It was late winter, and the last survivor of Brokenhammer was pouring the final dregs of the meager booze supply into a chipped stone mug for one last draught before, he felt, he too would succumb. Barrels lay broken and scattered, a thin mixture of blood and dusty mud coated everything, evidence of a vicious end to times past. Footprints tracked the mess across the room, an overexposed film caught in time; careful, cautious footprints, sprinting tracks, the frenzied press of a panicked mob. Bloody handprints fingered every surface. And the curious, sliding, triple-track that chased every single path of dwarven passage, the unspeakable horror that traipsed its way through the fort, the slippery trail of death and gore that led, finally, to the depths of the magma forges.
That door was bolted and braced, the bloody handprints testimony to a dying survivor's final efforts. The body still lay crumpled in the corner, nearby. Urist would not turn his gaze in that direction any longer, could not accept the death of his last living companion. Instead, he peered out thru the glass wall of the once mighty meadhall, into the dark of the snow covered fields outside. As he raised the mug to his lips, a shadow caught his eye. Something was moving out there, pushing against that impossible cold, the wind blown snow whipping past the spectre, nearly obscuring it completely from his sight.
He choked, nearly spitting up his precious drops, but swallowed the bitter heat instead, his last reminder of everything lost. His gaze locked on the outsider, his mind raced. Was it someone to his rescue? An immigrant, perhaps just an elven liason, but help none the less? Impossible, just the one.. too cold, why only one? The shape drew closer thru the drifts of snow.
He squinted, peering desperately. Details began to seep past the throbbing pain that threatened always to take his consciousness. Torn clothes, rags in the wind, perhaps the lone survivor of a goblin ambush.. he must be freezing. The being drew closer, Urists' gaze remained locked, his mug frozen in place, empty and silent at his lips. One leg, broken, bone jutting out raw, ribs exposed. A hand outstretched, blackened nails clutching, the eyes empty, the mouth open and hungry.
Horrified, he could not break his eyes from the vision, the monstrosity dragging itself thru the snow. The cold wind seemed to touch him then, blew through him, an impossible, uncomfortable shiver that seemed not to care of the walls which still stood between the mountain home and the howling elements outside. Shaking it off, he peered closer. The snow, so deep, and yet...or were there? His reflection in the way, obscurring his piercing gaze, the room, ghostly images, ethereal furniture placed outside.. The spectre drew ever closer. No, indeed, it left no tracks in the snow. So strange, was it even real? Was his mind broken? It passed a ghostly table. It shuffled forward, approaching an upturned chair, a shadow in its path. And then it placed its hand on the chair, it seemed, and slid it to one side, and the noise echoed behind him and that cold wind blew through him and through his beard and shook his body with spasms, and his stone mug lay shattered on the floor.