Galka sat by the river, trailing a hooked and baited string in the water. His mind was only half on the task however. He worried about his son, Marat. Tomorrow he would be a man. He would be old enough to wed, old enough to take a trade, old enough to make his own way.
But how long will it be before he is forced into the army as his father had been. Made to fight in some forsaken landscape in a far off kingdom.
Galka could still remember the war. The genocidal hunting of the Elves, fueled by their lord's disgust at the Elves' tradition of eating the dead. The long march through endless, ancient conifers. Waking some mornings to find men killed, their bodies hanging from the trees. Yet they still pushed into the heart of the forest. Where the last forest retreat of the southern elves stood.
The elves didn't fight as humans did. Even as the great army split to form a ring around the retreat arrows began to fly from the shadows. Three men in front of Galka fell before they even began to close-in. Galka and the other crossbowmen advanced behind the infantry, waiting for the enemy ranks to appear. They never did. Just shadows that ran between the trees, to fast to aim at. Any quarrels they loosed struck only trees and dirt.
As the noose began to tighten the elves began to fall. Some stood to meet the advancing ranks, wooden swords or spears held ready. The ancient veterans fell only because of the sheer number of men that came at them. Other elves were caught by the hail of quarrels shot from the rear ranks as they retreated.
The trees suddenly pressed closely together and arrows began to fly from the branches above. The dense trees forced the men to walk three abreast, straight into the strange, wooden blades that waited for them. The fighting was brutal but the elves were not invincible, the man beside him sent a quarrel through the leg of the elf preventing them from advancing on the heart. As they entered the clearing they saw that other parts of the ring had already entered the heart, fighting the last of the elves back to the centre.
It was then he saw Lord Udma, the king's general, on the ground, grasping his bleeding leg. He loaded his crossbow as an elf, in ornately carved wooden armour and a stag-horned helmet, drove her spear through his left knee, somehow cutting off his lower leg with the spearhead. As it lifted it's spear to deliver the killing blow as Galka loosed his quarrel. The bronze tip punched through the center of it's breastplate. It staggered and then knelt looking down in shock. It removed it's helmet slowly, hands shaking, to reveal the ageless face of an elven woman. She placed the helmet beside her, heedless of the battle raging around her, and craned her neck back to look at the sky.
The fighting was amost over, men still entered the clearing from the trees and Galka could only watch as Lord Udma ordered two men to lie the woman's body down. Proof of their victory.