Bronzedstring is a small castle in the Hills of Steam. One of the northernmost fortifications of the Union of Couples, it is part of a line of strongholds that run east to west and defend and patrol the river valleys of the northernmost lands of the Union. This land is new to Union settlers too, Bronzedstring was only founded in 157. The castle has it's dramas, but they are all small; It is a rare thing to see armies march in these valleys and Bronzedstring has never been assaulted. Instead, in the classic role of border fortresses, the warriors of Bronzedstring range out atop their warhorses to the wilds in and amongst these valleys to surveil and purge these dangers before they can assault the hamlets.
I was one of these cavalrywomen, a human. My name is Eva Ushanova, Eva Bladeriver. My hair is long and wavy though I wear it tied up. I have spent most my life working outside or training for war and so I am more muscular than most. My pale brown eyes are very round and I'm told my cheekbones sit very low in my face. My nose turns up slightly and is broader than most. My hair is the colour of chocolate, something I've only seen once or twice, and my skin tone is copper. I dutifully served the Baroness Buqui, who ruled the League of Weather from her domain of Bronzedstring. We were surrounded by dark pits of the Goblins, and it was often our lot to fight off their raiding parties before they reached the villages. I was born and raised in these valleys, and as I grew I admired the skilled knights and horsemen that rode past our homes and seemed to travel everywhere in their quest to keep us safe. I had just come to join the Baroness when my adventure began, and I was about to start seeing just how large, beautiful, and unfair the world could be.
14th of Granite, 250.
We first spoke in the entry hall of Bronzedstring, busy with the constant energy of that place. "Baroness Buqui, my name is Eva Bladeriver. I have arrived to serve as your hearthperson, praise the night."
The Baroness was an older, demure woman draped in wool cloth dyed light blue. The closest thing she had to a weapon was a dagger by herside. Her skills were in understanding and leading others. She had a level head on her shoulders and was a powerful counterbalance to the natural tendency to violence of most frontierfolk. Her tired eyes turned to face mine, and a small smile settled into her face, "Ah Eva Bladeriver, it's good to see you. You've come to be one of the riders, I remember now. This is a dangerous path you know. These adventurer-soldiers often face their foes alone. Hopefully your friends can dissuade of this foolishness but still, praise the night and long live the cause."
I shook my head, just slightly, and smiled. I joked, "I'll be alright Baroness. I've got my sword and I've got my horse Nisam. I'll use my sword on the things I can kill and I'll use Nisam to get away from the rest!"
Her smile stayed in place for a second, before she began to laugh. To be honest I though the joke was kind of terrible but oh well! In the lull in our conversation she resumed, "Since you are so eager and optimistic, how would you like your first duty?"
I nodded and she continued, "Well then, the giantess Leya..."
I sputtered out, "A giantess? By Mukca... a giantess? Baroness I've never killed anyone and you wish for me to fight a giantess?"
She was frozen for a moment then resumed, "Well you don't need to fight her immediately. In fact this giantess, Leya Strengthfly, lives in Phrasescars cave in the Jungle of Leaves. As you know the Jungle is a fair distance to the south-east from here, though I couldn't tell you where."
Her eyes and posture softened a little. "Eva, I agree that it wouldn't be wise for you to face the Leya Strengthfly as you are. She has killed three and her strength is that of many men. But this is what the League of Weather needs from you. This is the danger in your position. You ride out to face it, and our hopes travel with you"
In the face of this danger a plan began to form in my mind. I asked the baroness about other troubles plaguing the area. Other dangers I could face for now. I learned about many, but a single issue stood out to me. Half a day to the east a group of outlaws had encamped in the abandoned monastery of Twistgripped. The monastery was founded in 157 by the Creed of Standing, and the central shrine was known as the Chapel of Esteem. We agreed this was a good place to begin as I could also rescue whatever relics remained in the Chapel. I equipped myself by adding a bronze helm, leather armour, iron mail, a hood, some bags, copper low boots, and a bronze morningstar and shield to my kit. The most valuable of which was far and away my bronze greatsword. It wasn't particularly well-made but I still found it beautiful in it's own way. Just before I left, almost on a whim, I also grabbed 25 silver bolts and arrows. I doubted I would find a bow or crossbow but they may prove incredibly useful in a bad situation, the same with that morningstar and shield as backup weapons.
Just outside the keep, adding to his already prodigous bulk, was my horse Nisam Kamlocquenir, Nisam Coupleseal. I had known him his whole life and he passed into my care after my parents passed away. He was too valuable and too important to me to really be called a possession. His hair was chestnut brown and kept shortcut to stop him from sweating too much in the Savanna we called home. His skin was a dark peach in tone.
I rubbed him down and fed him some hay from the Baroness' stables. I had only just arrived at the keep so his saddle was still affixed, I merely retightened it and packed his bags with various things. As we walked out of the stable I felt his head jerk to look back mournfully at the hay and apples glistening in the sun.
"Hey now Nisam! Haven't we trained you up to be a big strong warhorse with an iron will? Come on, we'll find you something to eat I'm sure."
As we rode past the outer walls I waved goodbye to the guards then began to pray. Mukca Dreamyflash is the Goddess of the Moon, the Night, and dreams. She isn't worshipped by that many but I've always found her tenets comforting. That there is harmony to be found in the depths of night, a light amidst the darkness, and a milky pale hand to lead you to salvation if you have the strength to follow.
"Mukca Dreamyflash, pale rider. I'm going now to fight my enemies and the enemies of people. In that inky darkness, I pray you will see fit to hide me from their sight and to illuminate their weaknesses, that I can better serve your will. Your nature, and all of nature, is a blessing on the world, and we are fools to be caught up in our drive to own everything in this world. Your majesty is beyond our mortal reach, and your beauty drives us to acheive the heights of skill and art. Praise the night."
Many people lock themselves away and deny their own emotions until they get so wound up they burst. I've always found value in having someone to talk to and that has often been the Goddess. Or... well, Nisam too.
The monastery was a cluster of stone buildings, interspersed with open air shrines and gardens built around a central statue and altar. Most of the gardens had gone wild and their heady scent filled the air. If not for the mission I'd have taken time to enjoy them, pick some and lie down amongst the verdant field. The central grotto had a small open air shrine surrounded by water at the bottom of a shallow pit. Above ground it was a square shape with columns at each corner and walkways connecting each corner to it's two neighbours. The rest of the building was open and you could see down to the pit. The majority of the stonework was engraved in swirling patterns, most of which recounted the history of the monastery itself. In the grotto itself I found a porcelain statue to the God Uce Canyonwills that blocked me from walking past, leading me to have to jump over to the other ledge. I also found a scroll and a book, the "Hidden meaning of Rasparanov" and "Common Sense Composition" respectively. The scroll was an essay on travel, and the 22 page book explored the author's journey when writing the essay. Both were adequate at best.
There were four more buildings with two to the north and two to the south. The closest southern building was unremarkable but as I snuck close to the southernmost structure I heard raucous laughter and the sound of people walking about. The Bandits. I slinked away to the northern buildings.
As with the southern buildings the nearest was unremarkable. The furthest of the two was a dining room still filled with furniture. All fair and normal. Fair enough except that every single one was fabulously decorated and they were in all kinds of materials from marble to rosegold. A peal of laughter nearly escaped my lips before I tamped it down at the last moment. To compare this extravagance to the sombre nature of their shrines was... just comedic. And it was all sitting there too. Abandoned. Pointless vanity left to rust and stain. This monastery still might be in use if they'd been a little less greedy and a little more pious or giving. Just outside was a refreshing taste of simplicity. A single stone statue amidst an earthen pattern dedicated to the God Em Fortress Stubbed.
With my reconnaisance done I rode out to wait until nightfall and read through the book and the scroll. A few hours afterwards I was sitting down and heard something crunch in the underbrush. I peeked out behind me from the corner of my eye as I surreptitiously hovered my hand just above my swordgrip. There was a copper-skinned woman there, same broad skin tone as myself and most people from the Union of Couples. She grasping a copper halberd. Past the brush I could she was wearing bronze mail and iron low boots with the rest being leather armour and clothes. My shoulders tensed up as I waited to see what she would do. Half a second felt like hours. Then she sprinted away and I jumped upright, drawing my sword with one hand and hoisting myself up into the saddle with the other. Before I was in the saddle she was gone but her tracks were easy to follow in the dense scrub and was soon on her heels. Before we came to blows I cried out, asking her who she was and what she does to see if she was a bandit. She replied, heart in her throat, that she was a soldier of the boss Thrimes Glowshins. The leader of this bandit group.
I called, out "Yield and you'll come to no harm!"
She replied, snarled and breathless, "You first coward!"
The world is brutal enough, and I'd hoped to let her live but she was a bandit. I rode her down on Nisam and cut into her while he bowled her over, stamping and furious. He then galloped right on top of her and crushed her lower leg. Her eyes rolled back in her skull as she gave into pain. His hoof soon made a gory mess of her head. I looted her armour, coins and weapon as was my right. I stored the loot on Nisam then went down next to a tree and held my head in my hands. I don't know how long I was there. I almost vomited. I thought fighting would be loud. Nisam and I were loud but she was so quiet. So terrified and desperate she didn't even scream. Eventually, after he calmed down, Nisam came over and pressed his head against mine to rouse and reassure me. I smiled up at him and basked for a second in the leafy green light filtering down from the canopy. With my resolve now restored I cut free some cloth from her clothes and laid it over her ruined visage. I murmured a quick prayer then turned around to mount Nisam but I had lost him. It took me a few hours but I eventually tracked him down as he was just meandering about. I shook my head and tied him up while I ran to the river and back to get a drink without breaking a sweat. I mounted up and rode back to my first camp, all thoughts of that woman's death now in the back of my mind. Nisam's hooves were still coated with her blood and his hoofprints tracked a crimson smear through the forest as the first of the flies began to descend on the scene.
I waited until late at night, then rode Nisam close to the monastery. I dismounted at the Grotto and slinked towards the dormitory I'd heard them in earlier. I don't know if that Halberdier had been sent out to find me but I was concerned that they suspected something was up. There was a good chance she had just been returning from some other business though, and I kept that hope in my mind.
Surprisingly, I managed to sneak up to their barracks without raising any alarms. I even slid in through the door as one of the sleeping outlaws began to snore. Mukca had blessed me. Only a handful of the outlaws were awake and I managed to get up almost next to them before they looked up from their cardgame. I charged in and hacked away at them. A bowman dropped his weapon as I sent his hand flying. Two wrestlers angled towards me. I eventually cut them down but one of them landed a punch that tore open my cheek.
I tried to respond in kind with a flurry of my own unarmed blows. My mother Ulana had been a traveller and an adventurer before settling down in the valley. She was the one who taught me how to fight, to ride, and to worship the pale rider. She had few treasures but her one prized posession had been a combat treatise from the Dwarven Holds, detailing their martial art of Kisat Dur. My kicks and strikes missed or were dodged easily. Well, my classes with her did always spend a lot more on the art of swordplay than on unarmed combat. When in need, fall back on what's natural. A goblin halberdier, a speargoblin and the unfortunate bowman were left. They blocked some blows with their shields or their heavier armour and it took some time but I managed to wear my way through the defenses of the goblins and destroyed their abilities to stand up or to hold anything, before soon finishing them off. The archer was quick work after that. The handful of other bandits were asleep or beginning to wake and I quickly finished them all off without any issues. I looted the corpses of coins, weapons, and metal armour, including my new bronze bow, and walked out. That had been frantic and messy but I had come out on top. I had tested my skills, my drive, my pure being against half a score or more and they had been found wanting. My face broke into a grim smile as satisfaction set in at a job well done. Triumph danced up and down my mind like summer lightning.
I screamed. A harsh and conflicted cry. Their mangled faces and bodies looking up at me. A lifeless eye cut open and oozing. A hand, seperated from it's body and lying in a pile of blood with a single fly perched atop the yellowed thumbnail, staring at me. A terrified face and a mangled throat, woken from rest; it's yell of surprise is choked with it's own blood. I looked down at the coin purses I had taken. Had I done this just for wealth? For my pride? I knew I had done it for my duty and to perfect my skill as a fighter, but in the moment I felt tainted. I looked down at a gold piece in my hand. My hand was spattered with their blood and it began to spread to the gold. I tossed it out into the forest with a curse. I knew why I had done this. I know who I am. I am in control of my self, and I bend my self to serve my liege and my goddess and to perfect my skills. I sunk to my knees in pre-dawn light, and thought I could see the moon just slipping beneath the horizon. Breathless and ragged I cried, "I swear to Mukca Dreamyflash and on the souls of my mother and father, I will put this wealth to good use and I will not become corrupted by greed or pride. I will do what I have sworn to do. I will serve, teach, learn, and grow. I swear it."
The moon, seemingly hung in place for those few seconds, slipped below the horizon. When I got back to Nisam I gave him a pat on the head and some hay from his saddlebags. I then loaded him up with the loot, including that book and scroll and my new bronze bow, and mounted up.