereghran had ever known.  And it was so highly magical that it glowed from one end to the other.

Here were fleets from Baerakis and Sunthakis, and from Toquere and Berdareh, and Quiesos.  And there was an enormous fleet of Elven ships from Linguonon.  But there was also a gathering of vessels from fishing villages of the Coasts.  And aboard each and every craft Aetas had placed a Mage or other user of magic, else he made sure that there was at least one powerful magical weapon or device in the hand of each Captain.  Furthermore, all of the Mariners and Soldiers and Brigadiers who were packed aboard those craft were given magical weapons of various sorts.  Thus did Aetas consider his muster well prepared to sail into the Deel, as he laid anchor but a furlong from it along two Lines north to south, with the Second a furlong behind the First.  And there he waited upon the appointed time with four Fleets in the First Line, including the Royal Fleets both of Baerakis and Sunthakis at the center; the ships from Torquere nearest to the shore, and those from Berdareh farthest out to sea.  But Aetas placed the Elven Fleet at the center of the Second Line, flanked to its north by the ships from Quiesos, but to its south by those craft which had become affectionately known as the “Fisher’s Fleet”, for those were largely manned by Fishermen and hardy Brigadiers who had volunteered to join the Crusade.

Aetas conferred with Strabos upon his Aefarin; often inserting supplications to the Gods in their conversation.  And he felt that the Gods answered his prayers when he sailed without mishap into the Deel at word from Strabos to proceed.  Yet, not a few Mariners and Soldiers and Brigadiers aboard those ships went into the Darkness with weapons in hand, shaking in their boots, and wide-eyed with fear.

Strabos put away his Aefarin as he sat mounted looking upon the wan blackness of the Deel with the three Defenders and the Kith arrayed together with his Company of Guardsmen, and with whom were also the Herald Farus and all the Knights who had survived the first five wars.  But here also were the Wizards Flaven and Calaren, and the Lords Turlin and Medhyos, and many other high-ranking Lords and Officers.  And behind these stood such a mighty army that it could not entirely be arrayed upon the land between the Deel and Kelebros but was placed along both banks, all the way from Baeren’s Lake to the Great Northern Bay.

Fourteen Divisions had Strabos in his Main Force, but six others he set along the West Bank of Kelebros as his Secondary Force, and eight Divisions on the East Bank as his Third, commanded by Duke Phaedus at the Fifth Tower.  But the Duke’s forces were mostly Brigadiers, charged with holding the East Bank against counter-attack out of the Deel should the Crusade fail after all.

Strabos now entered the Deel with his Royal Company at a place west of the Fifth Tower, followed immediately by four Divisions spaced as a great curve along the outer shape of the Deel so that all four together entered at the same moment just after the King’s Company.  And so large were these Divisions that together they formed a Front one furlong deep that stretched from ten leagues west of the Delta of Kelebros to where the Deel crossed the Foothills sixty leagues due west of the Seventh Tower.  Yet, five more Divisions were to follow that Front, with two side-by-side entering near the Foothills but the rest, one after another, at the place where Strabos had entered.  And the remaining six Divisions, initially set along the West Bank, were together to move west and enter last at various locations as final reinforcements.

Strabos had supplied his forces with many magical weapons and devices, and also charms of protection.  And there was at least one Master Mage with each Division, and one Adept with each Company, in all of those forces.  Consequently, so magical and powerful was the Muster By Land that Strabos believed these alone would be quite sufficient to whelm the enemy’s defenses and thereafter occupy the whole of the valley where stood the Demon’s great keep.  And while both Kings were confident of victory, little hope was left of finding Brandar alive after more than a year since his capture, or even that the be-stoned forms of his three fellow Northrons would be retrieved intact.

Nevertheless, with the whole might of the Sereghran moving as one, the Kings deemed that Modeus would be soundly defeated, given the manner in which his armies had been crushed in the Fifth War  --  for it was thought that Modus must have loosed nearly all of his strength at that time, considering the vastness of the forces which had issued from the Deel and from the Mountains and Highlands and Foothills, and also from far in the South.  But the Kings could not have guessed the sheer number of Durwolc which Modeus had been breeding in the Darkness and in the Mountains.  And it happens that these now numbered twice as many as he had sent against the Sereghran in the Fifth War.  What is more, the Demon had sent spies into the Lands; evil Men disguised as ordinary Sereghran, who informed him of the mustering.  He therefore gathered his own forces behind the Deel, and in the Foothills and Highlands and the Mountains just to the south of it.  And he believed himself prepared for the coming of the Sereghran.  Thus was the stage set for the Sereghran’s Final War against Modeus the Cruel, and which was later called the “Defender’s Crusade”.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron                      

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent             

Chapter 32   Strabos Comes To The Castle             

Verily, the first four Wars of the New Frontier were intended as mere tests of the strength of the Sereghran.  And with each apparent invasion from the West the Demon Lord sent forces seeming great, but which were only a part of what he held in hiding in the Mountains and in the Darkness.  Thus, by the Fifth War he could send armies full-knowing that they would be defeated, but large enough for the Frontier to be weakened, whereupon all of his remaining forces would sweep through the Forest.  And while the Sereghran surprised him by mustering upon the Grasslands so soon after their victory, he smiled to himself all the more pleased that his victims should come to him instead.  And he called for his forces to gather in the Mountains north and behind the Deel so that those regions were bursting with Durwolc, other monsters, and every wicked and horrible creature imaginable, when the Sereghran came forth.  As a result, this last conflagration would be a decisive contest; bringing a close to centuries of conflict between Modeus and the Sereghran.  And he was eager to get on with it.              

Modeus held superiority in numbers and had captured the Sereghran’s Warlord, whom he now regarded as his utmost opponent.  And as much by what Brandar would not say as what was revealed in the tortured Northron’s delusional ramblings the Demon learned a great deal about the Sereghran from him, and knew from spies the strength and composition of the forces of the Crusade, though Brandar would never knowingly expose any true secrets, deluded or no.  Yet, what he did say became a deep source of regret to Brandar in later days, as he could not have known that the Sereghran’s Royals would launch such a full-fledged assault into the Darkness.              

During the year in which the Sereghran were mustering upon land and sea, Modus would torture Brandar upon his body and his mind.  And once, the Demon had deceived Brandar with a dream in the form of a vision from the Gods, in which an Angel spoke to him and prophesied falsely, saying:  “Look!  The day shall come when the UnderLords, defeating the Enia shall rule over all of Esuriah and shall give to Modeus rule of Esaereh,” and so on and on.  But due to the surpassing power of the Demon’s glamory Brandar found it difficult to dismiss the dream, and at times came to believe it, when, in his torments, such crooked lies overcame his ability to deny them.  Yet, in his heart of hearts, Brandar kept a small spark of reason which the Demon found that he could not extinguish; not by torture nor magic, nor any trick that may be played upon the Northron’s mind.  And while that small bit of hope came at length to be all that Brandar had left, it was enough to keep him going.              

In those days, the Loremasters knew very little about Modeus; not from whence he had come nor his age, nor what sort of spirit was his true form, for he was already the Demon Lord when the Sereghran’s Founders had come through the Mists and seized for themselves portions of the northeastern coasts of the Hidden Continent, naming their holdings “Arzultaur”.  But Modeus seems not to have been concerned with the Founders until they took the Jungle Lands away from him, at which he began to wage war against them.  And that is when the Sereghran built Towers upon their borders facing west, which lands they named “Frontiers”.  But when the Seven returned to Andaria the Elves of Eastwold showed them ancient scrolls that spoke of Modeus by another name.  Thus did it appear that Modeus was a rather ancient Demon, one of the most dastardly ever to enter into the World.

Long ago, ere the end of the Age of the Gods, the Elves served in armies led by the deities they named Ghieveh, but which the Sereghran, and later the Northrons, name Tainhezar.  And the Gods defeated their foe Asgahan, whom the Elves named as “Isqanari”, which is “Evil Great-One”.  But while that enemy was shut away into the Outer Voids by Eiowaeh himself, never to return, some of his followers escaped into deep places of the world.  Yet, all of Asgahan’s chief servants were later found and captured, whereupon the Gods formed that magical fog the Eld call the “Enchanted Mists”; created for the purpose of preventing the evil within from ruining the world without, thus preserving Esaereh for the Children of Eiowaeh, who are the Faerie-Folk and the Elves, and Dwarves and Men.  For the Mists indeed shift the time of those who pass through, but also destroy all creatures of evil, and slay the fleshly forms of every sort of evil spirit.

The most vile Demon imprisoned therein was named Aeftan, who was Asgahan’s Lord over all the Demons who had taken physical forms in Esaereh ere Asgahan was removed.  And he ruled also over the abominable Durwolc, which Asgahan had obtained from captured Children by mating them with Demons and Devils, to give rise to offspring as such blasphemous abominations; bred for naught but wicked intent.  This Aeftan was therefore most certainly that very Demon whom the Sereghran called Modeus the Cruel, though this was not understood in Weyilendeh until the Eld of Eastwold had studied the copies of the Lore of the Sereghran that Brandar brought to Andaria, while the Sereghran themselves would only learn the name from the Good Dragon, Raudrogos the Red, upon the demise of Modeus, at the end of the Defender’s Crusade.

In Elden Days could Modeus, high in the service of Asgahan, take on forms fair seeming, in which he would spy upon the Gods and the Elves.  But the Gods placed in their Sphere of Abatement,  which we know as the Enchanted Mists, a power that exposes at length the foulness in all evil creatures of flesh, while ever else preserving people who are noble of heart.  This is why Modeus and his Minions, and any swayed by his will within the Sphere, cannot help but do evil, regardless of what earthly raiment they may don, or what disguises they adopt.  And this is the reason the Sereghran are given long lives, while all spies Modeus sent amonst them would always be revealed, and must then escape or be imprisoned, or they were slain.  Thus, while the Demon believed he knew more about the Sereghran than they knew of themselves, in this he was but deceiving himself.  

Through the years, however, Modeus developed new powers by his morbid arts, of which the Darkness within the Deel was merely one manifestation.  And he had so gained the praise of the UnderLords, bretheren of Asgahan, and whom the Gods have also forbidden from returning in flesh to Esaereh, that they promised him lordship over the world should he aid them in their desire to dethrone those Gods.  Thus had the UnderLords given to Modeus mystical secrets to enhance his power, so that none among the Children of Eioweh may stand against him lest the Gods themselves intervene.  Hence has Modeus given to himself a great purpose; very much larger than holding the Hidden Continent as his worldly domain  --  for he desired to capture and offer up in sacrifice no less than all of the Sereghran of Arzultaur; most especially the youth.  Then would he receive that power by which he may escape the Sphere.  And by the dark mana gained in such sacrifice, even should it require the slaying of all of the Children of Eioweh upon the face of Esaereh, this he would do in service to the will of the UnderLords.  For, though he deemed himself wise, he was in fact quite mad. Nevertheless, he came close to achieving that goal; as his armies were defeated by a slim margin and at an extremely high cost to the Sereghran.

Upon land within the Deel, and in the northern reaches of the Mountains, Modeus had assembled enormous hordes of Durwolc and other dreadful monsters.  But upon the shores within the Darkness, and all along the far Western Coasts, he had bred vast gatherings of Korligen, and most especially the ravenous Holgygros.  And in the waters were Sea-Serpents and many-legged monsters and all manner of the creatures of the Deep which the Sereghran had encountered in the New-Frontier Wars.  Likewise did he give succor to the Leviathan of the North and to all of its brood and following.  Yet, leading these forces were his Minions; Demons scarce less powerful than he.  But such Demons came in many forms, all horrible and fell, and exceedingly blood-thirsty.              

Stepping through the Deel holding a bright lamp, Strabos found that he could not see more than a few paces before him despite the lamp.  And ere his full Company had come in behind him he was attacked by wolves and wargu, then many slavering Durwolc.  And while he and his Company managed to carve their way through, the fighting lasted so long, days it seemed, that he came to believe that there was no end to the enemy’s ranks within the Darkness.              

Here were various breeds of Trogo and Bugo, and Changelings and Beasties, and all manner of mutilated beasts and flying creatures, even vermin and insects, and scaly reptiles.  And there were animated skeletons of all these monsters, and other things besides.  Then came Minotaurs and Ghouls, and Werebeasts and Harpies, and also Gryphon and Chimera, and amazing Elementals, including Mud-Mounds and Stone-Warts, and Fire-Whirls.  But next came Wights and Gangyn, and Abbadon Spirits, along with Alphyn and Bannacon, and Calopus monsters.  And later there were Giants of many clans, and Dragons and Drakes, and Devils and Demons, among whom were the Minions of Modeus, tall and foreboding.  Thus did Strabos come to rue the crossing of the Deel, and said aloud that if only he had known he would never have consented to the Sereghran entering into the Darkness, Full Muster or no, and regardless of all of his magicks.  Yet, at last was he victorious, with the four Defenders and the Kith by his side, backed by his Wizards and Guardsmen and by the Sereghran’s armies marching faithfully behind.  And even after sustaining great losses in that battle, he rode far into the Darkness with no further hindrance for what he kenned must have been several days more.  Then he became wary of the respite; hating the predicament in which he found himself, not knowing what monsters would come at him next, nor when.

Aetas would have similar misgivings, as he found the Darkness upon water as wan as a moonless night.  And while he had brought many a large lamp, the Darkness was as some stifling stuff with substance, not smoke nor mist, which quenched the light of the brightest of the lamps within a very short distance.  Neither was there wind to fill the sails so that he must row his ships forwards with his Captains trying their best to keep the Fleets together by trying to remain close enough to see the lamplight from nearby vessels, as though it were torchlight seen from afar.              

Needless to say, the Fleets began to drift apart, despite even the magical arts of the Mages and the magic of the devices used by the Captains to aid them in remaining on course.  And so, the Fleets found themselves isolated in the midst of the foul Darkness, and with no true sense of direction.  But it seemed also that the sound of their voices, even horn-calls and the ringing of bells, were muffled and got no farther than the lamplight, so that all of the ships within each Fleet also began to drift apart.  Thus did most of the Captains order that ropes must be used to keep them together.              

When now Aetas had come to what he believed was thirty leagues from the Deel, his ships were attacked by Sea-Serpents and other creatures.  And while he won that fight, he lost half the ships in his Royal Fleet, but knew not the fates of the other Fleets.

To the north of Aetas, though he could not see them, was the Fleet of Sunthakis, which suffered the same sort of assault as the Fleet of Baerakis.  And yet farther north was the Fleet of Berdhereh, which was nigh completely destroyed when numerous and very huge many-legged monsters took to reaching up and dragging hapless Mariners under the surface of the sea, never to be seen again.  Then would the creatures act together to pull a ship whole beneath the waves.  But in the south, as the Fleet of Torquere had approached the shore, those ships were beset by Korligen which swarmed upon the ships like ants upon a carcass.  Dire thererfore were those battles within the Darkness upon water.  And Aetas was barely saved in time by the coming of the Elven Fleet from behind.  But the Elven Mariners were so magical that they won that fight, though they also lost many ships.  And while the Elves see farther in darkness than do Men, they could not see far into the depths beneath their ships and thus could not tell when a many-legged monster would come suddenly from the fathoms below to assail their ships.              

Now, the Fleet of Sunthakis was kept from utter decimation by the coming of the Fleet of Quiesos, although two-thirds of the ships of Sunthakis and a forth of those of Quiesos were sunk ere the enemy was defeated there.  And the Fleet of Berdherah, which had drifted to ten leagues away, was met by the Leviathan and its following and therefore lost all but three ships, which were saved only because of the unexpected arrival of a Good Sea-Serpent whose name is Naudilikos, and who strove with the Leviathan and its brood, defeating them, and chasing them away to the north, though the men in those ships rowed as swift as could be from the fight, fearing that the tumult of that battle may surely destroy them.  But the Mariners of those ships learned not of the fate of Naudilikos until many years later, when the creature was reported to have been sighted in the seas far from shore to the east, while the Leviathan was seen no more.              

As it happens, the Fleet of Torquere lost no ships, but so many men aboard them had been killed by Korligen that a large number of them were left empty and pilotless, though bloodied from stem to stern, and therefore went drifting off into the Darkness unmanned.  But the same fate would befall the Fisher’s Fleet when those men arrived and came close enough to behold the fighting upon the ships of Torquere, at which they attempted to lend aid to their friends.  Thus, sadly, these were also whelmed, so that twelve only of their vessels were to flee by their men rowing as hard and fast as they possibly could.  Yet, even while using lamps and bells, four of those became separated in the Darkness and were lost in the gloom, never to be seen again.

Finally, all of the enemy upon the water were vanquished after what must have been days of fighting.  And, by some quirk of fate, the survivors came together at the place where Aetas and the Elves were resting from the ordeal.  But it was there where Aetas discovered that the Darkness negated the magic of his Aefarin, so that he could not get news of his victory to Strabos by that means, nor receive news from him.  Then did Aetas regret deeply his coming through the Deel but willed himself to press on.  And so, counting up what vessels were left to him and stringing them all together with ropes, he had them row to what he guessed was southward in search of land.              

A good sense of direction he must have had, or was directed by the grace of the Gods, for he came to the North Shore in the Darkness but one day later.  Yet, as he came ashore, he was assailed by Korligen in seemingly unending numbers.  Then did he believe that the creatures must even have been knowingly waiting for him there.               

The Korligen assailed violently all the Mariners and Soldiers who came ashore, while Sea-Serpents suddenly also arrived; attacking the ships anchored thereabouts.  And in this battle several more ships were lost ere the Elves killed so many of the evil serpents that the remaining creatures fled fearfully away to the west.  Yet, the Korligen were crowding upon the beaches to get at the Sereghran ashore, who must fight like madmen in attempts to make runs for it inland  --  for stepping foot upon the beach, they must fight and move or be slain and then eaten, else they were eaten alive.  But having heard of the Korligen from Tells of the Southlands in the New-Frontier Wars they knew that the creatures would not go far upon dry land, and thus the way forward was to fight a way through and make it as far inland as could be done.              

Then Aetas ordered that the ships must be abandoned while he and his great Company made a narrow but safe place upon the beach for those aboard to disembark.  And in this way he and his forces came ashore.  Then did he quickly lead them south, with many losses, until at last breaking free of the Korligen.  But then was he attacked by masses of Duwolc from the east.  And after what seemed like days of fighting, he was slowly driven west until at last making a desperate stand upon a great hill, which he knew not lay but ten furlongs from the shore.  Then, just as he believed that he may barely, by some miracle, turn the tide, his forces were attacked by yet another army of Durwolc from the west.  And with that did Aetas see the approach of his doom.

Hard pressed was he now, standing upon the self-same hill from which Brandar and Alak had spied the Demon’s Castle a hundred years past.  But the Castle could not now be seen in the Darkness.  Neither were there living things but for blood-sucking insects,  other than the combatants, in that once fertile land; not a blade of grass, nor flowers, nor birds, nor varmints, though there were many winged insects who must be surviving only by feeding on dead things.  The land itself had died over the years in which the Darkness kept the light of the Suns from reaching the ground, so that there remained only dust and dirt, and the Demon Lord’s wicked servants, and those troublesome biting insects. 

While Aetas had lost most of the forces which had sailed through the Deel, he yet commanded the equivalent of one small army, though highly magical, for only users of potent magic could have survived thus far.  And among those who stood upon the hill were the Men of Agereis, who had proved the fiercest fighters of all, for it was primarily by their valor that the hill had not been overrun, though it came to be surrounded upon all sides.  Then three wingless Dragons came upon them from the south and slew many a Sereghran.  And one of them slew Aetas as he was himself slaying another, but had let loose the hilt of his magical sword and was therefore made vulnerable.              

With that, all of those upon the hill became enraged.  And the Men of Agereis slew the offending Dragon while the Elves there slew the third.  Then was the tide of the battle turned, although the Sereghran were yet outnumbered.  But as the enemy were using no magic, the surviving Sereghran were able to drive them off, as the Durwolc came to learn that no number of their own could stand against the wide-eyed Men of Agereis, nor the agile Elves of Linguonon, nor the Mages who remained upon the hill.  And so did the Sereghran win a sad victory that day.

Now, the survivors remained on the hill for a time and burried their King in the Darkness, after which they buried their many friends who had fallen there then must bandage  wounds and do what healing could be done.  And as the Admiral of the Elven Fleet was there, he became the leader of those forces.  That Lord’s name was Lindheron.  And he appointed the last High Captain of the Men of Agereis as his Second.  That one’s name was Ardour of Kombros, who was also kin to Duke Flaven.  And while Lindheron held the highest rank, he listened to the counsel of Ardour; for in him the Elf Lord kenned wisdom not often seen in such a formidable fighter.              

It was then decided between them, while hope waned, that they must continue upon the Crusade lest all the deaths be in vain.  And after but a few hours of rest the Elf Lord led the survivors to the southeast while Ardour and his men guarded the rear.  Yet, ere they had covered no more than a furlong over the dusty ground by the light of the now few lanterns they had brought with them they were attacked again by heavily armored Durwolc, so that another great battle ensued.  Even so, the survivors had by then become dauntless and fearsome, and wholly determined.  And they routed the enemy with but few additional losses to their own, and took to marching triumphantly to what they believed was the south, though they were not rightly sure of their true direction, nor even that they were approaching the Castle grounds.  But that they were, and at length came upon it.

How many days and nights the fighting took place within the Darkness could not be guessed by the Crusaders within, though it seemed that many days had passed.  Yet, it was later determined that a mere few days had passed outside of the Deel, by which it was surmised that Modeus had imbued the Darkness with his own shift of time, in mockery of the God’s Enchanted Mists, so that time was shrunken within the Darkness, rather than stretched as with the Mists.  So, time was gained not.

*****             

Strabos found the deadness of the land insufferable.  But he furthermore kenned that no magic, not even that of his Aefarin, could penetrate the Darkness.  And he cursed the Demon Lord many times while making his way north, or to what he believed was the north, upon the hard-packed and lifeless earth.  But due to the absence of wind, not even a stirring of air, the Sereghran behind were being choked and blinded by the dust kicked up by those in front of them.  And this was a nauseating dust, like the cold soot of an ancient pyre, or the suffocating ashes of a long abandoned field of battle.              

Horses they possessed still, though many had fallen, along with many a rider in the fighting near the Deel.  Thus did Strabos come with significantly reduced strength.  And the remaining horses had grown afraid of the Darkness, often bucking and straining at their bits, and trying always to turn back, which some of them did despite their rider’s efforts to turn them about or bring them to a halt.  So Strabos was at length forced to order a dismount and have his forces continue afoot, leading their horses.  And they found that no magical light would pierce the Darkness any better than their ordinary lanterns.  Nevertheless, Strabos came forth even in fear of the Darkness, yet convinced that his cause was righteous  --  for certain was he that should not all of the Sereghran rise up to defeat Modeus, then the Demon Lord would win in the end.              

When next Strabos made to stop for a rest his forces were attacked from all sides at once.  But again, he beat back that enemy, though with great loss, as wingless Dragons of exceptional mightiness came upon him and which could not be slain but by magic.  And because his closest Divisions behind him were severely depleted he sent messengers back to order the rest of his forces to come to him as best they could.  Yet, all but one of those messengers were lost in the Darkness.  Thus, just as the Fleets upon the water were separated, so were the Divisions upon land.  And some would be totally destroyed, to the very last Soldier.  Then, once again, ere a few hours had passed, Strabos was attacked and again beat back the enemy, but with even greater loss.  But this happened again and again, for what must have been days upon days of fighting.  And with each renewed assault, the monsters seemed that much more fell and ravenous.  As a result, his forces steadily dwindled, until, at the last, he was left with but one and one-half Divisions and a tithe of the Royal Company.  Indeed, so many died upon that march and upon the sea that Arzultaur would be drastically reduced for many years to come.              

The Wizard Palphus was slain while fighting Dragons, of which three he slew ere being caught from behind by another and bitten in half.  But that Dragon was felled by Strabos, while many others were killed or driven off by Flaven and Calaren, along with the Last Three Northrons and the Kith.  Yet, in that fight, one of Khalen’s sons was slain, as was Brandar’s youngest daughter.

Gruesome and raw were those battles.  And Strabos came to believe that no end would come to the carnage as he sought for the Demon’s Castle.  But though he fought for what seemed weeks of bloody warfare without hope of seeing it in the Darkness, he stood at length before the Castle Gate war-stained and weary, and beheld there pits and ravines full of flame, and pools of unknown liquids, and heaps of slag and bones and excrement all around the Castle.  And if he had imagined a place brought up from the UnderRealms to defile the face of the world, he had not dreamt of the reality of it.             

Here, while the light of the flames there were somewhat stifled by the Darkness, they were enough to illuminate the Castle with an eerie crimson glow.              

The stronghold was large and intricate, surrounded by high walls with many watchtowers and walls topped with row upon row of long, needle-sharp, black-iron spikes.  And at the footing of the wall was a mote filled not with water but with flaming orange magma; bubbling and plopping and steaming, and emitting spires of poisonous vapors.  But in the towers were hundreds of openings, like so many tiny black eyes, all peering into the Darkness.  Yet, there appeared to be no living thing in those windows, nor upon the walls, nor anywhere else about the Castle or upon its grounds.              

There was but one great gate, with a mighty archway above two massive doors of rusted iron beset with spikes, like to those atop the walls.  But there was no handle nor lock, nor any other means of opening the doors, nor a mechanism for knocking.  And across the mote was a stone bridge leading up to the gate, opposite of which were stone guard-houses, one each on either side.  Yet, there were no guards to be seen.  And standing between the guard-houses, gazing across the bridge, Strabos was at first at a loss as to why the place was not guarded.  Then it occurred to him that he had walked into a Trap, for surely the Castle was full of monsters, and the enemy must be all around, waiting in the Darknesss for some signal from the Demon Lord, safe within his Castle.  Thus did Strabos order his forces to take battle stances there, and to be ready for anything.              

Be it known that the Last Three Northrons played a major role in that dire march to the Demon’s Castle, often saving from ruin the King and many of his Company, assailed by the most fearsome monsters that have ever been.  Giants of many kinds, Dragons and Drakes, Devilkin and Demonics, and Durwolc by the score, among many other creatures and beasts.  And so terrible were the foes arrayed against the Crusaders that were it not for the Three wielding their marvelous magical swords, sometimes back-to-back, and had Strabos no such Champions, then his strength would not have been enough, regardless of his valor and that of his Guardsmen, nor the great magicks of Flaven and Calaren, nor the legendary prowess of the Lords Medhyos and Turlin; for the Northrons, with the Kith behind them, carved the way through the enemy, and thus brought Strabos alive to that place.

Thus did these Heroes make it possible for Strabos to stand at that bridge ready to challenge the Demon Lord.  Yet, worse even than the nightmarish sight of the Castle and its grounds  --  where many white bones were sticking out from Sereghran gear on the mounds thereabouts  --  was the horrid stench of the place, as the stink would make the odor of a rotting corpse seem like the scent of roses in bloom.   And some even of the most hardy Warriors could not help but wretch upon the ground when first coming upon the Castle, as the fumes there made all of the Sereghran sick to their stomachs.  Waiting a long while then, but seeing no sign of attack, Strabos ordered Flaven, Medhyos, and Turlin to move the remaining army outside the stench and make camp as best could be done in the dust and blackness, and to establish a defensive perimeter about the encampment.  But Strabos remained at the bridge with the Three and the Kith, together with Calaren and the Herald Farus, with his old friend Brugjo, now a Knight of the King’s Guardsmen.  And those two Strabos ordered to go upon the bridge and before the gate and there declare the arrival of the High King of the Sereghran.  But they were also to call for Modeus to come out and surrender himself to Strabos.             

Of course, none believed that the Demon would do any such thing, but a King must do as tradition demands.  Thus did Strabos send his Herald with orders to shout at the Castle where they were sure the Demon must be listening from behind his walls, and was likely now gazing upon them from the blackness of some high window.  And while Farus and Brugjo felt as if they had been given a death sentence, they took the King’s order as a command of the utmost urgency and made to ride resolutely toward the gate.  Yet, ere they had gone half-way across the bridge horn-calls were sounded from watchmen in the encampment’s eastern flank, at which the two halted, waiting to see what was happening.  And Strabos sent riders, scared out of their wits, to discover the reason for the sounding of the horns.  But the riders soon returned, saying:  “Mariners of Aetas have come from the north led by the Elf-Lord Lindheron and the Hero Ardour.  And the Lord begs that the King await his arrival, at which he intends to give report concerning events upon the water and upon the lands to the north.” But when Strabos asked about Aetas the rider said:  “The Lord said only to request your patience in waiting for his arrival, when everything shall be revealed.”  Then did Strabos know that Aetas had fallen.  And he was so aggrieved by this news that he began to think of foregoing the Crusade, even at this late hour, and after the deaths of so many.              

The Survivors of the Fall of Aetas had come from that last battle in the north with no further resistance from the enemy, and made it to the Castle upon its northern side where there was no bridge across the mote.  So they went round to the east and then south and came upon the encampment of the forces of Strabos in the Darkness.  And at first the men upon both sides believed that they had come across more of the enemy.  But ere the delivering of blows they recognized their friends, though their joy was short-lived when they discovered that their combined numbers were now less than a sixth of what had been mustered ere entering into the Deel upon both land and sea.              

Farus and Brugjo were confused, not knowing what to do, and therefore returned to Strabos.  But seeing his countenance they were afraid to be so bold as to disturb the King with questions.  And after Lindheron had come and spoke of Aetas they decided to wait for Strabos to address them directly, for the Elf’s news was grievous.             

Strabos bent as one told that his brother has been slain.  And he secretly lost hope that this fight would be won, though he tried not to show it.  Then he dismounted and rested upon a seat that had been brought for him, and there sat deep in thought, staring blankly at the scoria at his feet.  And none there spoke a word for a very long while.  But at length, he lifted his face, though no tear marred his dusty cheek, then stood proudly, gazing out into the Darkness as one believing that he is soon to die.  Thus, he beheld Farus nearby, and said:  “You there, Herald.  What news from ‘yon Castle?”  At that Farus feared his own King, and bent to one knee, saying:  “Pardon, I beg, my Lord.  We turned at the sound.”  But he knew that Strabos had seen him and Brugjo return.  “Forgive me, Highness.  But we were not sure of what to do, thinking that things have changed.”

Poor Brugjo had also gone to one knee and was bowing low his head.  But the King, seeming surprised by his Herald’s words, let fall a lone tear from his eye.  And after wiping it with the back of his hand he stepped over and lifted Farus up, saying to him:  “Fear not, good Farus.  You have done well.  Indeed, all things have changed.  But go and do as I bid.  Yet, add this to your proclamation; that Modeus the Cruel must stand in judgment for the slaying of the King of Baerakis.  Then tarry not, but come straight-away back to me here as swift as you may.”              

Farus and Brugjo turned to fulfill their duty, but as they made to mount up Tomas came to them and bid them wait a moment longer.  Then he went and had words with the King, after which he and his countrymen returned and said to them:  “Mount up, Royal Herald.  And you, good Knight.  Perform the charge laid upon you.  But we go likewise to get a closer look at that Castle, and to view this Demon should he dare show himself whilst we have hands to our hilts.   Then shall we discover of what this Demon is made.” So it was that the three Northrons rode bravely with Farus and Brugo up to the dark gate. 

*******             

Lonely and miserable was Brandar, bound with a neckband by a chain to the slimy wall of a windowless cell.  And, just out of reach of the door, which opened inwards, he seemed weak and crippled, as one decrepit by old age.  Indeed, his beard and hair had grown long; turned white from his torments, and from the many days of his sunless confinement so deep within the Demon’s dark and odious dungeons.  And he had sores and wounds and many scars all about his body.  But exactly how long had he been a prisoner he could no longer venture a guess, and viewed any hope of rescue as a dream sent by the Demon to twist his mind.  Yet, while he lived he had hope of an escape, someday, somehow  --  for he had a secret which gave him that hope.  A thing which had not yet, by some miracle, been found by the enemy.  And that secret was a small knife hidden in a concealed pocket low in a leg of his trousers.              

“Long ago,” whispered Brandar to himself, or was he in another daze?  “So very long ago,” when once he was a boy, his father had given him the knife and showed him how to hide it, and instructed him not to reveal it to anyone, even henceforth to wash his own garments, as his father himself always would.  So Brandar had done that, as well.              

Therefore, through all the days of his captivity, through the beatings and torture and the biting and kicking and pawing and clawing and so much rough handling, none of his captors had discovered the little knife.  And in all that time, as though it were a blessing from the Gods, no rent nor hole nor jagged rip in his trousers betrayed the hidden pocket.  Yet, he dared not touch the knife.  Nay, he dare not speak of it, nor look towards it, nor even think of it as a knife until the most perfect of moments.  But how much longer must he wait?  How much longer did he believe he could ultimately endure?  How much longer could he live under such deplorable conditions?              

On many occasions Brandar barely kept from revealing the nature of his secret weapon, when Modeus would send him into the throes of an awful vision.  But Brandar spoke only of “my father’s gift.”  “The gift shall set me free.”  “The gift is my secret.”  And the Demon was not able to discover what the “gift” truly was.  Yet, it proved to be a grave mistake on his part to come at length to consider it nonsense.  For if he had left Brandar naked from the start, and not allowed the return of the Northron’s hastily searched trousers, then Brandar would likely have perished upon the floor of that cell.              

As it happens, every few days one of Brandar’s Trollo jailers would open the door to the cell and toss Brandar some spoiled food and also refilled his water-bowl, into which one creature often urinated after giving Brandar a swift kick, just for laughs.  And so would Brandar curl up and moan, behaving as if he was old and sickly; defenseless.  Yet, Brandar’s cringing and cowering was an act, for he had long since become used to the abuse.  And he feigned agedness, all the while taking the food, as unpalatable as it was, and ate any other source of sustenance that happened to crawl into his cell, so that he was not as weak as he seemed.  Also did he work himself in the dark, pulling himself up and down by the chain connecting his neck-band to a great ring fastened high upon the cell’s moldy wall.  Thus, while he was indeed weakened by his ordeal, he was stronger and less mad than he appeared.

There came a time, therefore, when a long span had passed since the Demon had called for more torture, that Brandar was rather well healed of his most recent wounds.  And he wondered why this should be; praying that Modeus had decided to let him rot to death in the dungeons.  Then, three days since Brandar’s last meal, that one Trollo, the pudgy sort, who was always drinking too much, came to throw Brandar a hunk of putrid meat and to refill the water-bowl.  But this Trollo had the nasty habit of whacking Brandar on the back with the flat of his axe as well as kicking the prisoner in the ribs, ere turning to fill-up then pee into the bowl.  And Brandar had marked this one’s traits, as the creature loved the burning liquor which the Kobo brew, though it made him stagger and stumble.  But also would he foolishly leave his weapon laying about unwatched.              

On this occasion, then, after hitting and kicking Brandar, at which Brandar doubled-up as if truly hurt, the tipsy Trollo turned and left his axe against the wall as he was about to prepare himself to urinate into the water-bowl without first filling it with water.  Yet, Brandar, out of the corner of his eye, noticed that the axe, for once, was just within his reach.  So he curled as if in pain and took the knife from its secret place just as the Trollo began finding relief in the water-bowl.  And as the brute closed his eyes, as always he did when pissing into the bowl, Brandar suddenly leapt up and planted the knife deep into the middle of the monster’s pointed ear.              

The Trollo, surprised and in sudden agony, stumbled backwards with a howl, grasping at the handle of the knife.  But ere he could withdraw it Brandar snatched up the axe and with it split the Trollo’s skull clean in two.  Then, for all of the times the vile Trollo had beaten him and kicked him, and for all the pent-up rage and despair at his captivity, yet, most of all, because the vile Trollo kept pissing, Brandar hacked repeatedly at the monster, screaming curses at it, until the thing finally stopped pissing.

Then Brandar pulled the dead Trollo to the middle of the floor and, with a final almost ceremonial strike, attempted to cut off the creature’s head.  Yet, due to his hast and his starved condition his aim was off, so that the axe did not fully cleave the neck completely through but left meat on one side, at which the head did not roll away but merely drooped sidewise with its eyes wide open, split skull and all.              

With that, Brandar bent and pulled the knife from the Trollo’s ear, then kissed the bloody little blade, saying softly:  “Thank you, Father.  Thank you.”  But he did not put the knife back into its hiding place.  And ere he could do anything else he swooned and fell upon the mutilated body of the Trollo, for he was exhausted from his exertions.  And he later remembered dreaming there of his father’s smiling face.              

Strange are the twists of fate, and of unforeseen occurrences, and the fortunes of war, or the happenstances of life and nature.  But stranger still are things that take place which alone may be some accident, but together must be destiny.  And so it was here with Brandar, in this deepest of all prisons, for afterwards would he say that he believes the Gods intended his capture, as everything that happened whence he pierced the Trollo’s ear seemed more than good fortune.  Yet, also would he say that he wished the Gods had found another way. 

The noise of the incident attracted the attention of another Trollo jailer, who was about to have supper at a table in a nearby guardroom.  And while such creatures prefer Elf-meat or Man-meat, or even Dwarf-meat, when they can get it, today it was ham, freshly slaughtered, well cooked and steaming hot, and dripping with tasty grease.  Thus did the Trollo angrily throw down the meat upon the table ere taking one bite and went stomping down the hallway to see what the fuss was all about.  And this one had a club with which he was not opposed to using even upon his fellows.              

Fortunately, the Trollo did not call for help, for he was the bearer of the keys to that portion of the prison and was used to handling things himself.  And he had the key to the lock which secured Brandar’s neck-band.  There he found Brandar sprawled unconscious upon the dead Trollo’s body, both of them spattered with blood and wet with urine, and lying as if both were dead amidst all the gore on the floor.  But since he also had drunk some of the Kobo liquor he checked not for signs of life; assuming that the two had killed each other.  What is more, he beheld here a Man ready for gutting and cooking and eating in place of the sorry ham on his table.  And he set his club against the wall so as to free up his hands for releasing Brandar’s chain.

Naturally, most prisoners were slain within days of capture, whether Sereghran or errant Durwolc.  And it was part of this jailer’s pay to be given the meat, as Durwolc will eat the flesh of their own, if nothing else is available.  But this prisoner was special; the precious Sereghran Warlord, whom the jailers had named “Blondie”, and who was to be kept alive and breathing, chained whole in his cell, until further notice; as the Master enjoyed toying with him.  Yet, what the dimwitted Trollo could not comprehend was that Modeus wished to get information from the Northron, and would therefore be quite angry at any premature death not of his own making.              

Nevertheless, the Trollo selfishly eyed poor Brandar, imagining the feast that could be made of the Northron’s cooked flesh, and made excuses in his mind to justify the meal.  “Arr!  Blondie is dead,” said the Trollo to himself.  “And the Master will have no need of his meat.”  Then did he unlock and remove the band from Brandar’s neck.  However, as stupid as most Trollo are, this one was not as slow as many of his kindred and suddenly realized that he must first “prove that Blondie is dead,” and how it came about, saying:  “… else the Master grows angry and I be thrown in the mote.”  So he meant to refasten the neck-band, intending thereafter to fetch a fellow jailer to act as a witness, growling to himself:  “Yes, but I will have to share the meat to get them to go along.  Does nothing go right for me in this work?  I should be living under a bridge happily feasting on travelers.”              

Well, the Gods answered his question, though not in the way he would expect, as Brandar suddenly came awake as the Trollo was mumbling to himself.  And Brandar yet held the little knife in one hand and that bloody axe in the other.  So, he turned in the Trollo’s grasp just as the creature was about to relock the band.  Seeing this, the Trollo released the band and went to grab for his club.  But Brandar threw the knife so that it stuck in the Trollo’s hand just as the beast was about to sieze his weapon.  Then did Brandar rise up and slay the Trollo with three hacking blows of the axe.  And so swift was Brandar that neither he nor the Trollo had made enough noise to alert any other jailers.  Thus, Brandar calmly took back his knife, wiping it clean upon the creature’s garments ere returning it to its hidden pocket.  But naturally he was rather tired, as he had not eaten in three days.  Yet, he was of a mind to escape, and went cautiously into the hallway, making his way to the guardroom, where he beheld by candle-light the jailer’s uneaten ham, unleavened bread, a pitcher of clean water, and a large jug of the Kobo liquor.  Then his eyes went wide with lust, and forgetting everything else he began to eat.  And being intent upon the food, he thought not of jailers nor of Demons, nor of checking if the other door to the room was locked.

When he was finished eating, he lay his head upon his forearms on the table and went swiftly to sleep; sleeping such a deep sleep as he had not been able to sleep since when he could not guess.  And how long he rested in that room is not known.  Yet, there he dreamed of pleasant things, instead of his usual nightmares.  And in one of them he was lying in his very own bed in the House of Odar, which seemed too hard.  And he was being disturbed by someone pounding upon the door.

******             

Farus shouted his pronouncements as loudly as he could manage, crying out:  “Be it known that the Lord Strabos, son of Teukos, and High King of all the Sereghran of Arzultaur, now justly lays claim to this land in payment for hurts to his People!  And the one named Modeus, the Demon Lord, must come from this Castle and surrender to the Lord Strabos!  Then shall Modeus stand in judgment for the waging of wars upon the Sereghran, the slaying of innocent folk, and for the death of King Aetas of Baerakis!”              

Farus, however, expected no answer, lest it were arrows shot from the windows in the towers, or from atop the walls.  Neither did he believe anyone inside could hear him over the roaring of the fires in the mote beneath the bridge.  And so hot it was from the lava below that he was sweating profusely.               

“Know you therein,” continued Farus, “that this Castle is under siege!  Neither shall you be shown quarter lest you surrender the Castle to the King!  These lands are forfeit!  And Modeus must come forth to answer the charges against him!”              

As ordered, Farus turned then to go back.  But first, he stopped to inquire of Tomas:  “What ho, General Loksom.  Is there more to be said here?”  “Nay,” said Tomas.  ‘Get you gone to the King.  And we shall …”  Boom!  A loud thunderclap-like sound out of the Darkness above the Castle, cutting Tomas off in mid-sentence.  And the horses reared in fright as a great and mighty shaking of the ground occurred.  Then more booming sounds went on, one after another, at a slow but steady rate.  And while the Northrons, with Farus and Brugjo, would have ridden straight away back to the King, they could not get their mounts under control.             

Boom!  …                                          

Boom!  …                                          

Boom!  …             

The gate suddenly opened, and out poured heavily armed Trollo, snarling and yowling, and running onto the bridge like rabid-mad animals.              

Boom!  …             

“Ride!” called Tomas, finally getting control of his horse.  “Ride like the wind!”  But the looked-for rain of arrows indeed came from the windows in the towers, and from Durwolc who now appeared atop the walls just as horn-calls were heard from the direction of the encampment.  And by those arrows Brugjo and his horse were slain.              

Boom!  …             

When Tomas had reached the end of the bridge he turned his mount and voiced a word of command to activate the magic of Rosth’s Gem, the Opal of Light, which allowed him to shoot hot beams of sunlight from his eyes.  And with these he turned some of the Trollo to stone, which surprised and halted the other Trollo there.  “The Opal!” yelled Tomas to the other two Northrons, who had turned about to see what he was about.  Then were they thrilled to discover that the magic of the Opal was theirs as well.  And together the three then turned each of the remaining Trollo to stone.             

Boom!  …               

With that they turned again to follow the King to the encampment; amazed that the magicks of their necklaces was giving them the power of Rosth’s Gem.  And thus did they ken that Rosth’s necklace, if not Rosth himself, must be near within the Castle.

*****             

Boom!  Boom!  Boom!

Brandar awoke, irritated that his sleep was being interrupted.  Yet, he felt now not his bed beneath him, but a cold stone floor.  And it was dark, for the candle had burned out, though torchlight flowed through the crack between the floor and the bottom of the door upon which someone was pounding. 

Boom!  Boom!  Boom!

Whoever was banging upon the door was being violent enough to shake it to its core, and yelled in the enemy’s common speech:  “Open this door, Obla, or I will break it down!”  Then Brandar realized that it was a Trollo, and that he was not in the House of  Odar in Romin.  “And if yer’ve drunk all the drink,” said the Trollo, “I’ll skin yer alive, use yer hide for a rug, and give your bleedin’ arse to the mote!”  So Brandar jumped up, kenning that he must have fallen to the floor in his sleep.  And in the dim light he noticed that the candle was out.  Then he found and seized the axe which had also fallen upon the floor.  

Boom!  Boom!  Boom!  

“Open this trap, Obla!” bellowed the Trollo from the other side of the door.  “And I’ll not say it again!”  Brander quickly made his way back into his cell just as he heard the locked door to the guardroom being loudly broken open, whereat torchlight filled the guardroom. “Just as I thought,” said the new Trollo, finding the liquor-bottle empty.  “Yer’ve drunk it all up again, yer lout!  Where ye be, Obla!”  Then the Trollo, looking down the hallway, noticed Brandar’s cell door was open and went stomping forth with a torch in one hand and a large mace in the other.  “There ye be,” said he.  “Comoe out o’ there, you sluggart!  Don’t make me come after yer, cowart!”  But arriving to find his two comrades on the floor, not seeing Brandar hiding behind the door, he kenned instantly that something was amiss.  And that is why he could, as a matter of instinct, parry Brandar’s attack using the iron haft of his torch.  Brandar fought with that creature who proved to be a large and fearsome beast, larger than the other two.  And as the monster used both the torch and his mace, Brandar received many burns and bruisings ere he cut off the hand which held the mace, then clove a long and deep gash in the Trollo’s chest, wounding it deeply.  Yet, Brandar had not yet killed it, for it sat itself down, dying, with its back against the wall.  Watching then the Trollo leak its black blood upon the floor Brandar kenned that the food and rest had given him strength.  Then he split this Trollo’s skull as he had done to the pissing jailer, after which he wrenched the torch from the monster’s dead grasp and took the keys from the fallen Obla, then moved into the hallway and went back to the guardroom, intending at first to fight his way to freedom.  But seeing the broken door across the room, with the unlit passage beyond, he grasped the folly of such a course and devised another plan.  He believed now that he must spy out the dungeons, seeking a way out, if he could do so without being caught.   He tossed the torch aside and went down the new passage, cautiously feeling his way in the lightlessness to which he had become so accustomed in his many months of confinement.  And while he had often been dragged in chains through many of these passages, he did not yet know a way out, for he was blindfolded when first shoved into his musty cell.  Therefore, he would search for ways going upwards, ever upwards, until finding a means of escape.  But going about searching for so long that he began to lose all hope of reaching the outside, he decided that he must, at the least, be willing to fall, if nothing else in a desperate attempt to find the Demon Lord and slay him.  So it was that Brandar, with great skill and stealth, and by the Gods’ blessing, searched the ways and passages and chambers of that great maze of a dungeon so that he found store-rooms full of food and clean water; cautiously lighting torches he found here and there but snuffing them out with the slightest sound in connecting passages.  And while he had been tortured in some of the rooms he came across, numerous other rooms he found replete with the remains of dead Sereghran in various stages of decomposition, but not one living soul.  Then once, he came upon the skeleton of a Scout which he had sent to keep watch upon the Deel and that he recognized by its decaying garments.  And there the pang of grief he felt at discovering that Warrior was too much for him to bear, so that he bent to his knees and wept for all of the dead of the Sereghran.  Then all of his frustrations and anguish and his sorrows and anger poured out in those sad and lonely tears, falling so lightly upon the dusty floor of the chamber.  Always Brandar sought the ways upwards.  But he found the passages inevitably led to rooms or halls full of the noise and torchlight of Durwolc, or in which dwelt other foul monsters.  And thrice was he nearly discovered.  Yet, try as he might he could not find an unwatched passage to the outside.  And he was so long at searchinig that he became anxious and confused, wondering when his escape from his cell would at last be discovered, whence an alarm should be sounded.  But that alarm was not to come. 

Brandar spent what he guessed was many days sneaking about, trying not to be detected, and avoiding those places darker than the dark of the dungeon, in which he rightly guessed that some awful creature would be waiting to snatch up and devour whoever came near.  Yet, ere much longer he grew wrathful and weary of his plight; deciding that he must begin waylaying Durwolc to question them about the way out.  Then did a smile cross his lips as he went forth determined to take vengeance upon the Durwolc, and contemplated with a morbid sense of glee the torturing of some stray Trollo.              

Verily, Brandar had learned well the horrid speech of the enemy in these days of his imprisonment, more so even than the knowledge given to him by that spell placed upon the Seven long ago.  And he could therefore question his captives with a good chance of detecting whatever lies might be told.  Thus, he separately caught and then tortured two Trollo and one Kobo, all of whom, sadly, died rather painful deaths ere giving him anything remotely useful.  But next he took three Gobba, in turn, though with no better result.  Yet, a fourth mistook Brandar for a thief, and tried to bribe the Man for its freedom, saying something about “treasures in the vault.”  And going along with the fool, Brandar learned something valuable indeed, though the Gobba did not survive further questioning, at which Brandar said:  “Too bad.  May his soul find peace.  He was such a good lad.”

*******             

Boom!  …              

Now, fighting raged as soon as Tomas and his fellows had gone back to Strabos and must thereupon turn to defend against the Druwolc.  But when the enemy were sufficiently dispatched thereabouts to give a moment’s pause to the fighting, the three Northrons guarded the rear as Strabos with Farus and the King’s reduced Company then retreated into the encampment, where Strabos arrayed the Company upon a small mound of slag, at which Tomas went up to speak urgently with Strabos.              

“My Lord!  As you know,” said Tomas, “we Northrons bear gems upon chains such as this,” and he showed Strabos his necklace.  “Gifts from the Wizard of Romin,” said he, “each of which is different from the others in both form and power.  I have this jade-stone which gives to me lightening-bolts from my fingertip.  But Daram has the Ruby of Fire-Breath, and Khalen carries the Amethyst of Swiftness, and the others have other powers.”  “Yes, yes,” said Strabos, “such is known to me.”  He was making ready to fight, for he could hear battle taking place all around.  “What is that to me now?”              

Boom!  …             

“Just this,” said Tomas.  “When sister Gems are close enough together, each also possesses the powers of the others.  And as we rode from the Castle gate with your Herald, lo, we made test of the Gems and found that the sunlight of the Opal was in these we hold here.  Yet, I was not surprised by this turn, for the Opal was worn by Rosth when he was changed into stone, and then dragged into this Darkness.  Thus, Rosth and likely the others of our countrymen must be there within the Castle, mayhap even Brandar, else their necklaces are there, as the Gems we hold here are giving us all the powers of their sisters.” 

“I see,” said Strabos, mounting up, at which his Company did likewise.  “Perhaps your contrymen, even Brandar, are within the Castle.  Yet, three remain stone, hard as statues, and thus have been slain.  But Brandar, if he lives, remains a prisoner of Modeus, like as not in the deepest of his unfathomable dungeons.”  Then Strabos gestured to his surroundings, saying:  “How, then, does that serve us in this place.”             

Boom!  …              

“Hear me,” said Tomas, “then pass judgment as you will.  The missing Gems are there, even Brandar’s Pearl of Giant-Strength.”  Then Daram and Khalen looked at each other in sudden realization of what Tomas was leading to.  “What if we could go into the Castle itself?” he continued.  “Verily inside of it, and mayhap retrieve those Gems.  Then the powers of the Sereghran shall be so greatly increased that we shall, at the very least, destroy many a foe, though we who enter perish ere the end.”  “Into the Castle?” said Strabos.  “Are you mad?”             

Boom!  …             

With that, Tomas grew angry and stepped over to hold the reigns of the King’s horse, saying:  “Fight and die upon this field we shall do, if that is what the High King demands!  But what hope do we have corralled like this?  Absolutely none!  But yonder, that burning mote stands before a fortress that not even this enemy shall find easy to assail.  Think, Sire!  After so many have fallen upon both sides that your forces have not slain such of their foes that the Demon has more to throw at us!  Nay!  He has put forth the last of his strength, just as we.  And I would wager all of the Gems that the Castle has now been emptied.  Yea, the Castle is empty!              

“The Demon means to crush us out here as we bark meaningless words across the bridge at his gate.  And therein he watches from some high tower, imagining that he is safe, though having but few guards at the door.  The very last thing he would expect is for all of us to leave the field of battle and strike for him there, within the Castle itself!”             

Boom!  …              

Now Strabos caught the wisdom of the Northron’s tactic and agreed, owing that the making of a stand upon the dirt before the Castle, while noble, was to invite defeat.  Yet, to attempt the Castle itself, if only out of desperation, offered at the least some chance of survival.

“Right!” said Strabos.  “Right you are, my Warlord’s Second.” And he drew his sword while gazing upon the Castle lit by red flames.  “To the Castle,” said he to himself, but then turned to address his Officers.  “To the Castle!  Make ready to strike for the Castle.  To the Castle, I say, one and all!  We go to the Castle and seek there our foe!”  And while the Officers were amazed at this at first, they all soon kenned the wisdom of it and did as they were told; and thus did they prepare to move upon the Castle.              

Boom!  …              

Strabos turned again to Tomas, saying:  “Now, good Northron.  As so often you have done since we came through the Deel, will you cleave a path for us through this wretched and horrible enemy?  Will you lead us to that Castle?”  “Indeed, I shall!” said Tomas.  “And more than a path!  A veritable highway shall I cleave for thee!  And all of the Sereghran may follow me to victory!”

Boom!  …              

Thus did the Last Three Northrons take up one more charge and fought their way to stand upon the bridge, finding there that they possessed all the magicks of the Wizard’s Gifts, and which most definitely made all of the difference.  Nevertheless, a terrific battle was to be fought, for here was the remaining strength both of the Sereghran and Modeus, who had indeed emptied his Castle but had also brought all his forces from the Mountains.

 

The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 33   Brandar Finds The Statues

Brandar took food and water from a store-room and sat down to eat in a long abandoned torture chamber.  And he wondered why there were not as many Durwolc in any of the passages as he would have expected  --  for the entire place should be simply crawling with them, as he had heard when he was first dragged blindfolded down to the dungeons, and as he beheld the many times he had been taken to be tortured.  Yet, now he could tramp around for hours without encountering a single enemy.

“Gone to the war,” said one of the captured Trollo. “They have gone to the Master’s war,” said the Trollo when asked how many of his fellows were nearby.  But this meant little to Brandar, who guessed that Modeus had launched another of his many assaults against the Sereghran.  “If only I could get out of this place,” said Brandar to himself, laying down to take a nap after finishing his meal.  “Then should I lead them to victory.  …  Aye, those wars … .  Wars … .”  And after he had fallen asleep, he dreamt of his father, and far away Andaria, and of his childhood, and his comfortable bed in the House of Odar.  Then his mother came to shake him awake, but instead of speaking she issued a great booming noise.

Boom!  …

With that, Brandar awoke.  But he knew where he was, and lay still for a while and then stretched, intending to get up.  Then came another booming noise.

Boom!  … 

Brandar sat up, pondering the noise.  Then it happened again a bit later, and again, and again, repeatedly, in slow though regular intervals, as if a storm were hovering above the Castle and the sound of its thunder was making its way all the way into the dungeons, but evenly spaced.

Boom!  … 

And after so many repetitions, Brandar knew that there was no storm, though he could not ken what may be causing such noises.  So, he stood, grasping firmly the haft of the axe, and listened more intently, waiting patiently after each one.

Boom!  …     Waited.     Boom!  …     Waited.     Boom!  …

Then he heard the sound of a dozen Gobba on the move in the passageway, coming towards the chamber.  Thus, he hid himself, as the light of many torches grew brighter in the passageway.  It then became clear that they were coming his way, and he feared that his escape had been noticed, and that the Gobba were now coming to capture him.

Boom!  ... 

Yet, the Gobba passed the chamber without so much as a single look inside, then disappeared up the passageway.

“What is this?” thought Brandar.  “Something is afoot.  But is it me?  Why did they not search the chamber?  Surely I am missed by now.”  Yet, what Brandar could not have known was that the Demon Lord had more pressing things on his mind than escaped prisoners, nor was Modeus even aware that Brandar had escaped, as no other jailers had gone into that part of the dungeons since Brandar had slain his Trollo keepers.  Most of the enemy in the Castle had been ordered to go out and do battle with the Sereghran who had come to the gate, even here in the heart of the Master’s Darkness.  That is why Brandar was so alone in the dungeons, else he most certainly would have been caught and slain fairly soon after leaving his cell.

Boom!  …

Then yet another company of Gobba marched up the passage.  And Brandar thought he heard one of them say something about “Sereghran in the yard.”  Then a large company of Trollo passed by, chanting and slavering, with their long forked tongues hanging out and swinging back and forth.  Yet, neither had these looked into the chamber in which Brandar was hiding.

Boom!  …

“Sereghran in the yard?” thought Brandar.  “In the yard outside?”  And it occurred to him that perhaps the High King had launched his own assault upon Modeus, and was even now laying siege to the Castle.  Then Brandar’s heart leapt at the prospect.  But he waited excitedly in the chamber, making sure no more enemies were coming along ere going out to embark upon a new plan of action he had devised after questioning the last captured Gobba.  And besides having the Trollo axe, Brandar had taken the curved sword of the Gobba, and its belt, and had been wearing them ever since.

The small sword he had been using as a carving knife, and as an extra weapon.  So, now he checked all his weapons, including the little knife hidden in the leg of his trousers, and then slipped ever so quietly into the passageway, keeping a wary ear open for any approaching enemies.

Boom!  …

It happens that the mistaken Gobba told “thief” Brandar both a way out and the way to a certain treasure vault, wherein, the evil Gobba claimed, many valuable things were stored, and also many weapons.  And Brandar deemed that if he could enter the vault to obtain armor and a decent sword, his chances of making it to the outside would be greatly improved.  But to his happy surprise, all the passages had become so deserted that he encountered no other monsters on the way, and came soon to that very place.

Boom!  …

Creeping up in the dark along the passage leading to the vault, he found that the passage came to a bend ere entering a small chamber illuminated by torchlight, wherein he had been told the door to the vault was in the back wall of the chamber, though he could not see it from where he stood, for he had stopped and was listening carefully, as it was apparent that the chamber was guarded.  And Brandar eavesdropped upon what he believed must be two Trollo, by the sound of their voices.

Boom!  …              

“Blimey, but that noise is drivin’ me batty!” said one of the Trollo, at which the other replied:  “Shut yer yap, Garn.  Else, would yer rather go an’ have a chat wi’ the Saragorn?”  To which the first said:  “Shut yer yap, maggot!  I was jus’ sayin’ I hates the noise, is all.”  And so it went, this way and that between the dim-witted Trollo.  Yet, due to their banter and the booming, they did not hear Brandar slink his way to the bend in the passageway.

Boom!  … 

Then Brandar prepared his axe for a fight; having devised yet another new plan.  “You in there!” called Brandar, in as gruff a voice as he could manage.  “Come and help me with this meat!  A tasty Saragorn, fresh from his cell.”  Then one of the Trollo came to the chamber entry, saying:  “Who’s that?  What meat?  What do yer want?  Is that you, Obla?  Why would yer share yer meat?”  “It’s me,” said Brandar, now intentionally trying to sound as much like Obla as he could, for he knew the name Obla was that of the late Trollo who had long been pissing in his water-bowl.  “At least let one of you come out and help me with the prisoner.”  Then he added:  “Blondie needs cooking!  And it’s all good meat, I’ll wager.  Lean and sweet!”

Boom!  …

Fortunately, these two brutes were not the brightest of Trollo, even among Trollo, which is probably why they were left behind instead of being sent to the fight.  And they began arguing about who was going to help with the cooking.  But one must have been larger than the other, or of higher rank, as it threatened the other, making it stay behind as it took hold of a spear and came tramping down the passage, saying:  “Ho, Obla.  Decided to eat the fair one after all, eh?  I wants his liver.”  But instead of Man-liver the monster got the Gobba sword in his throat as soon as rounding the bend, at which he simply dropped his spear and stumbled back in surprise, clutching at the sword.  Then Brandar grabbed him by his tunic and pulled him further round, where the creature fell sidewise upon the floor pulling at the sword.  And with that, Brandar swiftly slew him with but one mighty axe-hack to the side of his head.

Boom!  …

Brandar then yanked out the axe, dragged the dead Trollo a bit further down the passage, pulled out the sword, and after wiping it on the Trollo’s tunic put it back into his belt.  Then he took up the Trollo’s spear, returned to the bend in the passage and again called out:  “You in there!  Come on out here!  There’s plenty for everyone.  But don’t wait long, or we’ll eat it all!  Ha, ha!”

Boom!  …

“No,” said the last Trollo.  “Yer bring 'im here.  There’s room fer a fire in here.”  “Suit yourself,” said Brandar.  “But that just leaves more for us!”  And this got the Trollo downright infuriated, for he dearly loved roasted Man-meat, most especially the legs.  So, he lit an extra torch and with it came out from the chamber, saying:  “No yer don’t!”  Thus, he came tromping down the passageway cursing and grumbling, leaving behind his own spear but drawing a knife with which he meant to cut for himself a whole leg from Blondie’s carcass.  But he suddenly found his partner’s thick spear driven deep into his stomach just as he came to the bend.  And here was Blondie himself holding the spear, who then shoved it in deeper and twisted it, all the while sporting the most wicked of grins.

Boom!  …

The Trollo went wide-eyed, dropped his torch, and fell back against the wall as the dour Northron pushed him, then let go of the spear to take up the axe with which to finish the monster off.  And so swift was Brandar that the Trollo had time only to raise his knife in a feeble attempt to parry the Northron’s strike.  But the axe broke the knife and was buried in the Trollo’s chest, where it stuck so tightly that Brandar could not then pull it free.  Neither was the Trollo killed, for Brandar had not struck any vitals, and the creature was tougher than Brandar had expected.  Then the Trollo fell sidewise, broke off the spear, and crawled towards the chamber with the axe yet in its chest.  But Brandar calmly drew the Gobba sword, stepped over to the beast and thrust the sword straight into the Trollo’s brain from behind just as the thing was reaching for its own spear inside the chamber by the arched doorway.  Then Brandar rolled the stinking Trollo over, and with no small effort removed the axe from its chest.

Boom!  … 

With the blood-soaked axe in hand, Brandar went to scout about the passages thereabouts.  Yet, finding no more enemies, he next returned to the chamber and studied the door to the vault.

Here was an iron door twelve feet tall, with an arched top and a large emblem, like a great cold coin, exactly in its center, and with large hinges to the right but a locking latch to the left.  Yet, the latch was rather simple, more so than what Brandar would have expected of any door to a vault.  Then did he have doubts about the dead Gobba’s words, though it was worth a look at any rate.  So, he reached out and took hold of the latch, just to see if it was locked.  Then did he understand the reason for its simplicity.

Boom!  … 

The instant he touched the latch a searing pain ran all the way up his arm.  And he fell to the floor believing that his hand had been burnt to a crisp.  But the pain abruptly went away, and there was nothing wrong with his hand.  Yet, he was not about to try the latch bare-handed once again; guessing that the “coin” on the door was a ward of affliction.  So, he used the Trollo’s spear in hopes of prying off the emblem.  But both of his hands felt the terrible burning, as if he were grasping a white-hot rod as soon as the tip of the spear touched the emblem.  Yet again the pain soon went away.  Thus was Brandar astounded at the magic of the ward, but could not then figure out a way to remove it, or otherwise a means of opening the door.

Boom!  … 

Suddenly made desperate and enraged by the frustration of it all, Brandar took up the axe and began hacking at the latch, and in so doing received a pulse of intense pain with each and every strike.  But he kept it up, nonetheless, although the agony was so great at times that it sent him to his knees.  Yet, he was utterly determined to defeat the ward, and was not about to give up.

Boom!  … 

Finally, after more than a hundred blows upon the latch, and near the point at which Brandar would have collapsed from absolute exhaustion, the latch broke, so that the door opened just a crack.  Yet, Brandar must rest or pass out from his labors.  If he must defend himself against an enemy who may unexpectedly enter the chamber, the axe-blade had long since become too dull to be of any good for slashing.  So, he let it fall and sat with his back to the wall, praying that he would not be disturbed.

Boom!  …

Of course, Brandar realized that he could not long remain idle.  And, as soon as he felt that he was able, he rose up and used the spear to open the door, receiving one last affliction.  But the door had thus been opened wide enough that he could easily step into the vault without touching it.  Then he took a nearby torch from the wall of the outer chamber and held it before him as he warily entered the vault, not yet knowing that he had in truth found the most important treasure-vault within the Castle.

Boom!  …

Here was a very large room with a very high ceiling.  And Brandar could make out a great archway with bars across it, a portcullis it seemed, at the limit of the torchlight in a wall a fairly far distance away, though he could not see through the bars from where he stood near the door, except that some strange silvery glows were coming from within the room beyond the portcullis.  But he did he much care about that, for he had spied what he sought.  

To his left along the wall, and the whole length of it from the door, was a vast array of all manner of weapons and of armor, and every other kind of implement and tool of war which might fit through the door.  But to his right were piles of garments and blankets, and rugs of fine make, and collections of what must be household goods made of silver and gold, such as goblets and bowls, platters, plates, and the like.  And everywhere also were strewn or stacked furnishings; tables, chairs, sofas, and such, and other luxuries.  But Brandar ignored all of that, and went over to find a sword and some armor.

He decided also to take a spear and get a new belt, and find a decent axe and stiff dagger, or two, and whatever else he might need to fight his way out.  "A crossbow would be useful," he thought out loud as he spied one, "and a good longbow, along with many arrows in a large quiver …, no, a short-bow, due to the confining passageways.  And … ."

Boom!  … 

Indeed, there were many racks of swords and spears of the finest make.  And huge chests filled to overflowing with knives and with axes, and maces and hammers, and flails and staves, and many other hand-held weapons.  But there were also stacks of various pole-arms, and pile upon pile of armor and barding, and many kinds of other things for the fighting man.  Thus did Brandar spend time searching that hoard to find what he wanted, or what he thought he wanted, until coming to the portcullis at the far end of the vault.  And in the shadows of a great room behind the portcullis, nigh upon what must be a mound of silver and gold coins, and countless jewels, he beheld what appeared to be a Man, or the statue of a Man, carved as if fully armored, holding a glowing sword as if about to strike the bars.  But thrusting his torch through the bars Brandar found that there were three such statues, in similar poses, dressed and armored like to Sereghran Warriors.  And each of them were brandishing the lordliest of glowing swords.

Boom!  …

Realization smote upon Brandar as if lightning had struck him in the chest, for here were his very dear friends; Alak and Erek, and Rosth.  The very Northrons who had gazed into the eyes of the Gorgon upon the day Brandar had been taken by the evil Dragon Drakonus, on the battlefield outside of the Marsken of Vortunas.  And so smitten with grief was Brandar at seeing his countrymen so stiff and cold that he fell to the floor and wept once again, and remained there sobbing for a long while.

Boom!  …

When finally he looked up once again, he happened to gaze off to his left through the portcullis and there, hanging on the wall, was his very own sword, Beliscaertos, among many other great and wonderful weapons.  And the sight of that sword gave to him a renewed sense of purpose, putting new life into his limbs.  So, he placed the torch in a holder on the wall nearby and knew what next must be done; for he kenned now both a way of escape and a means of heaping vengeance upon his nemesis, Modeus the Cruel.

Boom!  …

Determined to find a way past the barrier, Brandar cautiously touched the bars with a long pike which he found among the equipment thereabouts.  But, discovering that no pain was to be inflicted upon him, he sought a means of lifting it up, seeing that it was made to go into a slit in the ceiling.  Yet, he found that no weapon nor tool would pry up the portcullis.  Neither did he find a disguised or hidden device, such as a stone to be pushed or a torch-holder to be pulled, or any other button or lever which may activate hidden mechanisms that might lift the portcullis.  Thus, he took spears and staves and other implements with which to attack its bars.  But nothing he tried would bend them apart, nor affect in any way the dull black iron of which they were made.

Boom!  … 

Then he thought perhaps that he could hook the sword on the end of a pike and pull it off the wall and through the bars.  But he found that his strength was not yet sufficient, despite his recent meals, for he was not then restored to his former vigor.  And try as he may, his efforts simply wore him to a frazzle. 

Boom!  … 

Wholly weary and despondent, he sat facing the portcullis and stared dejectedly upon the pile of riches beyond his reach.  And there, thrown as a trinket upon that wealth, to Brandar’s sudden delight he beheld his very own necklace, with its Pearl of Giant-Strength, and thus he forget his weariness.

Quickly he took up the pike and with it retrieved the necklace.  But so intent was he on doing this that he failed to notice three Gress, who must have discovered the dead Trollo, and also the opened vault door, and were now sneaking up behind him.  Yet, after Brandar had put on the necklace,  in that moment speaking the command that activated its power, he became aware that all things had changed, as if the Gods had suddenly willed it so. 

*****

Boom!  …

The Last Three Northrons cleared the bridge of monsters but could not open the gate nor break it down despite the powers of their swords and the magic of their necklaces, for an incredibly powerful enchantment was protecting it.  Thus, they called for Flaven and Calaren to cast spells upon it while Tomas guarded them and the other Northrons held either side of the bridge, where from the flaming mote Nsurudin Demons and others of the Minions of Modeus were emerging to assail the Sereghran thereabouts.  Unfortunately, what remained of the King’s forces were steadily being whittled away, surrounded upon three sides by hordes of ravenous foes, besides being attacked by the fell Minions.  So, the Sereghran there must soon enter the Castle or perish one and all.

Boom!  …

It happens that Medhyos had fallen under an overwhelming attack of Giants, as that Noble defended the rear of the charge towards the Castle.  And Lindheron was slain by a mighty Nsurus when he had turned his back upon the mote, after leading his Mariners across the Castle grounds alongside the Men of Agereis.  But Ardour cut off the head of that Minion, though he lost his arm in so doing, and bled profusely while then wielding his sword in his other hand, though he was then slain by other Minions.

Boom!  ...

The Sereghran here now numbered less than one Division, where these had survived due to each Warrior holding some sufficiently potent magic.  But even so, while the enemy may pay fifty-to-one for every Sereghran they slew before the bridge, it was still no fair exchange in the eyes of the King.

Strabos, by the powerful magicks of his own mighty sword, had remained unharmed as he sat mounted in the midst of his men, with his horse also yet unhurt, for the steed had magic barding, and the sword could shoot terrible lightning-bolts with which he fought against the many flying creatures swooping down from above out of the Darkness.  But there too were the Northron Kith, and the Herald Farus, although only a precious few of the King’s Royal Guardsmen remained.  Then Strabos took to praying aloud, even as he fought, that the Gods may see to the opening of the gate.

Boom!  …

After a number of attempts at both negation and opening spells, Flaven and Calaren had not yet opened the gate's doors.  Then suddenly, a shadowy hooded figure appeared upon the parapet above.  And stretching out a clawed hand he sent forth a bright yellow light towards the two Wizards, and which impacted upon the bridge in front of them, causing a tremendous explosion that swiftly broke apart the entire portion of the bridge upon which they stood; sending much rubble tumbling into the mote along with Calaren, who had not the time to voice a spell of flying, and was lost to the lava below.  But Flaven had turned and leapt to grasp the ledge behind him, and then began to pull himself up.

The hooded one laughed a throaty laugh while stretching out his hand to strike once more.  But Tomas was there and smote upon the figure with a great lightning-bolt from his sword, Bheleuwal, after which the dark figure was seen no more.  Then Tomas took Flaven by the wrist and hauled him up with a mighty heave.  And the two next stood there gazing warily across the chasm towards the Castle’s high parapets, above the now unreachable doors.

Boom!  …


The Adventures of Brandar Odaron

Book 1:  The Hidden Continent

Chapter 34   The Fall Of Demon Modeus

Boom!  …              

Brandar activated the giant-strength power the very instant he put on his magic necklace.  Then something told him to turn around.  But whether he noticed a shadow or heard a sound, he could not later recall.  And just in time he beheld a Gress raising a mace with which it meant to smash Brandar’s head.  But the Gress went wide-eyed when Brandar caught the mace in one hand and effortlessly jerked the weapon from the creature’s grasp.  Then Brandar, with bare fist, struck the Gress such a terrific blow that the monster was knocked half-way across the room, sailing over the heads of its fellows only to fall lifelessly with a thud upon the floor.

The other two Gress, holding large curved swords, were taken aback at the loss of their leader and were momentarily at a loss as to what to do.  But when they had gathered their wits one turned and ran while the other made to cleave Brandar in two.  Yet, Brandar deftly avoided the strike, and using the mace smashed the beast on the side of its ugly head, killing it instantly.  Then he threw the mace so hard into the back of the fleeing Gress that the creature was sent sailing to smack head-on into the wall by the door, where it slid down, smearing blood on the wall, and then lay dead in a heap upon the floor.

Boom!  …

Thinking no more of Gress nor any other monsters coming to the vault, Brandar turned his attention upon the portcullis, but found that he could but barely bend the bars even with the greatest expenditure of energy, despite the magic of his necklace.  So he activated the Fire-Breath of Daram’s Ruby, not kenning the importance of this act, and with it smote the portcullis near the ceiling.  But the fire-breath had no effect.  So then he tried a lightning-bolt, though this too did no damage.  

Greatly frustrated, therefore, he decided to try one more magic, not expecting it to work, but thus used the sunbeams from his eyes along the top of the portcullis, whereupon the bars there were melted like a candle burned by a torch.  Then Brandar used the Sunbeams to melt the bars all the way round, grasped the portcullis, and tossed it aside.

Boom!  …

Triumphantly Brandar entered the room, went straight to his sword, which was not in its scabbard, and thus glowed with a silvery aura.  And Brandar took it from the hook by which it was hanging, then pointing it up and raising it high he shouted a battle cry:  “Bei dyhtig giegeh!”  Which is: “This day is victory!” in ancient Northron.  With that, the blade flashed as if responding to a word of activation.  Then he noticed its scabbard, with its belt, his own belt, among other scabbards piled up in the nearby corner.  So, he took it up and sheathed Beliscaertos, but did not yet buckle on the belt.

Unknown to Brandar, his voice had echoed throughout the ways of those dungeons and rose up even into the Castle.  And when Modeus heard it, at the very moment at which Tomas had struck him with a lightning-bolt as he stood above the gate, but which did him no harm due to invisible magic armor, instantly did he  ken that Brandar was loose in the tunnels beneath the Castle and had somehow gained entry into the treasure-vault where was the great sword Beliscaertos.  Yet, having no servants to send against Brandar, he must go himself, and therefore went swiftly from the parapets above the gate, intent upon slaying the Northron.

Boom!  …

Brandar next gazed upon the wealth in that chamber.  And there were other great blades hanging upon the walls, and shiny armor scattered about or thrown into corners, along with spears and staves, and scepters and wands, and much in the way of silver and gold, and of jewelry and precious gems strewn here and there, or piled in the middle of the floor.  Yet, he decided that he must first get new clothes ere examining things further.  So, he went to the outer room and donned garments fit for a king; for everything therein was of fine make.  But he cut out the small hidden pocket of his ragged trousers, used the pocket as a sheath for his precious little knife, discarded the old trousers and placed the knife in the top of one of his new boots.  Then he strapped on Beliscaertos and went back to the inner chamber to inspect the items there.  But from that hoard he chose two things only, besides his necklace and his sword; a helmet and cuirass, both made of silver, yet knowing not at that time that they were magical.

Boom!  …

Now, the helmet and cuirass were both intricately engraved with Elven lettering and many strange runes, among other symbols, covering all of their outer surfaces.  And the helmet had ear-guards in the shape of swept-back wings, but only a small fixed visor, and no nose-guard.  Yet, it was secured by a rather heavy though short length of silver chain which went under the chin.  And the cuirass, with separate front and back, had the same sort of wings on its breast, along with the same kind of chain used as hinging and for fastening it on.  But due to the wings, Brandar assumed that the helmet and cuirass went together, and thus he selected them as his only armor.

Then he went again into the outer room with a mind to put on his armor and go forth from there to impolse his vengeance upon Modeus.  He thus put on the cuirass and girt his sword.  But ere he put on the helmet, he suddenly realized that the Pearl of his necklace had given him the powers of its sister Gems, including the Fire-Breath of Daram’s Ruby, though Daram was not present.  Then was he all the more convinced that Srabos was besieging the Castle, and that Daram, at least, was also nearby, likely just outside the front gate.  This meant that the other two Northrons were likely also alive and well, and were perhaps even now outside with Daram, else their swords and necklaces would also have been brought to the Castle and stored within the vault.

This revelation gave to Bandar great strength of heart, so that he was more determined than ever to go and slay the Demon Lord, though it cost him his life.  So, he turned and gave a salute to the statue-forms of his countrymen, then set the helmet upon his head; expecting to go next in search of Modeus.

Boom!  …

Suddenly his mind was flooded all at once with such far-reaching mystical knowledge that he was made dizzy, and so swerved, and kept himself from falling by taking hold of a nearby table, whereupon he removed the amazing helmet, at which the infusion of knowledge ceased.  And he could not remember it all, though he recalled enough to be altogether delighted with it, and wanted more.

Naturally, Brandar gazed in wonder upon this marvel; a gift from the Gods.  And braving to wear the helmet once more, seeing its worth, his mind began filling with a deep knowledge which otherwise he could never have conceived, nor could have learned in a normal lifetime.  And he found that the dizziness went away as he got used to the influx of lore, coming as if it were flashes of wild and furious lightning in a sudden summer storm.  Neither was there any pain.  But in just a little while he had acquired all that the helmet would give.  Then did he ken that the knowledge was of the spells from the discipline called “Elemental Magic”, as practiced by the Wood Elves of Eastwold, and by the Dwarves of Anaurian.  And while he was given a vast store of that knowledge, he understood thereby that it was not the lore of all magic.  

Nevertheless, he was astounded by the power and variety of spells imparted by the helmet.  And he lost himself in testing them, forgetting for a while where he was, and why he as there, despite those booming noises.  Yet, the magic was so wonderful!  And he delighted in them.

Boom!  …

Here, he summoned a little ring of light which danced about the room.  Then he created a small thundercloud which he made rain upon the floor.  And he encased one of the dead Gress in a block of ice, such as Flaven had done to the evil Mage Striglis.  Yet, he then recalled a spell which made him stop and remember how he came to be standing where he was.

He turned and entered for the last time the inner room where he placed a reversing spell upon each of the be-stoned forms of his friends.  Then did his fellows’ flesh and their garments and their armor, each in their turn, change in but moments back into their normal forms, whereupon the three men fell to the floor, all of them dropping their swords, and all of them cold and sick, unable to speak, but alive and whole.

Then Brandar wept for the third time in those dungeons, seeing here his friends coming back to life.  But these were now tears of joy.  And he later said that the tears he shed there had cleansed his tortured mind of the madness of his imprisonment.

Boom!  …

After a while the three removed their helmets and found their voices, at which they thanked Brandar many times, explaining to him that they knew all about Brandar’s captivity, for they were awake in the days and nights they had spent as statues, though unable to move or to speak, nor even to get sleep, though they could rest their minds as if sleeping perforce, from sheer mental exhaustion.  Thus, they had guessed that the magic of their swords had kept their hard stone forms from being destroyed while also keeping their swords and necklaces, and even their clothing, from being ripped away from them.  Yet, it must also have kept their minds quite alive within the stone, so that they were going mad.  But Brandar laughed kindly at them, even through his tears, and with that, the four of them began to be healed of their insanity.

Boom  …

Needless to say, the three regarded their apparent years in the dungeon as something of a long and horrible nightmare.  Yet, they pitied Brandar more, as they had not been tortured.  And they were disturbed by his change in appearance, though they said nothing of it at the time.  For now, what they wanted was sleep.  So Brandar led them all, with swords in hand, to a place where they could sleep without fear, though no Durwolc nor any other enemy were seen in the intervening passages, nor in any of the chambers by which they passed on the way.  And the three slept for many a long hour, despite those so irritating booming noises.

Boom!  …

Meanwhile, Brandar spent time seeking for more ways up into the Castle, coming across a few Durwolc, here and there, whom he swiftly dispatched; hiding the bodies, though noticing that no alarm had yet been sounded.  And due to this, he surmised, half mistakenly, that the Sereghran’s siege was going well, and that Modeus must be wholly occupied with the defense of his Castle.

Boom!  …

Indeed, Modeus was concerned with the Sereghran, and had emptied virtually all of the forces he had been keeping within the Castle, to go and do battle outside.  But Brandar would learn only later how much the Sereghran there were sacrificing.

*****

Modeus left the parapets determined to find Brandar and cruelly slay him.  But he berated himself for not doing away with the tall Northron long ago.  And it was too late to send Minions forth to capture him, as all of them had been sent to fight the Sereghran.  So, Modeus cast a spell of scrying to seek for Brandar, owing that his dungeons were so vast that he could not possibly search them in time to turn his thoughts back to the struggle outside.

But lo, Modeus was hindered from discovering Brandar by even the most powerful of his magical arts, for there was a beneficent presence within the Castle, here in the heart of the Darkness he had wrought with the aid of the UnderLords themselves.  And he was amazed and angered all at once.  But striving for three hours against the presence, he found that it always prevented him from moving his mind’s-eye whither-so-ever he wished.  And he could not therefore discover where Brandar might be.

Boom!  …

So wrathful did this make the Demon Lord that he lost all better judgment, and was all the more determined to find and slay Brandar when elsewise he could have gone out from the Castle and seen to the defeat of the Sereghran, and thus secured victory that day.  Yet, in this can be seen the hands of the Gods, as the vile Demon forsook the defense, and lay in wait for Brandar in the Castle’s Great Hall; knowing, by the ways of his Castle, that the insufferable Northron would at length find his way there.

Then Modeus wrought for himself a covering of deep shadow through which Brandar could not see him, although neither could the Demon sense magic outside of the covering.  And that was the gravest mistake Modeus had yet made, as it explains why he did not sense the coming of one who could bring about his everlasting doom.  No, not the mighty Duke Flaven, the great Veiled Wizard, nor some other Mage, but someone very much more powerful than any user of magic among Men.

*****

Boom!  …

When the three restored Northrons had slept enough, and had been fed as much as they could eat, where they ate like ravenous beasts, Brandar led them back into the treasure-vault where they took on new garments and armor, but bore away nothing more, though keeping their swords.  Then did Brandar lead them by a confusing way which he had discovered, and took them at length to a cavernous hall he guessed must be in the very center of the Castle, upon its ground floor.  And as there were but few lamps along the walls, the place was dark, and very musty, though also seemingly quite empty.

Boom!  …

A bright and glaring flash and shower of sparks suddenly shot up from the far end of the hall, together with the issuing of much black smoke.  Then a great blast of fire struck the four and would have incinerated them had not each of them been holding their swords upon entering.  And when the smoke cleared, here was a hooded and shadowy figure sitting upon a large throne on a low dais, and from whence the flash and flame had come.  But this one was so dimly lit that his features could not be seen beneath his hood.  Nevertheless, the four Northrons rightly kenned that he was Modeus the Cruel, so as one they raised their swords and sent lightning-bolts at the Demon, expecting that their combined strikes should at least wound him.  And while all four lightning-bolts impacted upon the Demon, the normally destructive bolts did to him no harm whatsoever.  Then did Modeus laugh a deep and throaty laugh, just as he had laughed at the Wizard Flaven clinging to the jagged stone ledge at the edge of the lava-filled mote, ere Brandar’s cry.

*****

Boom!  …

Spell after spell Flaven tried, but could not open the gate.  And while Tomas was there to guard him, so many flying monsters would attack them from above that Flaven must at whiles forego the gate and defend himself.  Then Strabos rode up to the bridge, desiring to know what was taking so long.  But he was suddenly lifted from his horse by a huge Drake.  And when the King slew the Drake with his own magic sword he was dropped from a great height, and fell hard upon the ground amongst the enemy east of the bridge.  Yet, by the magicks that he possessed, he shook off the fall, but must fight alone with the enemy all around, and would not long stand, magic or no, for there were also many enemy Mages there, attacking him with magicks of their own.

Seeing this, Farus and the Kith, and what remained of the Royal Guardsmen, in a brave charge to save the King by magic and daring, and sheer brute force, carved a way to Strabos and thus brought him back within the ranks of the Sereghran.  Yet, the King’s forces were now suffering so many losses that he and his rescuers must turn immediately to fight against the most deadly of the enemies, in an effort drive them back.

Boom!  …

Of the twenty-four Northron Kith who had come into the Deel, thirteen lived to engage in that charge, but only five of them had made it back with the King.  And Brandar’s eldest daughter was slain in the effort, as was Alak’s only son.  Yet, out of a hundred Guards who had entered the Darkness with Strabos, less than thirty were left to aid in the rescue, while eleven only remained now, to stand beside their King.

Boom!  …

Then something happened which changed the entire conflict, as unlooked for out of the Darkness, high above the Castle, a blast of energy smote upon the tallest tower and shore off its top with a mighty explosion, louder even than the booming noises, which ceased in that instant.  Then a hole opened in the Darkness, and through it a clean shaft of sunlight shone upon the Castle, while the hole began to grow rapidly larger, and continued to expand; allowing warm sunlight to illuminate everything below.  And with that, all of the fighting came to a halt, then all the combatants pulled apart, gazing upon this wonder, where the Sereghran were infused with new vigor, while the enemy surrounding them were smitten with fear.  And soon the hole grew so wide that the entire Castle, its walls, and even the mote, were bathed in sunlight, while fluffy clouds could be seen in a clean blue sky above.

Then were the Durwolc dismayed, with many cowering in fear.  And next, the mighty Red Dragon, Raudrogos, flew through the ever-growing hole, followed close behind by many other Dragons in colors of orange and gold, and also of white.  But there came also wide flocks of great Eagles, and Hawks and Doves, and many other kinds of birds.  Then of all things came magnificent winged Unicorns, who would shoot mystic force from their horns.  But yet other winged creatures there were of various and fantastical sorts, such as winged Lions and flying Bulls, and strange but fell beasts which the Sereghran had never seen before.  And as the hole grew wider, bringing light where darkness had been, all of these creatures attacked the Minions of Modeus, and the Devils and Demons, and the wicked enemy Mages, and the foul Durwolc scurrying away, and all of the evil Dragons and Drakes and other winged monsters.  But the sunlight itself destroyed many among the enemy who cannot abide the light, such as Trollo, who were turned to stone, and Beasties, who melted down, and Vampires, who were burned to ash, and other creatures that changed into wisps of smoke or vapor that then soon dissipated upon breezes coming in through the ever-widening hole.  Thus was the tide of battle turned, so that the astounded Sereghran won the day.

Consequently, as the hole continued to grow larger, and the Sereghran’s allies of the airs continued their assaults upon the enemy, all of the Durwolc fled, while the vast majority of other monsters there were routed, and then mercilessly destroyed, for the passing of the Darkness brought with it the passing of the evil will which had been driving the monsters to bloodlust.  And what gatherings led by Minions there might who feared not the light were rapidly dispatched by the great Red Dragon, so that death was meted out to all who remained and would not flee.

And that is how the Crusade came to an end.  Yet, Modeus was not there.  And when at last the Darkness was gone, here it was midday, and the last of the battles of the Defender’ Crusade had been won.  So, most of the remaining Sereghran gathered before the bridge while what few of the enemy who had survived were fleeing into the Mountains, pursued by Eagles and the Unicorns, and the winged Lions, and all of the Good Dragons but for great Raudrogos, who simply kept circling above the Castle.  And there also after the fleeing enemy went a band of Sereghran who could not resist joining in the pursuit.

With the coming of daylight, the flames of the mote were largely quelled.  Then Flaven cast a new spell upon the gate, at which the arch above the gate broke and fell down even as the gate’s doors were rent open.  And all of the Durwolc who had been stationed behind the doors, frightened by the destruction of the arch, and alarmed by the light, beheld a blood-stained army of Sereghran staring angrily at them from across the mote, and so fled swiftly. seeking hiding places in the depths of the dungeons below.

Of course, a large portion of the bridge was no more.  And, while the flames had died down, the mote was yet filled with vaporous and bubbling lava.  Thus, the Sereghran could not cross into the Castle.  And Strabos stood nigh upon the broken ledge of the bridge, with Flaven and Tomas, and Daram and Khalen, and the remaining Kith, together with Farus the Herald.  And there they pondered how best to cross the mote so as to enter the Castle in search of the maker of their sorrows.  But none of them could say just then what next must be done.  Then Raudrogo came down to land nearby, and he spoke to Srabos, saying:  “Hail, noble King of Sunthakis.  Well it is to see thee living and in good health.  But wherefore now is Aetas of Baerakis?  Is he yet sailing upon the Waters of the North?”  “Alas, good Dragon,” said Strabos, “Aetas fell beneath the Darkness some days past, and has been buried nigh to the sea which he loved.  But grateful are we here for the daylight which you have so graciously brought to us, and saved us thereby.  For this do we thank you, we who remain.”  “Ah,” said Raudrogos.  “Sad tidings that.  I would have words with both ye Kings.  Yet, such are the ways of Esaereh, these days.

“Modeus hath lost this fight.  And the fleshly forms of his Minions are slain, so that their spirits have gone back to the nether realms from whence he summoned them.  But the flesh of the Demon Lord is not yet slain.  And whilst he strides upon the face of the world in such shape, the Sereghran shall never be shed of him, nor free of strife in Arzultaur, for this one you name Modeus is an ancient and surpassingly mighty Demon.  Once, he ruled over armies of Durwolc more vast than these, long ere your Founders had sailed so bravely through the Mists and arrived upon these lands.  Therefore, let us enter this keep and seek him out.  And mayhap we shall at last destroy his flesh, so that his spirit must thereafter be stripped of its strength and the Demon is therefore vanquished in this Age, if not evermore.”

But ere Strabos could ask how the mote could be crossed the Dragon leapt over and tore off the doors of the gate and threw them across the chasm.  Then did he let out a great spout of fire-breath into the sky ere stomping his way into the Castle, followed by the King and then the others.  And, true to the prediction that Tomas had made, they found the Castle nigh deserted, and thus had little difficulty clearing it of remaining Durwolc and all other monsters they happened to encounter therein.

Naturally, the Dragon could not fit into many places.  But he merely took to tearing up walls and caving in roofs and bursting through doors, to make his own path through the stronghold, while Sereghran Soldiers occupied the path behind him.  Thus did they come at last to that hall, now crumbling and burning, in which Brandar and his newly-restored countrymen were striving with the Demon Lord.

*****

Boom!  …

Ancient in evil was Modeus, the aforementioned Demon Aeftan, the powerful servant of Asgahan who strove against the Gods of Old when Esaereh was young, even to the Elves, long ere the Age of the Dwarves, and longer still ere the rise of Men in the world.  But lo, when the Gods had defeated Asgahan, the cruel Modeus was held within the circle of the Mists, and his former power was taken.  Yet, by the time of the Dwarven Age he had wrought for himself a new form, and gathered to himself other dark powers.  And he bred more Durwolc to serve him, and summoned the Minions to aid him in the carrying out of his dastardly plans.  Thus did he make himself Lord of Demons upon the Hidden Continent, where ever would he seek some means of escape.

Thus did he laugh at the coming of the Sereghran into his Darkness, then at the Wizard Flaven at the bridge, and at the four Northrons with whom he now fought, here in his throne-room, where he deemed no mortal Man may defeat him.  And while he was not as great as once he had been, he was yet surpassingly strong, all the more so as he had faced no god-like foe since his imprisonment within the Mists.  And all the lightning from Tomas standing upon the broken remains of the bridge had done him no more harm than would a flea-bite to a crocodile’s back.  No, he had left the parapets when he heard Brandar’s cry of victory, and had sensed the magic of protection given by the Northron’s brand being activated by Brandar’s touch upon it.  Yet, neither was he hurt by the four lightning-bolts sent at him from the four Northrons who had made their way to his hall.  

So, he laughed at Brandar, and again when the four struck him once more, and a third time, as well.  But, tiring of this play, he raised a finger from which he meant to send a bolt of his own, and so mighty that it could not be denied.  Yet, the Demon was suddenly halted by the sound of the explosion that shore off the top of the high tower above the hall, at which it fell on the roof, caving it in; falling with much debris to the floor between the Demon and his foes.   And the Demon’s booming noises came to a halt as well.  But the incredulous Modeus beheld through the hole in the roof the ever-expanding opening that had been made in his Darkness, then sensed the coming of the Good Red Dragon Raudrogos, along with the Eagles and Unicorns, and the many another flying creature.  Thus did he ken that his purposes were foiled, as he had indeed sent the last of his forces to the fields of battle before the gate, and discerned that his armies would be so weakened by the sunlight that they could not possibly defeat the last of the Sereghran.  

Of course, both the Demon and the Northrons were surprised by this event, though Brandar assumed that the explosion signaled the breaking through of the Sereghran.  Therefore, as the Demon rose with a howl, where the new light showed forth his hideous face, Brandar began to assail Modeus with the most powerful magic he had to hand, while being joined by his fellows, so that even this mightiest of Demons must perforce put up no small effort at defense, for it seemed to Modeus that the light of the Suns was a mystical living-thing that was drawing the very life from his flesh, weakening him, and which may even destroy him.  So, terrible was that fight now, where walls were thrown down, and yet more openings blasted from the roof.  And all wooden things in the hall caught fire.  But, while each spell cast by the Demon was countered by a spell sent from Brandar, using his enchanted helmet, so too did Modeus sent a counter against spells cast by Brandar, and against the magic of the Northron’s Brands, and also of their necklaces.  Thus was a violent sort of stalemate reached; the noise of which was heard by Raudrogos, who led Strabos and his companions there to.  

The Dragon tore through the roof and the wall at the entrance, and peered through the great gap he had made, while Strabos and Flaven, and the Last Three Northrons, made their way over the rubble.  And they were at a loss to see Brandar alive and well, and also their three lost countrymen restored, but were no less surprised to have come to witness a fierce battle raging in the throne-room.  Then they joined the fight, so that the Emissaries were once again united, where Tomas called out hardily:  “Hail, Warlord Odaron.  Well met you are, beyond long lost hope!”  But Brandar replied, even as he fought:  “Hail to thee, good General.  Well met are you, as always to hand at need.”  And next Strabos came and stood near Brandar, saying:  “Hail, indeed, my friend.  Good it is to see you alive.  But it seems that your stay with the enemy has not done you ill, after all.  You seem as bold as ever."

Brandar himself laughed, even as he continued to fight, and said to Strabos:  “T’is good to see you, my Lord.  But as for my stay with the enemy, I am come even now to repay the good Modeus for his kindness.  And much praise have I for his provender.”

Behind Strabos came Flaven, followed by the King’s surviving Guards, along with a few of the Men of Agereis led by the Second of Ardour, whose name was Barkar.  And behind these came the remaining Kith, though Brandar was too busy to notice.  And when these had entered, Raudrogos let loose a spout of fire-breath that traveled along the crumbling ceiling nigh all the way to the other end of the hall, where was Modeus fighting to remain free of capture.

Thus, when Modeus beheld the fire-breath above his head he was stricken with a deep and numbing dread; a fear he had not felt since the Elden Gods had captured him ere the making of the Enchanted Mists, for he kenned then that the presence of the Red Dragon made his foes more powerful than he.  And with that, he sent up a blinding flash with a dense cloud of smoke and ran headlong to ascend a stone stairway to his right, which climbed spiraling through the tower whose top had been destroyed.

Pursued by the Seven, the Demon at length ran out upon a high floor, now exposed to the sky.  And he quickly cast a spell upon himself by which he may fly like a vulture, and so leapt from the rough edge flying the east, whereupon the Dragon spied him from below and swiftly rose up to give chase.  Brandar however ran across that floor followed by his countrymen, then by Strabos and Flaven.  And to the amazement of all, Brandar leapt himself over the edge and flew in pursuit of Modeus.  But he would later admit that he knew not why he would do such a foolish thing, saying:  “I acted on impulse, where it simply occurred to me that I could fly like an eagle if I simply wished it so, though I cannot say how such a thought entered my mind, for I had not called upon my magical helmet to give me such power, of which I knew nothing ere that very moment.”  Yet, it afterwards became well known that the cuirass he wore was magical, and obeyed his every whim, including giving to him the ability to fly at will.

Then Brandar caught the Demon by the legs in mid-air and there pulled him down to the top of a great watchtower that lay upon an outer wall of the Castle, and which also overlooked the mote far below.  And there did Brandar do battle with Modeus, hand-to-hand, and magic-to-magic, as the Kith came and stood beside Strabos and Flaven atop the broken tower, not so far away that they could not plainly see the struggle.  Yet, the fight on the tall watchtower was not long to last, where the Demon soon threw Brandar back with a tremendous blast of flaming energy, then wheeled about intent upon fleeing east once more.  But the good Dragon was there, having just alighted nigh to the edge of the watchtower, hence blocking the Demon’s way.  And Raudrogos pointed his massive claw at the wicked Demon’s chest while voicing strangely-formed words in a tongue which even that ancient Demon could not know.

Thus was Modeus trapped.  And he turned with a mind to strike again at Brandar and slay him once and for all; hoping then to escape to the west.  But here was the Northron already upon him, instantly driving Beliscaertos to the very hilt through the Demon’s chest; cleaving the evil-one’s heart in two.

There stood Brandar and Modeus face-to-face, with Brandar two-handed holding fast the grip of Beliscaertos.  But the world had suddenly become still and calm.  And Brandar, in his rage, gazed for a moment into the wide-open eyes of this most evil of foes, then withdrew Beliscaertos and spun about, and made ready to deal out yet another sword-strike.  But Modeus merely stood and regarded Brandar in wonder, amazed that a mortal Man had so easily slain his flesh, while dark blood began flowing from his wound.  And with his last thought Modeus turned once again to deliver a curse upon the Dragon, kenning that Raudrogos had cast a spell for the making of an opening within his invisible armor; leaving him vulnerable to the Northron’s blade.

Yet, the Demon found that he had now no breath with which to utter his curse, while the Dragon looked upon him with a mixture of disdain and disgust, saying:  “Meet now thy doom, Aeftan.”  Thus did the Demon know that he was done-for; hearing his true name, and feeling his flesh die.

Modeus fell dead upon his back with his eyes open to the sky.  Then slowly did a dark shadow rise from his body, growing to become a vast thing of malice, taller even than the Dragon, and which wailed an unearthly cry of rage.  And the shadow thing was the disembodied spirit of the Demon, now reaching out as if to grasp Brandar with huge claws.  Yet, with only the slightest wisp of a breeze from the east, the shadow began to shift and then to disperse, and thereafter dissolved slowly away, like smoke from a chimney disappearing into a clear blue sky.  And the long wailing cry grew ever weaker as the shadow was disappearing.  Then did the evil spirit wisp away to the west, and was at last no more, and the sound of it came to naught.

There stood Brandar and the Dragon over the lifeless body of Modeus.  But across the way the watchers took to cheering and shouting with joy.  And Strabos said:  “All hail the slayer of the wicked Demon Modeus!  Brandar Odaron, Demon Slayer!”  But Tomas said:  “Hail the slayer of Modeus!  The Warlord Odaron, Lord of the Forest, and King of all the Dunjilar!”  Then Flaven said:  “Praise be to Brandar, mighty among Men.  May his name be sung through all the wide world!”  And more blandishments would Brandar receive as news spread among the survivors.

Now, Brandar spoke to the Dragon, saying:  “Hail Raudrogos, Dragon of the Cliff!  Well met you are, coming in the nick of time.  Much thanks do I owe you in providing that opening in the unseen armor of Modeus, for do I not guess rightly that such is how I was able to slay him?”  “Verily,” said the Dragon, laughing in his turn, then saying:  “Well met indeed.  But thine own praise is not undeserved.  Together have we slain the flesh of Aeftan, the Demon whom you named Modeus the Cruel.  And his spirit is much diminished thereby, mayhap so much so that never again shall he trouble the world of living things."  And he paused for a moment, but then said: “Well it is.  Very well.  Now shall all the Sereghran have the peace of which they have dreamt for so very long, and have paid for it in blood many times over.”

Then did the two notice the people across the way, cheering. Brandar next lifted up the body of Modeus, and, raising it high over his head, strode over and threw it over the broken wall, so that it fell to the magma below, and was thus wholly consumed.  But when the corpse landed in the mote, a great rolling thunder occurred, though no storm-clouds were anywhere to be seen.  And by this did Brandar ken that the Gods had given to him their blessing.  But that watchtower was so placed that many of the surviving Sereghran within the grounds of the Castle and outside beheld Brandar’s act.  And at the sound of the thunder they all let out such a shout of victory that it was later reported to have been heard all the way to the River Kelebros.

Subsequently, the Dragon flew away southwards.  And with that Brandar came down from the watchtower to meet with the other Northrons and his friends, and his only remaining daughter.  And that was a sad moment, as there Brandar learned of the deaths of his other offspring, and Alak of the fall of his son, and the other Northrons the demise of others of the Kith.  Thus was the joy of the reunion of the Seven dampened by the loss of so many of their children.  Neither was the victory, as great as it was, widely celebrated by the People, due to the number of those who had fallen both upon land and upon the waters, and would thus not return to their kin.  For out of the wide forces which had passed through the Deel, less than one Division by count remained to march wearily to their homes.

Nevertheless, it was a great victory, after all.  And every Soldier and Mariner and Brigadier who returned from the land of the Demon Lord were named “Survivors of the Deel”, and deemed worthy of everlasting honor and esteem.  They received much adulation upon returning to their Lands.  And ever afterwards did they receive the gratitude of the People of Arzultaur, with many of them later sung about throughout the known world.