Random Stories and Fragments

This is the last part of the multi-chapter story that explains the change in amurite government and only the epilogue remains (but that will wait until after the update). I know few people read these walls of text but i felt i wanted to finish what i started. I promise never to write such a lengthly and mutli-part story ever again.

The Coup:
Turn 17: A Long Shadow
Part Five: Victor’s Parade


Spoiler :

The witch Nezakat Vedat wasn’t sure if the tingling in her hands and sense of urgency in her gut were anticipation at the blood she would soon be spilling or the latent energies she had charged herself with throughout the night. Today was finally the day; her chance to put an end to the Order and their hidden churches and forbidden ceremonies. All night she had been in communion with those who dwelt behind the veil and their various demonic servants; she had sacrificed both her own blood and that of innocents. Her hands and forearms where a patchwork of crisscrossing wounds- testament to the blood she had shed, the pain she had endured to prove her dedication. The piles of bodies in her manor-house courtyard attested to the innocents’ blood she had spilled and the mana she had been infused with. Her hands positively itched with energy. Yes, Nezakat thought, today would be a day of great reckoning, a purge of the thorn that too long had pricked her side. She would finish the job that Luwin Born-in-Storm had begun at the Cevedes abbey.

The Radicals had learnt, through their various spies and informants that the return of the surviving crusaders, those too wounded to continue active service to Junil in the field against the Calabim, those victims of the Calabim ‘blood rage’, would be met by the faithful from throughout the realm. Priests and monks would all be present to show their support to the victorious warriors, and no doubt to warn the returning crusaders of the changes Nezakat and her servants had wrought. The assembly of so many of the remaining priests and monks, the most faithful of the laity was a temptation too great for the Radicals to ignore. Finally they could put an end to the whispered resistance, to the secret meetings of Junil’s most faithful.

Waiting for the ship which would bring the crusaders from Acaia, Nezakat surveyed the crowd. She was happy to spot her more obvious military support, those men and women who had sworn allegiance to her new regime, who now served as her police and strongmen. They were her ‘brutes’ and had been ensorcelled with absolute loyalty and mindless bravery. They would serve the same function that Luwin Born-in-Storm’s mundane troops had served at the Cevedes abbey; they would fight and die so that Nezakat’s mages could commit the real slaughter. Nezakat was also pleased to see her less obvious support amongst the crown. These were men and women, some dressed in the new uniforms of the republic’s civil servants and others dressed in civilian sheeshes so as to better blend into the crowd, who were accomplished mages, conjurers and sorcerers from the ranks of the Radical Academics. She could see commander Luwin Born-in-Storm and senator Korkud Kusçu amongst the crowd, competent mages in their own right and each in command of an additional half dozen loyal mages. She knew that there were much more amongst the crowd as well, hidden behind the faceless sheeshes awaiting her command.

* * *​

Daddy was coming home today. Little Nayla was so excited she could hardly stand still. The boat! The boat was here! She waved at the distant speck on the horizon, sure that her father could see her from afar. The five-year old strained at her mother’s hand, wanting to rush the wharves with the other families who awaited their loved one’s return from distant war, but her mother’s grip was tight.

Mother spoke in a soft but authoritive tone, “Nayla, you understand that daddy may not be the same man you remember. Daddy is returning today because he is wounded. If he was not wounded he would still be fighting those blood-drinking vampire spawn in Acaia- Junil curse them. You have to be ready for a… difference.” She spoke to her daughter but the words could just as easily been for her. Since she had received the letter 24 days ago all sorts of thoughts had gone through her head. Her bearded husband’s army had been victorious. Acaia had been liberated from the oppressive tyranny of the vampires. The people had welcomed their liberators with wreathes and flowers. At least the letter said so. She was too wise to not suspect that the military may have exaggerated the jubilation of the liberated Acaians. But the battle had been costly. The vampire nobles had forced their troops to drink a poison potion made from their own blood and that potion had made the enemy troops into mindless fighting dervishes. Losses had been heavy; many crusaders had bravely gone to meet Junil in heaven. Many more had been seriously hurt, their wounds too severe for the blessings of the crusader medics. These were the ones that were returning home today. Her husband, Nayla’s father was amongst them. She didn’t know what to expect. Only the most wounded were returning, so obviously he had been hurt, but how? What could she expect? Amputation? Worse- a head wound? She shuddered at the thought, and under her sheesh so that the prying eyes of the republic’s informants could not see, she made the sign of Junil to ward off bad luck. Around her she could see the tears and worry in other wives’ eyes. Many of the wives wore black bands of grief, signs of their recent widowhood. They were here to support their late husband’s regiment and the other wives. But for their families it was too late; the letters home had obviously said something quite different.

As the ship approached the press of bodies carried her towards the wharves. Everywhere there was a crushing wave of cheerful, flag-waving, hymn-chanting Amurites eager to greet husbands, brothers, sons and fathers. Tears of relief and apprehension, of joy and sadness mingled in the crowd. Everywhere… except around the demons. At the edge of the crowd, one on each side, stood a towering mass of barely restrained violence, six-armed beast standing 12’ tall and wielding 9-headed scourge in one hand and a towering iron scimitar in another. They were horned demons known as ‘balor’ and acted as the eyes, police, judges, and executioners of the new senate’s corrupted laws. Around them the pressing mass of people was completely absent. None wanted to come into range of these creature’s reach for fear of their sudden violent tempers.

* * *​

Sâhîn Summerspring knew he was sacrificing his life, knew that soon he too, like the brave Soner Çölasan would be a martyr for Junil’s Order. At one level he was afraid. He knew that the witch Nezakat would never allow him to finish his blessing, that he would be cut down by a whispered spell before he even knew where his enemies where, but he also knew that the reign of Nezakat and her puppet senate led by Rodrick Bellisam could not be allowed to last. Here was the chance to fix things, to return the Amurite government to the Amurite people, to expel the demons and their servants once and for all. At some level he was proud of the sacrifice he was making; he knew that his name would be whispered with the same sense of awe and respect that people whispered Soner Çölasan, the rebel priest’s name, with. He would be a part of Amurite history. Forever. And when he died, he would see his lord and serve him forever in heaven. Yes… he was ready.

The returning crusaders had disembarked from the returning transport ships, had assembled in the courtyard, many carried on stretchers, many other supported by their comrades and crutches. The mass of bodies all around them was awash with emotion, relief and joy most of all. Sâhîn could hear the whispered and hurried prayers of the faithful uttered quietly and from concealment. The moment was ready. He nodded to Mihriban Recep, one of the ‘White Robes of Junil’. Mihriban’s voice and hands were steady; she spoke the spell with confidence and without fear and suddenly Sâhîn was floating 30’ above the crowd; his voice was amplified to carry throughout all of Cevedes.

Sâhîn Summerspring knew he would be struck down at any moment; he could only hope that his sacrifice would be a rallying cry for all the faithful. He spoke, knowing that his enemies were preparing spells to fell him at any moment, “Brothers and sisters of the Amurite nation, loyal children of the gods, today, our brave brothers have returned and I would like to offer a simple prayer of thanks for their return and for their sacrifice in your name, O’ great Junil.”

All around him the crowd was staring at this floating speaker who dared to defy the republic and its corrupt senate so openly. There was panic and wonder and pride in their eyes. Sâhîn continued, even as the two Balor quickly strode through the crowd towards him and whispered spells filled the aether all about the crowd, “Junil bless these men, your servants who have fought, have bled and have died for you. Bless the men and women…”

Sâhîn Summerspring had gotten further into his blessing then he had thought but the Radicals could not allow this breach of their laws, this challenge to their authority to continue. Suddenly the witch Nezakat Vedat herself was aloft, her entire dark robes and frail old-woman body wreathed in purple, green and black tendrils and clouds of energy. Her voice crackled with arcane energy and fury, “Sâhîn Summerspring, you are a wretched traitor and by the authority of the Amurite senate, I condemn you to death.” Her words were not yet finished that she raised a hand and with a bony, near skeletal finger, pointed at the selfless priest. There was no bolt of light, no crackling of arcane energy, not even a whisper. But suddenly, Sâhîn face exploded into blood. Blood streamed from his mouth, his nose, his ears and even his eyes. His skin suddenly turned stark white and he plummeted to the ground, landing gracelessly at the feat of his ally Mihriban Recep.

The response was immediate. All throughout the crowd there were gasps. The corrupted senate had gone too far. Nezakat, firstly, was not a senator, and although she was a noble and the leading member of the Radical academics, she was not a representative of the republic. Secondly, she was known to consort with demons; she had fought in the Amurite civil wars on the side of the Caswellan. She commanded the Balor who patrolled the streets. And lastly, she had just struck down one of the most beloved figures of modern Amurite times. Sâhîn Summerspring was not only the beloved son of Marcel Summerspring, winner of Somnium tournaments and the first minister of culture, he was the unofficial head of the outlawed Order of Junil. Suddenly the air was filled with stones and small thrown objects as the masses finally released months and months of pent-up frustration and anger. The stones sailed towards the witch but bounced harmlessly off some sort of invisible shield. Throughout the crowd priests and monks revealed themselves, agitating the population and calling for an end to the tyrannical regime. Hoods were cast aside, disguises and concealing garments were thrown away and suddenly the crowd was full of the servants of Junil. Priests and monks, stood side by side with the laity and the crowd began to chant, “Kill her! Destroy the corruption! Redeem the martyrs!” Obviously they had been prepared for this.
* * *​

Nezakat Vedat smiled. The foolish priests had revealed themselves. There were many and they had the support of the people, but they were all here, in plain sight, ready to be eradicated once and for all. It would be a slaughter unlike any since her service to Thomas the Caswellan.

She called to her supporters, “Arrest them all. Kill any who resist. Kill any priest or monk. Kill any crusader who raises a hand against the senate.” She knew that officially, these men and women were not hers to command, but was not the head of the senate her apprentice and she his master? Was it not just a matter of formality before she would be crowned Caswellan and master of all the Amurite people?

Rodrick Bellisam floated up from the crowd, his frame draped in thick black velvet robes. He nodded to the police and bowed to his mistress, “As you will my master.” At this point there was no longer any question of who was truly in charge of the Radicals or the senate.

Immediately the senate’s police set about with their broad shortswords, stabbing and hacking at the assembled masses, wounding or killing many unarmed civilians. The mages filled the aether with their whispered spells, summoning the air, earth and mind mana of the Amurites and some calling upon other sources of mana, sources unavailable through training at the academies, death, entropy and chaos mana. Demonic stirges, small demonic flying creatures stinking of sulphur and bearing four heavily clawed arms beat the air with their four wings, swooping and scratching at the priests and monks. Creatures of electricity and air, elemental sprites were summoned to electrify and terrorize Junil’s faithful. The mind goblins made a return, dropping many a priest without apparent reason as they invisibly ravaged the conscious minds of the mass of the faithful. Lightning flew from mage’s fingers and filled the air with the smell of ozone and something much much worse, the charred smell of human flesh as the mages downed entire wings of the crowd with a single spell. Dancing scimitars hew through the crowd without anyone apparently wielding them. Orangish brown gasses were spilling out of Turusan Erkan hands as he floated above the crowd, the masses below him grasping at their throats and gasping desperately at the noxious vapours. Everywhere Nezakat looked she saw the dark robes of her followers and servants as they slew their hated enemies.

Nezakat Vedat smiled at the massacre as it unfurled.

* * *​

Nayla’s father couldn’t believe what he was witnessing. He had seen the horrors of battle with the Calabim, he had witnessed the terrible fury of a Hippus cavalry charge at close range. He had even seen the look of complete abandon and battle-rage in the eyes of the Calabim forces that had drank the vampire’s poison potions. But this, this carnage was something he had never witnessed. All around him the assembled faithful, the entirety of Junil’s priesthood that remained, that, from what he was able to gather, hadn’t been massacred or hunted down and slain like rabbits in a hole, was being massacred on a grandiose scale. It was like something out of the stories the old generation used to tell of the civil wars. Everywhere he looked there were demons and their servants. The demons threw the faithful about like dolls, chewed them and… violated them. The demon’s servants, men and women dressed in dark velvet robes, members of the corrupted senate and the ‘Radicals’ were laying waste to his friends and neighbours. Nayla’s father strained against the stretcher that bore him and was rewarded with a sharp pain in his hip, a reminder of the Calabim blade who’s tip still lay in his pelvic bone and which had begun to rot his flesh so that he smelled like putrid meat. If only, if only he could stand, don his armour and shield, wield his spear, he would…

Suddenly a voice spoke in his ear and a hand rested on his shoulder. He looked up to see a young man, the marks of acne still staining his youthful face. He was dressed as a priest of Junil’s order and spoke softly, “Rise, soldier of Junil and serve your master once more.” There was warm sensation throughout his body and suddenly the pain in his hip was gone. A shimmer formed around his body, a warm sort of ‘reassurance’. The shimmer got stronger and stronger and finally coalesced into shimmering silver amour. On his left arm the shimmer formed a shield and in his right, the shiver formed a spear. Suddenly Nayla’s father was whole again, whole and armed with amour and weapons of pure faith. He looked for the priest and saw him standing over another of the wounded crusaders, apparently repeating the same prayer for that crusader too was suddenly covered in a silvery shimmer a smile stretching across his face as he rose from his litter.

Nayla’s father needed no more prompting. “For Junil,” he cried and charged the nearest mage, his spear piercing the dark robed man’s throat as the shimmering magical weapon easily slipped through the man’s magical protections. Already Nayla’s father was looking for another target.

Looking around him he saw that many crusaders had been healed, that they, and the laity, were wielding shimmering weapons made purely of faith and obedience. He saw priests calling down pillars of fire upon the demons and sending them back to the hells they spawned from. Looking up he saw seven wizards robed in purest white and adorned with both magical glyphs and shining symbols of their faith in Junil doing battle with the dark-robed ‘Radicals’.

One was shouting over the crowd and through the battle, his voice amplified by some spell.

* * *​

“We are the ‘White Robes of Junil’, mages sworn to uphold the faithful and to stop your tyranny. For too long we have seen you abandon morality, abandon faith in the law-giver, abandon the Amurite people so that you could claim power and rule. No longer! Today you perish and may Junil have mercy upon your soul for we will not.” This was the cry of Cüneyt Kasapoglu has he flew above the crowd, his voice amplified by Mihriban Recep’s air magic.

Below the white robes the battle waged on. The priests and the laity were locked in a bitter struggle with the demons, the senate’s ensorcelled soldiers and the dark robes of the Radicals. All around, flying through the air were the elite of the Radical’s mages and the seven members of ‘The Council of Seven’, those mages who had sworn on their lives and upon Junil’s name to end Nezakat Vedat’s coup and her regime. Lightning and flying metal scimitars, blasts of mental energy and untold magicks crisscrossed through the air. Many a mage fell to their deaths that day and the battle was nearly even except that the ‘White Robes of Junil’ had the support of the priesthood and when they fell, they were healed and rose again. Even Sâhîn Summerspring rose again after being touched by Junil’s healing hand and a friendly prayer.

So although the Radicals commanded horrific magicks, the faithful commanded prayers and magicks of their own and they could counter the Radicals damage.

The battle raged on throughout the course of the day and into the early night and the faithful slowly took the upper hand as they healed their wounded in a battle of prolonged attrition. One by one the black robes fell to the courtyard’s stone surface and were mobbed by the angry mass of the faithful. Unlike the white-robed mages, they did not rise again. The demons and summons disappeared, often with fiery and destructive consequences. All throughout the courtyard a sort of quiet broken by sobbing and groans descended upon the wounded and the dead. Everywhere except for high above the courtyard where two black-robed Radicals fought for their lives against six of the seven leading members of the ‘White Robes of Junil’.

Rodrick Bellisam stood before his master Nezakat Vedat, both protected by a shining semi-transparent globe of bronze magick. Around them and above them floated the six of the seven leading ‘White Robes of Junil’: confident and conniving Cüneyt Kasapoglu, the wizened but determined Behlül Bozbeyli, alarmist Ðzzet Safavî who once fled from Nezakat’s manor, the beautiful widow Efromiya Yilmaz who still prayed for her husband every day, the youngest, Mihriban Recep who was, like Behlül once Tevfik’s apprentice, and the energetic matron Yurdagül Jirecek . Their leader, Tevfik Turhril, was nowhere to be seen. He had fallen earlier, a victim to a blast of mental energy from Nezakat herself. The priests had been unable to make him whole again.

Nezakat appeared desperate and tired. Her old frame had channelled much magical energy this day, much more then she had anticipated and the battle had gone very badly. The priests and the enemy mages had had been organized, well led, well supplied. She had realized very early that the confrontation had been a trap but she could not well have fled for to do so would have spelled the end of her regime and her dreams of conquest. Now those dreams were over and she had only one desire: to make the enemy pay. She had used the last of her stored magics, the last mental bolt, the last summoning, the last lick of fire; she had only one recourse. She would turn to her ‘ally’, the ‘beast of the brass tower’, a greater demon, a great commander and a prince amongst the hordes of hell, the creature to whom she had sacrificed many souls. A beast with whom she had signed a contract in her own blood. She spoke only three words and suddenly the air once again shimmered with magical energy. Like a mirage over hot sands the air seemed to wave and ‘glisten’. A shape took form, a distant landscape of ash and black sands, of rivers of fire and of a lone brass tower. A creature flew from that distant landscape approaching the 8 mages as they flew above the courtyard. It approached them but did come from anywhere around them. He closed a distance that existed only in the ‘mirage’ and very quickly the creature, a bare-chested man wearing a long skirt of orange silk with skin of molten brass and eyes of smoking embers, a man with a blade made from a slice of the night sky coalesced before the floating exhausted wizards.

“You have summoned me and that can only mean one thing; you will pay me my soul debt,” the demonic prince with the flaming eyes spoke to Nezakat with a voice like the depths of a deep and forgotten cave- neither hurried or impatient, a force of unreckonable power and age. Rodrick Bellisam shook with fear but the remaining seven mages resolved themselves and though they were afraid, controlled their fear and stood firm.

Exhausted but still proud, the witch motioned to the 6 mages who called themselves ‘the White Robes of Junil’, “Here is your payment dark prince. Take their lives and take their souls. Save your servant from destruction so that I can serve you further.” Now Nezakat felt no exhaustion, no pain. Her aged frame was once again filled with confidence and pride and the assurance that she would prevail.

The crowd below gasped as the prince from hell moved with a speed and precision that they could not comprehend. One second he was speaking to the witch, and the next his sword, a slice of darkness embedded with floating stars was descending upon old Behlül Bozbeyli. There was a resounding clash, the crashing sound of metal on metal and the demon’s blade was parried in mid strike. The air shimmered again and a second otherworldly figure coalesced into view. This figure too had eyes of shimmering embers but whereas the demon prince had skin of brass and a blade of darkness, this figure, a female form clad in long rose-tinted robes, had skin of marble and a blade of mother-of-pearl. The two figures stood facing each other, their swords crossed and the force of their opposing strength causing their frames to shake and the air around them to shake and ripple. Red and orange sparks flew from the clash of their crossed swords and the crowd and the flying mages retreated before the force of the two godly servants’ clash.

The demon prince retreated first, lifted his sword and pointed, with a sweeping gesture to the 6 flying mages who called themselves the ‘White Robes of Junil’, “These souls are promised to me. They are my due.”

Again the brass-skinned demons charged the mages, this time directing his attack at the beautiful widow Efromiya Yilmaz. Again his attack was parried and a shower of unearthly sparks showered upon the courtyards steps below, forever marking the stones with their otherworldly energy. Both figures shook with the force of their opposing strength. The marble-skinned female form spoke resolutely, “These souls are dedicated to Junil and you may not have them.” From the courtyard the crowd cheered and prayed.

Again and again the two figures clashed as the black blade of night sought again and again to claim one of the ‘White Robes of Junil’ but again and again the night blade was reposted but the angelic figure’s own strange sword. Frustrated, the demon prince turned on his servant, “Weak old witch, you have promised what you cannot deliver. I shall take a soul of a great mortal today, a leader of men, even if it must be yours.”


Trembling, old Nezakat pointed with a long wrinkled finger at the cowering Roderick Bellisam. The brass-skinned demon looked to the marble-skinned angel. The angel nodded and suddenly the demon-princes night blade had struck the first minister of the corrupted senate through the chest. His body slumped and seemed to dissolve, absorbed by the blade made from a slice of the night sky. Within moments there was nothing left of the corrupted senator. The demon took hold of his servant’s hand and again the air seemed to shimmer. The demon and the witch were again shrouded in the waves and ripples of a mirage and quickly faded from sight.

The angelic figure too shimmered and faded away, offering a quick smile to the figures clad in the white robes and the crowds below before completely disappearing.

All around there was blood and bodies, but the forces of Junil had won the day. A great cry went up and prayers of thanks and undying obedience were offered to the law-giver and his servants, the 'White Robes of Junil' who by chanelling Junil's strength, had brought low the corrupt senate, the reign of demons and had redeemed the pride and the faith of the Amurite people.

A new day had risen. The Amurites would be led by mages, a long tradition held sacred by many, but these mages would be loyal to Junil and the Order, a new tradition that reflected the faith and values that the Amurite people held and that was sacred to them. Long live the 'Council of Seven' leaders of the 'White Robes of Junil', liberators and protectors of Junil's chosen people.
 
They're very long but definately worth reading. I was going to suggest you posted them here actually.
 
Thanks. Our NESes have brought out more creative drive from me then i knew i had (hopefully with practice it will bring some talent)

I was actually thinking that i would continue the first one i wrote- the one about the scout in the crusader army.
 
This story popped into my mind recently; I am playing Perpentach of the Balseraph and I am just learning Somnium:

Spoiler The Somnium Final :
Dain the Caswellawn looked at his guest across the cards on the table. Perpentach had recently taken an interest in learning the game that Dain mastered, and this time, Dain was unsure of his victory. There were eight cards left in the deck.

Dain had bred an ability to keep track of every single card in the game - not just the Death, Fools and 7s, but all 54 cards. That was perhaps one of his greatest assets when playing against the Jester on the other side on the table. He was calculative and cautious. If he just managed to gain atleast almost as good cards as his opponent in the first half of the deck, he usually had the win in his open hand, since he knew when it was worth being aggressive. This particular opponent had him confused, however.

Perpentach had none of the fantastic memoristic abilities that Dain possesed, but his rapidly changing playing style made him a hard opponent. In this particular game, Dain had drawn all three Fools, and Perpentach had drawn Death. Still, after 46 cards, Dain was leading with but a single point - 49 against 48.

The Caswellawn ran through the cards left in the deck in his mind. There were seven different suits; Swords, Suns, Cups, Wands, Demons, Dragons and Angels. None of the remaining cards really made a difference to his well-played hand, filling all the ten suits. He felt a drop of sweat as he looked at the two empty places on Perpentachs table. Suns and Dragons. He had stolen the seven of Suns with the last Fool, he recalled. Before that, Perpentach had had the lead.

He double-checked his memory. Demons was the doubled suit left... 4 and 6. He held the 7 himself, Perpentach held the 3.

Dain drew the first card. The 3 of Cups. He turned the next over as well. 4 of Wands. They didn't reinforce his position, but if he could just snag the 3 of Suns, the 5 of Dragons and the 6 of Demons, Perpentach could not win the game. He swore to himself when turned over the third card. It was the 4 of Demons.

His only chance of winning was that the other Demon card was at the very bottom of the deck. He quickly rippled through the next couple of cards. 5, Dragons. 3, Swords. Three cards were left in the deck; the 3 of Suns, 6 of Demons and 5 of Angels.

He turned the next card. Angels. There were two cards left now. He felt another drop of sweat run down his right temple. He had never lost a game of Somnium against another leader of a People, not even Os-Gabella. And especially not at an official tournament. He wondered how Perpentach had made it to the finals. The Jester was mad, after all. He looked up into the face of Perpentach. It was like a mask, revealing nothing except a smeaky grin.

Dain knew that Perpentach was forced to draw the last two cards, no matter how insane he was, if he stopped now. And that would bring him to 55 points, way more than Dains own 49. He had to bet the entire game that the next card would be the 3 of Suns.

Holding his breath, Dain turned the next card, the fifty-third in the deck. Perpentach smiled at him as the 6 of Demons looked up from the table. With a grimace, the Caswellawn discarded the seven cards. The Jester patiently turned the last card over with two of his jeweled fingers. He placed the 3 of Suns in the empty Suns mark on his side of the table.

"Seems like I win,
son of Kylorin,
I hope I am welcome,
in your humble home,
if it stands fifteen years from now,
so you can have another go."


With these words, for Dain only, the Jester raised himself from the chair and bowed to the audience, before simply leaving the stadium. Dain looked around at the others. Os-Gabella was among the audience. Cassiel was not. He knew the Sheaim forces had conquered much of Cassiels land, and he did not doubt that this was the reason the Fallen Angel had chosen to remain at home, even on this ritual day. Cassiel had never been much of a ritualist, anyway. And he was a bad Somnium player, too.

With his mind diverted to the aspect of politics, he thought the Jesters final comment through... Was it a hidden threat? Dain knew of the mutated horrors in Perpentachs army - would they be able to invade his precious capital where Mokka had failed? He was unsure of it. Still, he would rather live to lose another game of Somnium in fifteen years than see his precious city burnt to the ground.

His line of thoughts was broken by Os-Gabellas harmful exclamation; "He beat you! Fifty-one to Forty-nine"


Hearing others' experiences with the game in stories would be neat aswell! Hope you liked it :)

EDIT: Another story, same game. I will have to play on soon so that I can fit it together into a real story:

Spoiler Insanity at it's finest :

Cassiel and two of his most loyal men - adventurers both - sneaked silently along the small forested path. He was close to Sheaim territory, and if any of them caught him, he was definately done in this world. Still, the risk was small, and it was certainly worth it, for he had some very important information to extract from Perpentach, the leader of the Balseraph.

Cassiel had spoken to Perpentach some times before, and considered him, if not a friend, then at least not a threat such as his neighboors, the Sheaim and the Clan of the Embers. He trusted that the Jester would speak the truth... And in his heart, he hoped for even more... Perhaps there was a way to evade death at the hands of the Sheaim after all. But that was merely hopes.

They arrived at the small hut. Gleaming light met them as the man to his right opened the door and stepped in first. Cassiel heard a muffled voice from inside the cabin, and shortly after, the man peeked back out of the door.
"The Jester is here, sire, with a single other."

Relaxed, Cassiel entered. He had had his fears. But it seemed that Perpentach was interested in what Cassiel had to talk about and had not allied Os-Gabella to set a trap for him. He slid into the room, brightly lit by coloured lanterns, his second guard right behind him.

At a large table, Perpentach sat. To his right, another Balmesque man sat, low in stature and dressed even more odd than the Jester himself. Apart from his eyes playing around the room, the man to Perpentachs right remained immovable. Perpentach himself stood up and greeted Cassiel and his men:
"Welcome, Grigori,
as you can see,
I have shown you trust,
now ask what you must."


Cassiel took a deep breath. Straight to business. Not that Perpentach was the type you wanted to small-talk with. The man was insane, and leader of perhaps the largest nation in the world. Extremely powerful, dangerous, and completely impossible to rely on.

"Very well, Jester. It has come to my attention that a Sheaim city has come under your rule.
I figured this either meant that Os-Gabella has bribed you to aid her in this war against me..."


Cassiel's hopes were high, he almost choked on the next words; "... Or that you have decided to come to my aid in this time of need, and has simply taken the city by force?"

The Jester looked questioningly at Cassiel. He saw a smile flicker across the other Balseraph's face, but it vanished the moment it had appeared. Cassiel began to despite the silent right hand of the Jester.

"There are more types of force than that of the swords,
I doubt you realize the power of poems and words.
It is with these weapons I have taken the city you speak of,
In fact, this man alone was more than enough..."


Perpentach smiled at Cassiel as he gestured to the man next to him. A barely visible bow of his head showed that the man had accepted the mentioning of him. Cassiel returned the vague gesture, and the man bubbled spontaneously into a cackling laughter. Shocked by the surprising reaction, Cassiel turned to Perpentach again.
"How? How can this insane individual do with words, what not even one of my best adventurers can with all the swords he would need to cut down the citys garrison?"

Cassiel had raised his voice to talk through the manic cackle from the small, Balmasque man, but when Perpentach took a breath in to reply, the man fell silent immidiately, returning to his stone-like, still apperence.
"It is true that Loki here is insane, but brilliantly so.
His unique mind allows him to put on quite a show,
be in more places at once and sing with four voices,
cuddle the mind of sane people in infernal noises,
until a mixture of thrills and outrages makes them swear,
to serve under the man who can command such a puppeteer.
Their sanity chooses to bend rather than break,
such is the truth of those left in Loki's wake."


Cassiel gaped at the two Balmesque men on the other side of the table. Perpentach spoke with determination and, from what Cassiel could judge, truth, in his voice. Such a man could be a terrible weapon. He was lucky that none of his cities had fallen to the terror this Loki brought with him, although, some decades ago, he had recieved reports of a man like this travelling through his lands, spreading unhappiness and lack of productivity where-ever he went. He considered himself lucky that he had not lost an entire city to the wits of the Jester's right hand, even more so that the Balseraphs had turned this weapon on his enemies. He prayed that Loki would not be sent to the nearby cities Os-Gabella had conquered from him. The citizens in these cities would be desperate and embrace the rule of even maniacs.

After gathering his thoughts, Cassiel cleared his throat and spoke again:
"Thank you for the answer. I was hoping that you had joined in on my side of the war, but I guess you driving the Sheaim insane is better than no help at all. I see no reason to continue this meeting, thus I wish you a good and safe trip home to Jubilee, both of you,"
Cassiel turned his gaze to Loki. The man gave him shudders of fear and he felt sick meeting the mans gaze, but he kept his face motionless.

"Oh, I am not going home, not yet, not soon, I am heading for the Sheaim front, to disperse, to distract, to disintegrate. My role in this play is not over, not yet, not over," Loki cackled. Before Cassiel could reply to this realization of his fears, Perpentach broke in:
"Thank you, friend of the Balseraph, Cassiel,
May your return home be safe as well.
I am hoping to meet you over a game of card,
shall we say just before the fall os Asgard?"


Cassiel bit the insult in him without replying. He knew that Perpentach was right. Even with Loki on the Sheaim front, his forces were too weak and unorganized to fend off the hordes of undead and living soldiers alike Os-Gabella kept sending against him. He thought of the theory his sages had developed, the divine mark of a god still on Erebus. If anyone had the powers to stop this from escalating, it was the man on the other side of the table. It would be sound advice to warn him of this before the fall of his empire. He decided to accept the request.

"Yes, I would be pleased to meet you over a friendly game of Somnium, in Asgard, while the Sheaim march on the city. I need to tell you something, then. In private."

The Jester simply nodded as Cassiel left the small hut and sneaked towards his home, on the other side of the Sheaim camp ahead of them. Cassiel cursed his bad luck. If this sign was what his sages told him, and what he felt inside him, the world needed the aid of this maniac more than even his own people. A god reentering creation, on Erebus! He hoped it would never come that far, and trusted that even the Balmesque ruler had enough sense to realize that this meant the downfall of the world. And cared about it.

Spoiler ooc situation :
Cassiel is taking a beating from Os-Gabella, I have taken a newly-founded Sheaim city with Loki, and he is now heading for the cities the Sheaim have conquered from the Grigori. The sign Cassiel is wondering about is Auric Ulvin (not met yet) completing the Samhain (sp?) ritual.


Hope you liked that one aswell, I will be sure to add more as the game progresses!

EDIT: Adding more despite not having played further..:

Spoiler Cassiel the Philosopher I: The Balseraph :

Cassiel enjoyed a philosophical discussion every once in a while, and recently, he had taken interest into the Balseraph, who seemed to be the only hope for this world to quench the last remains of the gods on the world. He sat in a chair opposite of one of his elder sages. Speaking his mind out loud, Cassiel started:

"A truly amazing race, these Balseraph. I mean... They are impressive. I was going to say despite their insanity, but I am actually thinking that the insanity that flows through the Balmesque lands right from Perpentachs throne to the lowliest peasant is part of what makes their race so keen at survival."

The old sage knew better than to discard the more controverse of Cassiels ideas, but he could not keep back the outburst: "What? Mylord, surely you are not insinuating that the fact that these people are raving maniacs is a benefit to them?"

Cassiel waited for the sage to calm down before continuing; "Why not, exactly? I would agree that they will never achieve the kind of sanity it takes to have a discussion such as this, but surely, it has it's uses, being insane... Just think of the power Perpentach holds over his people! Even we need ambassadors and a militia police to keep our people working towards a common goal. Perpentach on the other hand reigns supreme, due to his excessive control of the minds of his subjects. He needs not those expensive, and sometimes dangerous, links in the chain of command."

The sage saw that Cassiel was thinking ahead of his speech, and waited for another argument rather than cutting into the stream of words. Sure enough, Cassiel continued:
"And think of what they have been through! Surely, a sane people who were not the mindless slaves of their king would not have survived the Hordes of the Pristine?"
Cassiel was referring to the terror the Sheaim had brought along from the north; the Sheaim scouts and negotiators had awakened a pack of sleeping gargoyles, guarding the Pristin Pass, and had chosen to flee to the Balmesque lands, the monsters at their heels. Perpentach had quickly gathered the people of Jubilee around him and armed every single one. Not even the children had been spared a place in the army. Perpentach had been fighting for survival. And he was close to failing.
In the end, over half of the populace had lost their lives in the combat, their voices now ringing along the many others in the chorus inside Perpentachs mind. The battle had been so depserate that Perpentach had reached out to whatever creatures he could find to combat the gargoyles. The wolves, just brough in to the carnival from the forests, still wounded almost beyond recovery, had happily charged to their deaths to protect the Jester and his people.

"Hmm. You may be right, lord." Cassiel continued: "And what about the battle against Orthus? Perpentach ordered the men of his city out of it to guard the pass to north instead of their families in the abandoned town! Orthus slaughtered everyone of them, but the sacrifice proved worth it. The champion of those same men now brands the Axe of Orthus as a trophy! Any sane man would have been struck down by grief by having to leave his family behind for this monster to slaughter. Only insane men would have been able to survive the destiny the Balseraph has had! And now they are flourishing, their empire growing, while we, the sane and philosophical, are being beaten into submission by the Sheaim!"

"But lord, surely, you are not thinking of..." Cassiel cut the man off.
"Going insane? No, that would be unfitting. First of all, my people would not heed me. I am not a great Mind magician like Perpentach. Second, think of the price of it... All those ghostly voices, inside your mind, always! Surely, everyone who was subject to that torture would go insane beyond redemption. I actually think Perpentach manages nicely, when one thinks of what he is facing, every single day and night... And besides that, he is our only hope if the rumours are true. I am hoping that there is some brilliant and reasoning mind somewhere behind his mask of insanity."

The sage shrugged. "But we don't know. We know nothing of what is inside his mind. That is his nature. He could just as well ally himself with this stranger god, or even the Sheaim. Such is the nature of insanity... Unnatural."

Both of them nodded in agreement. The subject was closed. Luckily, Cassiel thought. You didn't have to discuss it for long before you felt the madness creeping towards you.


EDIT: Played on. Dain is dead at my hands. Story will be in parts, first one is up:

Spoiler The Revelry pt 1 :
Perpentach looked at the mage on the other side of the table. The Stasis Years had taken a hard toll on The Caswellawn, the cold combined with his worries for the small Amurite empire. Merely three cities were within the borders of the Amurites. To their west, behind a range of mountains only split by the Nimarail Pass, the Balseraph were located. To the east and north, Os-Gabella and her Sheaim warriors were trying to press Cassiels defences. Since before the Stasis, Cassiel had been able to hold his central cities. During the depressive effect of the Stasis however, several of the Grigori border cities had been converted by the Balseraph jester and magician, Loki, no matter if they were Grigori or Sheaim. All in all, this monster had claimed five cities for Perpentach.

And finally to the south, beyond the Nimarail pass, a gathering of barbarian orcs had founded their own city. There were also talks of animated skeletons wandering the area, and Dain had assigned two Swordsmen Regiments to protect Nimarail from these newfound threats.

The last Somnium tournament had been cancelled due to the Stasis, but now, 30 years later, Dain was facing Perpentach in the finals again. The jester was defending his title, he had not played any matches to qualify this time. Dain had rippled through every single opponent to reclaim his title in the final.

The four cards left in the deck were standard, Angels, Moons, Wands and Pentacles. Dain was leading with three points, but it was Perpentachs turn, and the jester had no pentacle card yet, neither wands. Dains lead would not keep up if the jester got both of these suits, even less if Perpentach was smart enough to draw all four.

Perpentach drew the first card. Wands. The second was Pentacles. Dain remained emotionless as he hoped that the jester had not been counting the cards. He could still win if the jester decided to end his draw now. He sighed with relief as Perpentach placed the two cards in their respective places, taking the lead with a single point. The Caswellawn quickly drew the last two cards and placed on top of the Angles and Moons he already possesed. Reinforcing his position with four points, he won 49 against 46.

Perpentachs face was locked in a motionless smile as he left the stadium, mentally absent. Dain had no idea what was going on inside the Jesters head and did not want to know...

"Kill him! Kill him right now! Look at him sneering like that!" "No, he is a friend of your people! Leave him be and war the Sheaim instead!" "Oh, I am guessing you were Bannor when you lived! Why battle the Sheaim? Why not the Amurites? They are so much easier targets!" The voices were maddening. Perpentach tried to silence them, but they kept rippling through his mind like waves in a lake being bombed with rocks. "Look, here, surely, Auric is the enemy. I mean, he's trying to freeze the world dead! Remember the Stasis? Twenty years without crops, so cold that only the bravest and maddest dared go outside! Perpentach shook his head violently, when suddenly, a booming voice rang through his head. He had heard it before, when the Balseraph had found the Pyre of the Seraphic, but it had eluded him shortly after. This time, it was here to stay. For a very long time. "Listen up: Dain fears you and if you do not kill off him and his pathetic minions, he will prod a knife at your back as soon as your forces have left for other lands. Send out the Divisions against the barbarians to the south, merge them with the new recruits and march on Nimarail. I will stay with you until Dain is no longer alive." Perpentach smiled. Most of the voices had fallen silent simply due to the authority of the booming voice. Perpentach wondered who had been the owner of the voice. Bhall, perhaps? No matter who, every word from the voice was like a Revelation to him.

During the next years, the Balseraph empire prospered. Perpentachs minions felt his light mood reflected in their own minds and worked harder and better. Soldiers were being equipped in a formidable tempo; the abundance of misshapen freaks in Jubilee had finally found a purpose. Only a few years later, four of these divisions marched south to face the barbarians. Perpentach had had his workers form a broad road all the way to Nimarail. The conquest would be swift once the barbarians were off his mind.

The Bolt Division bore it's name for a reason. Despite their heavy armament, these warriors moved as swift and endurant as wolves along the road. The other Divisions could only watch as the Bolts sped up the hill ahead. They were spent themselves, resorting to making camp in the forest at the foot of the hills. Especially the rear Division, yet to be given a name, had been slow. Then again, the warriors in the Division had skin all covered in stone, so the reason was obvious.

Aigy sped ahead of the other Bolts. He was the swiftest of them all, and the one who had given the Division it's name during a training where they had played King of the hill. He had climbed the roof and quickly knocked off the few others who had managed to get up there. He had continued to knock off any who climbed the roof, and even when most of the others had given up or broken something, he had remained the king of the hill. Even when a thunderbolt hit him, he had remained standing evne after that, despite eyes flickering and hair on fire, he had remained unscathed. After that, he had been given command of other recruits with the same resilience and speed as himself, and he was now the leader of the Bolt division, sprinting up a hill ahead of his men.

As he reached the top of the hill, he looked down to the forest below. Campfires, lots of them. Orc scouts out. By the looks of the size of the camp, they were two divisions. And by the looks of the camp, and the forest that had been where the camp was now, they had axes. Lots of good axes. His report was crucial, and he sped back down the hill, almost trampling his second in command. The man hardly thought before following Aigy back to the camp.

The men cheered at the news of enemies close by. The next day, the orcs were slaughtered one and all. The Bolt Division did not even get to fight. Not this time. But they would be needed against the Amurites.


Spoiler The Revelry pt 2 :
Aigy was eagerly awaiting the return of the Swiftblade division. They were the division designated to protect the rest of coloumn when marching on Nimarail. They had fought some skeletons and had now entered the Lair beneath the battlefield to claim their rightful loot. Aigy was happily unaware of all the dangers that normally lurk in places like that, and so were the Swiftblade Division.

After what seemed like hours, Aigy and his division saw shapes in the dimly lit entrance of the lair. Moving closer, they tried to identify their comrades. It was almost impossible. The Swiftblade Division leader exited the Lair, brandishing a long Mythril sword, and a Mythril face mask. One after one, his Division walked up the Lair and stopped behind him. They all wielded Mythril weapons and bore the most horrid and yet beautiful masks that Aigy had ever seen, also done in the extremely precious and strong metal. With a proud voice, the commander of the Swiftblade division, Fizzain, announced: "This division will from now on be known as the Mythril Mask Division! Now, let us get a move on and find the borders of those weird magicians!"

Aigy stared in awe, nay, gaped in awe, as the Mythril Mask Division proudly marched in coloumns to the front of the army, extremely deadly. They would probably stand a fair chance even against the firewielding warriors who slew Orthus. Realizing now how powerful the army of four Divisions was, Aigy doubted they would need the reinforcement that were en route from north. He knew that a mage, in folksmouth known as The Dancer, as well as the Gryphon Scouts were leading the reinforcement coloumn.

Back in Jubilee, Perpentach was sleeping. The booming voice had left him for the night, leaving his mind silent and empty. Suddenly, another, more beautiful and yet more dangerous voice was heard in his dream. He understood that the voice was not from inside his own head, but from somewhere far away. And it was very beautiful. And extremely lethal. Perpentach writhed in his sleep, but when he awoke, he remembered the dream entirely as it had been. He quickly sent word to his minions that a great carnival was to be held to celebrate a fantastic event: The Balseraph had recieved the blessing of the gods! In his sleep, Perpentach had heard the voices of strange, underwatery beings of a kind he had never seen before. They had revealed to him many secrets of the world and inspired him. In an even better mood than ususally, Perpentach threw his bedside mirror at his servant, causing him to stumble backwards down teh staircase in a rain of glass. With a cackle, the jester stood up and leapt down the stairs, over the unconscious servant.


Spoiler The Revelry pt 3 :
Sayn stood amazed at the Balseraph division advancing on him and his fellow comrades. They seemed to move in trance, dancing in and out between each other, violently swinging their deadly Mythril weapons around them in wild and extravagant gestures. What impressed him the most was that not a single Balseraph soldier was wounded by his any of his comrades, or by the few arrows the guards had. A thing he didn't notice was the mage who danced among them while chanting. The soldiers were invigorated by his spell and suddenly, as if one man, entered a mad dash towards the Amurite front line. Sayn was almost so surprised that he was cut down without resistance. With an amazing force of will, he raised his blade and got ready to meet the first enemy, a small Balmesque soldier with a sabre and a mask that resembled a human face crying spiders. Sayn noticed that apart from the mask, the man was normally clad, in a clowny, clothy suit. He quickly swung his blade downwards, towards the mans right arm, hoping to dislodge in and thus disarm the man.

What happened was this: Only a second before Sayn's blade would have cut the man's arm off, the Balseraph crounched into a small ball and rolled past Sayn. By the time Sayn had finished his swing through empty air, the man had cut two nice crescents in his shoulderblades. With a sigh, Sayn fell to the ground. His last sight was ranks of clowns with swords and strange masks running past him.

The city of Nimarail fell easily, and the Division who defeated the last of the local militia got the honor of bearing the city's name. From now on, they were known only as the "Nimarail Conquerers".

The Balseraph army quickly marched on Cevedes, with the Mythril Mask Division in front. All resistance on the way was brutally cut down, and soon, the city fell.
Dain the Caswellawn had fled to his last rampart, a small and recently founded city, protected by just a single division of swordsmen as well as the local militia. As the Balseraph left Cevedes, with their wounded inside for quick recovery, and marched towards the last hold of the Caswellawn, Aigy saw two divisions of Amurite scouts dash for the city. With an oath, he realized that not even he could reach them in time. Not even the Gryphon Hunters, bearing their name because that they had once raced a Gryphon and won, could catch up with the scouts. Nevertheless, both the Hunters and the Bolts immidiately set themselves in motion. Dain's last stronghold would fall without them. The Mythril Masks would assure that.

Aigy ran through the city gate. On the streets around him, citizens still loyal to the Amurites had gathered to slow down the Balseraph. Aigy quickly motioned to his men, who cut down everyone in their way. The citizens quickly dispersed as the Bolts headed for the lazaret where the wounded were being treated. There were almost two entire divisions there, and losing them would anger Perpentach. A lot.
 
Those were a lot more entertaining than I thought they would be. No one's ever actually had Loki in one of their stories when I think about it. At least no story I can remember off the top of my head had him. Good job, Diamondeye. :goodjob:
 
Thanks, Cypher. I hope I got the right impression of this wreched being. Just think of how much you hate seeing that guy trip into your lands, and I am sure you are able to identify yourself with Cassiel and aknowledge his fears for Loki...
 
Hey pretty new to posting in the forums(mostly i just read) but the idea came to me so I thought id give it a shot. Any advice from the fantastic authors here would be appreciated. (bonus points if you know what movie the idea came from)

Spoiler :
Rosier looked out over the sea lapping against the cliff. The cool breeze threw his hair out behind him but he was too lost in his thoughts to notice. This was where he went when he had the chance. He would of liked to come more often but there were always more people to kill, always another enemy. He sighed and turned to walk down the path from his privacy. The voices had started again. Whispers scratching inside his head letting him know that there was yet another to kill, another life to take. The wind was building the waves into towers crashing against rocks below and it looked like a storm was building far out to sea. The ground was cracked beneath his feet, it had been since his masters had taken over the city. This happened where ever the Veil spread, the ground broke and heaved as if in pain, the trees died and the wildlife changed forever. Rosier wondered what happened to the people who they left behind but abandoned the thought quickly. The voices would drive him on before he could find out and he knew from experience that thinking about what was behind him would only torment him. He was always moving on, trying to forget, trying to find some peace. His masters had stayed in this town for and unusually long time, normally they had feasted on the population by this time. “The Kuriotates always did build big cities”, he muttered.
“Aye and they make good rum as well” A voice declared. Standing in his path was a man wearing the robes of the Order. “Rosier, Knight of the Second Sun I charge thee with the murder of countless innocents, the destruction of three Order temples and the breaking of your Oath to uphold the peace. I have sworn an oath to destroy you and bring back you shield as proof.”. The order sent these suicidals every so often to try and kill him. Sometimes they came for his shield and sometimes for his head. They all ended up dead. Most barely put up a fight and none so far had even hurt him. He advanced at a slow walk, drawing his blade as he advanced.

Joseph had been tracking Rosier for quite some time now, and upon finally finding him was disappointed. Where was the demon made human with glowing red eyes? This man with his sword drawn seemed tired if anything. As Rosier drew nearer he took a quick swig from his hip-flask for courage and tried to silence the voice in his head that remembered all the tales about Rosier. But his faith was strong and his oath binding. He would not be defeated. Joseph drew his weapons, his sword of holy steel, and his shield blessed by an angel of Junil himself, or so the merchant had said. The blow came so suddenly he had barley registered the sword moving as it cut into his shoulder, and knocked him to the ground. Joseph gasped in pain, it was worse than anything he had felt before, the wound had shorn right through the top of his shoulder blade and would probably kill him from infection even if he managed to crawl away from here. Joseph closed his eyes and waited for the inevitable death blow and made a silent prayer to Junil. Rain began to pelt down upon the scene, huge drops of water bore witness to the events unfolding. Rosier looked down at Joseph with pity,” So tell me, where is Junil now? Where is he to protect you? Has your faithfulness and loyalty to your oaths helped you?” He buried his sword next in the earth next to Josephs head and leaned in close,”Fealty, Faith, Order, do you realise how pointless these things are now? Can you truly understand the folly of your actions yet?”, Joseph turned his face towards him, “Junil prote...”
“JUNIL STANDS FOR HYPOCRISY”, he roared, “He asks us to be true to our oaths and condemns us if we fail, BUT it is human nature to fail, human nature to fall. The only thing we can be true to is chaos and anarchy”, he pulled his sword from the ground for the death blow. Joseph was prepared for what was to come. The pain sharpened his focus and in a rare moment of clarity saw the world as it was meant to be and new exactly what had to be done. Pushing up with his good hand he tackled into Rosier and threw himself off the cliff. Robes flapping around him he saw that Rosier was part of the plan, the natural chaos in Order. And he was at peace that his death was part of the plan as well. As long as everything was as it should be he was happy, even as he rushed towards the sea grasping Rosier in a death grip.

As the morning sun greeted the victorious Bannor army marching from the city, a fisherman brought up a naked man, with a hip-flask gripped firmly in his hands. “Well bless me' eyes what have we ere', ere' lad whats your name?”. The man looked at him oddly and said “ I don't really know, but I could use a drink"
 
Spoiler The importance of heroes :

The hooves of several hundred horses raised a cloud of dust that almost hid the riders as they charged along a broad road, cut from the solid trunks of the Forest of the Northern Star. At the head of the coloumn, Arianne raced her brother, Hirrian.

She was two years older than him and in command of the coloumn, a feared champion of the Hippus mobile forces. And only a few miles ahead of her was the small Ljosalfar settlement of Hyll, unknowing of the force that was heading for them to burn down every building there, or so the Hippus thought... Rhoanna had recieved two thousands pounds of gold to take down several Ljosalfar settlements bordering the Calabim, and this was the last.

Arianne looked sideways at her brother, only a few feet behind her. He looked back, smiling with clenched teeth and sweat running down his face.

His smile stiffened and disappeared when the arrow slammed straight into Arianne's neck, just above the chainmail. He stopped his horse, his world suddenly moving slower, while his big sister and idol was thrown off the horse, a single shaft protruding from her neck in an odd angle. Subconsciously, he noticed arrows battering down at the coloumn from several trees. As if far away, he heard his own voice yelling. "Shields! Archers, to the flanks! Ambush!"

Gilden let go of the string again. A second arrow swirred from the tree, penetrating Arianne's chainmail just above the waist. Hirrian watched with grief as the muscles she used to breathe went into a short spasm before becoming still. With tears of anger and a look of murderous retribution in his eyes, he dismounted with his shield over him, and drew his sword from its scabbard. Filled with an unbearable lust for vengeance, he charged towards the tree. He saw that several of the other mounted swordsmen had done the same, and were running towards the other trees from where the arrows came.

Gilden watched with a growing fear gnawing at his stomach as the swordsmen came closer. Even without their mounts, the Hippus were formidable enemies. He peeked nerveously to the nearby tree, where his youngest recruit, Aalfalar, was positioned. Luckily, noone was heading towards it. But two were running towards him. He identified an officer in front, but he was covered by his shield. With a whisper as the wind throgh autumn grass, Gildens string was released to bring it's message of silent death to the soldier behind the officer. He fell to his knees, clenching his hands around the arrow in his eye, powers rapidly fading.

Hirrian stopped at the foot of the tree. He could no climb it in his chainmail. Still, he had to reach the archer somehow. He could not let his sisters death go unavanged. He found himself a rock of fist size on the ground and threw it at the archer.

Gilden avoided the missile, thrown at an incredible velocity, by inches. He jumped from the branch rather than risk losing balance and thus control. As he landed, rolling away from the incoming threat, he saw the face of the young warrior and knew that he was involved in a fight to the death.

Hirrian charged the crouching elf, sword and shield high. Only a few yards from the target, he fell a sharp pain in the knee. He looked down and noticed a shaft had penetrated his left kneecap. With a grunt he trampled onwards towards the archer, still crouching.

Gilden let a second arrow leave his hand the second he was withing swordreach. As Hirrian lowered his shield to attack, the shaft penetrated his chainmail on the right shoulder. Stricken with pain, Hirrian dropped the shield and fell to his knees. In a desperate last attack, he tried to pummel the elf in front of him with the shield. Gilden moved out of range and placed another shaft in the shoulder of the Hippus officer, who fell to the ground with a grunt.

Gilden ran to the road to see the last few Hippus fleeing. He also saw several of his own comrades lying dead beneath the trees they had hid in. When they gathered, he saw that they were merely eleven men left of the original forty. Luckily, Aalfalar was among them. While the others buried the fallen elves, the young recruit came up to Gilden.
"Sire, how come we won? They were atleast two hundred, fully equipped! I am still surprised that we even survived."

Gilden looked at the recruit before answering. "First off all, we have the terrain in our favour. And the element of surprise, ofcourse. Second, the Hippus underestimated us. Or those who paid them did. They underestimate the value of individuals such as you and I."

The young recruit looked up at Gilden again, questioning: "Please, elaborate."

Gilden smiled. "Think of how much the world changes a man, from the day he is born. See how the woods have changed the nature of the elves such as yourself, or how the horses have changed the Hippus. The reason the Hippus were defeated is because of this. Like the world can alter a man, so can a man alter the world. From when he is born, if he has the will and skill. That is the nature of heroes."
 
Here's part of an old Chinese poem by Li Sao that seems like part of the Song of Autumn.

Spoiler :
Eagles do not flock like birds of lesser species:
So it has ever been since the olden time.
How can the round and square ever fit together?
How can different ways of life ever be reconciled?
Yet humbling one’s spirit and curbing one’s pride,
Bearing blame humbly and enduring insults,
But keeping pure and spotless and dying in righteousness:
Such conduct was greatly prized by the wise men of old.

Repenting, therefore, that I had not kenned the way more closely,
I halted, intended to turn back again-
To turn about my chariot and retrace my road
Before I had advanced too far along the path of folly.
I walked my horses through the marsh’s orchid-covered margin;
I galloped to the hill of pepper-trees and rested there.
I could not go in to him for fear of meeting trouble,
And so, retired, I would once again fashion my former raiment.

I made a coat of lotus and water-chestnut leaves,
And gathered lotus petals to make myself a skirt.
I will no longer care that no one understands me,
As long as I can keep the sweet fragrance of my mind.
High towered the lofty hat on my head;
The longest of girdles dangled from my waist.
Fragrance and richness mingled in sweet confusion.
The brightness of their luster has remained undimmed.

Suddenly I turned back and let my eyes wander.
I resolved to visit all the world’s quarters.
My garland’s crowded blossoms, mixed in fair confusion,
Wafted the sweetness of their fragrance far and wide.
All men have something in their lives which gives them pleasure:
With me the love of beauty is my constant joy.
I could not change this, even if my body were dismembered;
For how could dismemberment ever hurt my mind?

…

The age is disordered in a tumult of changing:
How can I tarry much longer among them?
Orchids and iris have lost all their fragrance;
Flag and melilotus have changed into straw.
Why have all the fragrant flowers of days gone by
Now all transformed themselves into worthless mugwort?
What other reason can there be for this
But that they have no more care for beauty?

I thought that Orchid was one to be trusted,
But he proved a sham bent only on pleasing his masters.
He overcame his goodness and conformed to evil councils:
He no more deserves to rank with fragrant flowers.
Pepper is all wagging tongue and lives only for slander;
And even stinking Dogwood seeks to fill a perfume bag.
Since they only seek advancement and labor for position,
What fragrance have they deserving respect?

Since, then, the world’s way is to drift the way the tide runs,
Who can stay the same and not change with the rest?
Seeing the behavior of Orchid and Pepper flower,
What can be expected from cart-halt and selinea?
They have cast off their beauty and come to this:
Only my garland is left to treasure.
Its penetrating perfume does not easily desert it,
And even to this day its fragrance has not faded.

I will follow my natural bent and please myself;
I will go off wandering to look for a lady.
While my adornment is in its pristine beauty.
I will travel all around looking both high and low.
Since Ling Fen had given me a favorable oracle,
I reckoned a lucky day to start my journey on.
I broke a branch of jasper to take for my meat,
And ground fine jasper meal for my journey’s provisions.
 
While I'm resurrecting the Saga of Samuel, I also spent a good part of the day working on earning my title of "Junil's PR Department." I suspect I'll get eaten by other loremasters for my eccentric tolerance of the Order, but I'll risk it.

Spoiler The Order From Street Level :
The Order From Street Level
Ozziel, Wandering Scholar

Of all the religions of Erebus, none is as misunderstood as the Order. Unfortunately, the ones most likely to misunderstand it are its followers, whose less than pleasant reputations are occasionally well-deserved. It is hardly a religion of peace and love, but that isn't to say it is one of war either. It is fundamentally concerned with justice. As one follower of Junil confessed (after having been introduced to Sunshine [1]), “nice ain't good, good ain't nice. We're nasty. Merciless. Pitiless. Maybe even brutal. But if we don't like you, it'll be with a good reason. Maybe you won't think it's a good reason, but that don't matter. But we ain't no hypocrites, and we ain't got no crooked kings, 'cause we ain't no hypocrites.” I could get no further from this gentleman when he proceeded to pass out on the floor, however.

“Good isn't nice” is actually an excellent summary of the Order philosophy. While low-ranking Order priests have been known to do incredibly idiotic things in the name of Junil [2], acts that can be directly attribute to Junil, or those who can hear him, tend to invariably be justified, occasionally in an absurd way. One story, which my research has found to be more than anecdotal, tells of a Prior visiting the Balseraph empire in an attempt to negotiate with Perpentach. During the conversation, he casually, and without explanation or comment, stabbed and killed one of Perpentach's advisors when he passed near. Perpentach found the non-sequitur murder from an otherwise dull ambassador absolutely hilarious, and let him continue as though nothing had happened. Later, a broken summoning circle was found in the advisor's room; he'd attempted to summon a demon of Mammon, and been possessed by it instead. The possession had been perfect, fooling even Perpentach. The Prior never did explain how he had been so confident in his actions, or that Perpentach would laugh it off.

The Order's focus on the greater good of all Erebus has some unfortunate side effects. They place the greater good as more valuable than individuals, and are quite unbending in their decisions. The most rational decision is sometimes not the most moral one. For example, let us take the Werewolf Problem [3]. Whereas most on Erebus either struggle with it or occasionally try to get more information or find a third way, the Order's dedicated followers invariably answer the question with the result that saves five in both, whether it it means directly or indirectly causing the death of one. They are rational, logical, and in their most devoted form, somewhat alien to most people of Erebus. They hand out judgments dispassionately. Nepotism and cronyism are rare [4], and their laws are absolute and apply to all, from peasantry to kings.

It is that last part, the equality and absoluteness of law, that makes the Order surprisingly popular with the oppressed. In nations where the leadership does not follow the Code, the Order is magnificently adaptable to a religion of revolution and social change. This may seem utterly absurd for a theology of law, but the laws of the Order are applied universally, and in many oppressed states, the leaders are guilty of breaking these laws. The laws of mortal men are considered, at best, subservient to the laws of Junil, and moot if the ones making the laws are themselves criminals in the eyes of Junil. The Order demands service, first and foremost, to Junil, and this service often means toppling leaders who do not obey... whether from within or without.

Another oddity is that the Order's sentences are often far lighter than those under many more vicious regimes. Compared to those influenced by the Empyrean, the Runes of Kilmorph, or the Fellowship, most penalties are harsh, but not completely unreasonable. A thief in Order lands will be spending a very long time in prison indeed, twice what the Empyrean would give him at minimum, but compared to the fate he would suffer for stealing from nobles of the Calabim (obviously), the Svartalfar, my fellow Balseraphs, or even some Hippus tribes is far, far worse. Likewise, from whom he stole is less relevant; indeed, to some in the Order, stealing food from the poor is seen as a greater crime than taking gold from the rich.

One thing that should be said, however, is that the Order does not forgive liars, oath-breakers, and those who use unholy powers easily, if at all. No use of dark magic, even if it's for the greater good, is considered tolerable, due to its tendency to corrupt those who use it. This belief is not entirely unfounded, unfortunately, although the speed and ruthlessness with which the Order persecutes even suspected users of unholy magics can be quite startling. Meanwhile, criminals who lie to a Confessor will often find the sentence for doing so worse than that for the actual crime. If the lie is under oath, it will sometimes be treated as oath-breaking and punished by death. This incredible hatred of liars horrifies those who do not follow Junil. Casual lies, when officials aren't involved, are technically legal, but considered to be a grave insult. I made the mistake once of complimenting a particularly horrific-looking woman, the captain of some Bannor regiment on her “beauty,” figuring she'd appreciate the nicety. I barely talked her into sparing me, and instead received a lecture on the origin of each and every one of her terrifying scars, earned fighting the Infernal, Sheaim, and Orcish empires. Luckily, a few were legitimately excellent stories, and I even borrowed one to explain my newly broken leg in a tavern later that day.

This is not to say that Junil's believers agree universally. The religion has fewer theological gray areas to spark discussion, and occasionally conflict, than Erebus' other religions. But it is not without. The definition of redemption, and what may be done to earn it, is a point of fierce contention. The Bannor prefer redemption through death for those who have committed crimes especially offensive to Bannor or Order sensibilities, firm in the belief the redeemed will spend eternity in Junil's vault [5] if they are truly repentant. The Kurioates seem to feel that several years in a dungeon is sufficient for most crimes, although they tend to not to look kindly upon especially heinous crimes or repeat offenders.

At this point, I'd like to mention the infamous inquisitions. An Order confessor assured me that they were merely routine investigations, and that only those guilty of worshiping outright malevolent deities needed to be worried. He was a terrible liar, and seemed as terrified of the inquisition as anyone else. Problematically, he also insisted he abstained from alcohol. But for reasons far different than you might expect, I found myself in the trust of the madame of a local brothel, who was more than happy to set the record straight.

“Inquisitors? (What followed next was a long string of impressive curses.) Alright, you want to hear a story to back all that up? Well, there was this Temple of Kilmorph. Fine place. Nobody there who'd ever done anyone any harm. Boring, traditionalist, not exactly what I like in a customer, but fine, decent working folk. No bad blood. Then comes this fire-and-brimstone preacher, screaming that he was here to root out the cult of Mammon. At first the followers of Kilmorph were cheered by this; they really don't like Mammon. Turns out he meant them. Oh, and Tali help any poor fool who tried to defend them; Junil's loyal followers found themselves taken away along with them. Even a few confessors tried standing up to this psychopath. Merciful Sirona, but I don't know where they went or what happened to them. When they came back about a month later... they weren't right in the head. They lived their lives, but... they weren't really alive, y'know? The temple was demolished without comment.” She also mentioned the name of the man who was responsible, Aldrin Gray although I could, of course, do nothing legally. I was after all, only a visitor. However, I have reason to suspect that Confessor Gray may not be remaining in his post much longer; the laws of the Order apply equally to him as much as anyone else, and I recently heard rumor of him blaspheming in a temple.

I am not about to convert to the order, or even recommend it to anybody who values hedonism, pleasure, and general fun as much as I do. Its priests range from agreeable, practical individuals who believe law exists to protect the weak from the cruel, to raving lunatics intent upon turning the world into a machine. But the Order has ways of eliminating the latter, for which I am truly thankful. All considered, as a general rule, I have found the followers of the Order, with rare exception, to be genuinely good people. But remember: good is not nice.

1 – One of the many fine alcohols produced by the Jubilee Mage's Guild. The exact production method is secret, but it likely concerns sun mana. As well as the usual effects of drunkenness, the drinker, unless incredibly strong-willed, becomes brutally and unflinchingly honest... well, more than is usual for the drunk. Foreigners usually avoid it; basic human instinct advices against drinking anything that glows. I find the glow can be minimized by offering it in well-lit places, and serving it in properly tinted glass, and I always carry some for interview purposes. I recommend Spring Sky; it's expensive even by the considerable standards of Sunshine, and considered a sissy drink by most, but its pleasant flavor and low alcohol content makes people underestimate it, and it lessens the effects of drunkenness that might interfere with the victim's drinker's newfound honesty.
2 – For an extreme case, see “The Compact Shattered,” specifically the chapter regarding theories about the birth of Mardero. Ten of the twelve involve the Order, ranging from the most likely theory concerning a botched attempt to destroy an unholy tome, to a patently absurd peasant's tale regarding a woman being thrown off a cliff. Thankfully, most instances of Order incompetence are similar to that found in the autobiography of Goodreau, regarding the death of his daughter; they manage to avoid doing any more damage, at least...
3 – The Werewolf Problem is an philosophical quandary. It consists of two questions. The first: A werewolf attacks a palace. Five men rush through the portcullis but a sixth lags behind. If you close the portcullis you save the five, but the slow man will be killed. If you do nothing the werewolf will ignore the slow man and kill the five in the yard. What do you do? The second: A werewolf attacks a palace. Five men are being chased by the werewolf but do not have time to reach the portcullis and the safety of the inner yard, they will be killed unless something is done. You realize that if you were to push a man from the palace walls into the werewolf's path it would distract the beast and give the five time to escape though it would mean the death of the single man. What do you do?
4 – This may have to do with the punishments involved; the crime for nepotism and/or cronyism (seen as one in the same) can be quite harsh. If the individual was genuinely competent and did no harm, but was not the best candidate, they generally only suffer a minor demotion to a position where they have no power to repeat the mistake. However, if the choice was genuinely harmful, punishments can range from irreversible and awe-inspiring demotions (such as the nobleman who, despite being a member of a centuries old noble family, found himself cleaning sewers after choosing his lecherous drunkard brother to head the City Guard) of all involved, to outright execution if the crony in question is a foreign spy or follower of a religion such as the Ashen Veil or Overlords and the promoter should have reasonably suspected as much. The Order's definition of “reasonable suspicion,” however, can be a bit unforgiving; failure to show up at the temples of Junil, or at least the Fellowship, Empyrean or Runes (who hold enough influence to force the Order to tolerate them), tends to cause unfriendly knockings.
5 – Details of which are sketchy. It's generally agreed, outside of the Ashen Veil, to be preferable to Hell. How much so is a point of debate. The general consensus among laypeople of no religious conviction is that boredom, a probable part of Junil's vault, is preferable to eternal agony.
[In footnote two, I'm not saying Mardero's 'pedia entry is incorrect. I'm not that crazy. But this is written from an in-world perspective, and without omniscience, it wouldn't exactly look like a credible theory. “So, you're saying that the Ashen Veil's greatest champion, the demon Mardero, is the child of some random woman who a pontif ordered thrown off a cliff and whose body was never found? And it isn't possible one of the many, many creatures of the sea simply ate it? And why this woman, of all the woman those Order imbeciles have executed? For Tali's sake, she wasn't even an Ashen Veil priestess; you said it yourself, she was a pagan!”]
Spoiler Aldrin Gray :
Aldrin Gray stood at the top of the temple, looking upon his city. The governor thought he ruled it, but it was his. The slaves of Mammon, who had claimed themselves servants of Kilmorph had been taken away and... re-educated. They would be no further trouble. If any heresy ever showed itself in his city, it would be crushed. Even his fellow confessors knew not to trifle with him. The city feared him, as well it should.

“Someone here to see you, Gray.” said another Confessor. Nobody ever called Gray by his first name, if they expected to live. “A scholar, doing some sort of research about the Order.” Another heretic, doubtless full of... questions. Gray opened the door, and looked down upon a chubby, middle-aged fellow of Balseraph dress. A Balseraph, in his city? It was all he could do to not call for the dog's execution. “Name's Ozziel, scholar of theology. I'm here writing an article correcting the various misconceptions people have about the Order.” Gray decided to see what his game was. Know thy enemy. He put on a false smile and invited him cordially in.

“Care for a drink?” he asked, offering a some sort of Balseraph liquor. If Gray didn't know any better, he would have sworn it glowed. “No,” Aldrin said. “I don't drink.” “Funny,” Ozziel muttered. “That's what they all said.” “No true follower of Junil should ever allow alcohol to cloud their mind. Not that your kind would understand.” “What,” Ozziel demanded. “Got a thing against scholars?” That hadn't been quite what Gray meant, and he was sure Ozziel knew it, but upon reflection, a Balseraph and a scholar were about the same. Fitting that one should be both.

As a confessor entered the temple and went to pray silently, Ozziel said, “I have heard it is traditional that a Bannor offer a guest an oath of hospitality. Is this true?” Strange little man. But he was, unfortunately, correct. Gray decided he might as well; he could deal with the idiot later, outside the temple. “I apologize, I nearly forgot. I swear that so long as you are under my roof and do not betray my trust, no harm shall come to you by my hand.” A nicety, although one he was now bound to obey. Ozziel responded traditionally. “So long as I am beneath your roof, I shall not betray your trust.”

A pause. Then, Ozziel said “Inquisitions.” “What of them?” Gray asked. “Everything.” responded the scholar. Gray sighed, regretting his oath. “We had to deal with a cult of Mammon... surely you know of that?” Every damned Balseraph followed Mammon in some way. But Ozziel shrugged. “I have no fondness for Mammon's followers. Between Oghma and Tali, I'm pretty much covered.” “What do you make of Junil?” asked Gray, looking for an excuse to re-educate the dog. Ozziel merely shrugged again. “I have no qualms with him, and he works to prevent the destruction of this world, something I am quite fond of. In fact, he's not that bad. He tolerates the little imperfections all of his followers have, so long as they are willing to confess them, and fight to rid themselves of them. For instance, I like sex, alcohol, various other substances, and art relating to at least two of the previous, preferably including the sex. I don't get enough of that for my liking. And yourself?” Gray blazed with anger. “I have no sins! I am...”

The silently praying confessor had slipped behind Gray without him noticing. “Perfect?” Gray laughed. “By Junil's glory, I have cleansed myself of all dark taints! I...” it was about then he realized what he had done. “Correct me if I'm wrong,” Ozziel said. “Isn't claiming perfection a heresy? After all, I'm pretty sure only Junil is perfect.” The confessor behind Gray nodded. “Why, yes, it is! And blaspheming in a temple of Junil. In full view of several confessors.” It was then Gray noticed the other confessors who had been quietly busying themselves. “Would you say Gray just committed blasphemy?” “Yes.” “Definitely!” “Well, I think that's enough. We'll have to arrange a trial. I just hope the people of the city can't think of any other crimes you committed while we have you locked up and awaiting that trial. That would be terrible.”

“Well, I'm terribly sorry,” Ozziel said. “I have to leave now, but it was a pleasure talking. But first, I believe I owe a friend something I promised him.” Ozziel went up to one of the confessors, and politely handed him the strange, glowing bottle. “I think I've explained it well enough,” he said, and then left.


EDIT: On another note, did I miss any standard Evil Tome Reading precautions?
Spoiler Evil Tome Reading precautions :
Do not attempt to read demonic tomes without proper preparations. Always keep tomes contained in containers of iron, lead, or ideally mithril, or surrounded by shielding circles, preferably both. Never attempt to construct a shielding circle on your own, always have it constructed by a licensed Mage. Law and Spirit magic make the most reliable shields, insist on one or both of those whenever possible. While reading demonic tomes, always keep salt on hand. Always have a trusted friend, ideally an illiterate and/or morally inflexible one, nearby before reading the tome in case of possession, entrancement, or assault by the tome or its guardians. Arm said friend, not yourself. If possible, do not remove the tome from the shielding circle, and turn the pages using a an iron, lead, or ideally mithril rod to avoid physical contact. If you begin to hear voices or begin contemplating suicide, even if this is not unusual for you, immediately cease reading and wait no less than three days before attempting to continue. Do not read the tome late at night, while under the influence of alcohol or mind-altering substances, or in poorly lit areas. If destruction of the tome becomes necessary, bury it in a place holy to Kilmorph and/or Sucellus, cut it into quarters with a holy sword of Junil, douse it with water blessed by the Overlords (unless the tome is one of theirs), or burn it with flame blessed by priests of Bhall or Lugus. If desperate, sell it to the Council of Esus, but not the Ashen Veil, no matter the offer. Never, ever, under any circumstance whatsoever, attempt to eat the tome.
 
I'm beginning to like this Ozziel fellow :lol: I bet his memoirs must be quite a nice read :)
 
Great entries KC! Really loving them :)

I've always though of the Order similar to the way you've portrayed them, unlike what most people on the forum see them as, so I'm glad to see that version getting some publicity!
 
I've always though of the Order similar to the way you've portrayed them, unlike what most people on the forum see them as, so I'm glad to see that version getting some publicity!

Yeah, I think their like Christanians or Muslims or any religues beings (or Americans). Most are good, and (at least relativly) tolerant people, but some are Psychotic-wack jobs (Fundimentalist extremists, crusaders, Taliban, almost any one at Fox News, French tourists that stand in the middle of the walkway impeding every one) that give the rest a bad name.
 
There is no "the order is x, always." Every religion looks different based on what civ adopts it. This vision of the order the last few posters are putting forth strikes me as accurate in the case of, say, the Elohim or the Luchuirp adopting it. Bannor or Calabim + Order, though, should definitely have raving intolerant fanatics as the rule, not the exception.
 
Raving, intolerable, religious fanatics suddenly gave me a vision of Covenant Armada... But I think that it is close enough to the actual Bannor, isn't it?
 
I tend to think that the Bannor + Order isn't exactly "kill, kill, kill" when it comes to followers of the other good religions, but do tend clamp down many limitations on them. I believe Kael said at one time that The Order does tolerate followers of Sirona, Kilmorph and a few others, but forces them to aid the cause, usually by conscripting them into the army. I can easily see the Bannor doing this, but since the whole society is extremely militaristic, I don't think that would be that much worse. I can see them getting socially ostracized though.
On the other hand, I can seeing the Bannor killing any follower of the OO or the AV regardless of circumstance. I can see the Bannor Priesthood having quite a few completely crazy fanatics who would kill anyone remotely related to the OO or AV though, even if it isn't thier fault. But I don't really see that as the rule. I would think that the laws would be similar compared to another Order following land, but the Bannor would just be more zealous in carrying out the punishment.
 
And, in conclusion to my former post. I have ended the game since it was running on .34, but I though you deserved a final:

Spoiler The Revelry part 4: The fall of the Caswellawn :

Dain looked around at the small group of survivors around him. Those were the only people left of the Amurite race! Those were the only children of Kylorin who would walk the earth. And trodding towards them at the head of his army came one of Kylorins own best students to deal the killing blow to his heritage on Erebus. Dain ground his teeth together and picked up his stave. He, too, was a student of Kylorin. And he would stop this murderer from finishing his dirty quest, even if he had to defeat his hordes of mutated soldiers alone. Behind him, the Amurites looked up in desperate hope as Dain straightened his back and walked towards the approaching Perpentach.

Dain knew that Perpentach had noticed him, but the Jester king seemed completely ignorant to him. That was, until Dain began spelling out a formula. He could feel the fire spread from his palm and form a small fireball in his left hand, slowly growing. Within seconds of this, Perpentach stopped dead in his tracks.

Dain suddenly felt a devastating pressure around his mind. He focused on keeping the Jester's maddening voice out of his head. He felt how the fireball in his hand seemed to almost stop growing as he concentrated entirely on protecting himself from the force of Perpentachs mind magic. It was hard, but he could resist. He knew it. He had believed Perpentach to be a better mage, actually. It seemed almost too easy. He slowly threw the spell off himself, distangling himself from the invisible strings of mind-numbing ether than poured from all around him.

Suddenly, his eye caught a glimpse of movement. Perpentach was merely ten feet from him. The Jester was moving while channeling the spell! Dain could only watch and keep fighting the spell as he saw Perpentach move towards him, as if through melted metal. He saw the long, pointed kris in the Jester's right hand, but kept himself from panicking. Whatever would happen if he let his guard down and let the voices swivel into his mind would be worse than the quick death the long dagger would provide. Both to him and his people.

The Caswellawns eyes widened slightly as the Jester raised his right hand. With a sickening thump, Dain more heard than felt the blade sink into his own back. He kept his focus on the attack that was still ongoing in his mind. He felt the thump again as the Jester hammered the kris into his back once again. This time the sound was followed by a blinding white glimpse of pain. Still, Dain endured. He felt his own blood soaking his cape.

The third thrust broke the mage. The Caswellawn fell to the ground, dead before he landed. The Amurite people watched in horror as the king of the Balseraph bowed down to wipe the blood from his weapon in Dain's cape, before picking up the stave. Slowly, the Jester turned towards the last children of Kylorin. With a grimace of disgust, he broke the stave over his knee.
"Slay them/One and all/Mayhem/mage's fall", he said while simply dropping the stave and turning around to walk away. The last wail of pain from the Amurites faded out behind Perpentach as he returned from the battlefield.
 
Hi, I'm shorty going to be looking for players for an online game similiar to FFH, that is set in the world of Erebus. The game will involve skill, dimplomacy and creativity, which I think will suit many of the posters in this thread.

Players will need to be fairly comitted, willing and able to send in ''orders'' (commands for what you want your nation to do) every week, and writing short stories related to your faction will provide additional benefits.

The game is due to start on the 1st of March, but you will need to reserve a faction and a place in the game asap. The thread is on this forum, right here.

The thread contains the game concept and rules to some extent, neither are complete. They will be completed in the upcoming to March the 1st.

To gain a greater understanding of the game concept, you may want to have a look through Immaculate's FFHNES, to which EkoNES (my game) will bear general similiarities with.
 
Clan of Embers Opening Story:

It is said that even the best laid plans of men will go astray at the whim of a god. What they do not say, though, is that even the best laid plans of the gods will go astray, on the whim of that most impersonal of forces: Fate.
In another world, another time, perhaps, The plans of Bhall, the Fire Mistress, come to fruition. All was in motion for them to succeed. The Orcish rabble had assembled at Braduk the Burning, the Preistesses had gathered for their undoing, The warlord Jonas was Preparing to take power from the Priestesses, Orthus was ravaging the Wildlands, and an angry Sheelba had been found by an old Orc Warrior, who was bringing her, on his back, to the great meeting at Braduk.
But it was not to be.
As Orthus approached the outer slums of Braduk, a loose roof tile fell from one of the ancestral buildings, striking the powerful Orc on the back of the neck, Paralyzing him for life. At nearly the same instant, Rantine, usually surefooted, even while clambering the sharpest cliffs, stumbled and fell, a deep fall ending in a freezing, icy, river.
And so all came Undone.
In this world, Orthank Endain, a wily, cunning Orc, cousin of the Fallen Warlord, who, in that other world, would have been forgotten and faded into oblivion, Took power of the Clan of Embers.
His aim was the same as Jonas’s had been, but he took a much less brutal, although much slower, approach to the task of taking power than his cousin had planned.
He knew he had to win the minds of the people, make them turn away from the Priestesses and turn towards him as a savior from the corrupt crones.
So, he quietly assumed the mantle of leader of the Clan of embers, leaving the other clans alone, instead of subjugating them as his Cousin would have done.
In time, though, rumors spread through these clans of twisted and terrible magic performed by the Priestesses of Bhall. Rumors that the Priestesses were hording the great treasures of the past, and preparing to Levy taxes on the Faithful of Bhall. This offended the naturally proud Clans.
As the years passed, more and more clans turned away from the Eternal Flame, and, among these, the Clan of Embers emerged as a Leader, with Orthank at its head. Now an Elder, he still had all his wits about him, and organized and trained a united rebellion against the priestesses. The Rebels moved on Braduk, and easily crushed the armies of the clans still loyal to the priestesses.
Though initially successful, the priestesses had forseen his victory on scattered to the wilderness, preparing, in their turn, to wage a guerrilla war.
But the Fire Goddess, seeking to Salvage something from her ruined plans, Intervened. Speaking in dream to the Crone, head priestess, and to Orthank, she organized a lasting peace, cemented by the marriage of Crone’s Daughter Erin and Orthank’s son Kristur.
Erin and Kristur, though Initially Strangers, Fell in love, with a love more powerful than anything a god could have forseen.
It was A love so powerful and full of hope, that it called on the Goddess most dedicated to Goodnes itself.


Possible opening story for the Clan of Embers in EkoNES, depending on Kol's approval.
 
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