Morning gave way to day, and the sun climbed high into the sky as the group began to traverse the plains. As far as they could see to the east and the west there was nothing but endless plains. Behind them to the north the great mountain range they were from was quickly beginning to shrink, and down to the south the mountain that they traveled too seemed to remain the same size.
The seven dwarves were well aware that they would be rewarded with rum if they took good care of their supplies, and so most of them drank very little water that first day. When the sun was directly above them in the sky their nervous leader stopped the wagons and gave them all time to eat. Most of the dwarves gathered around the wagons and remained standing as they ate; their rumps sore even though the benches were padded. Dod, on the other hand, laid out on the ground to eat his meager meal. He’d grown slightly used to the outside and was much more comfortable stretched out in the grass.
The meal stretched on, each dwarf eating in his or her own fashion. Each was lost in thought, ignoring the rest save for the brothers. At this point none of them knew the others very well, and they didn’t seem willing to make new friends at this point. So it was that they were all extremely surprised when a voice called out from the plains.
“Stand and be counted Dwarves of the Mountains!” The voice was gentle but commanding, and as the dwarves looked up those noticed several figures standing in a circle around their small camp. Each figure was wearing a cloak that was camouflaged to blend in with the endless plains. Had they not announced themselves the dwarves would never have noticed them, unaccustomed as they were to their surroundings. It was then that Railick noticed the weapons.
Each of the tall figures had knocked an arrow in a wooden bow and had taken aim at the group. There were seven figures, one for each dwarf, so they were well covered. It was impossible to tell which one had spoken, so the bookkeeper responded to them all.
“We are dwarves of Understars the Abbey of Faithfulness and we trek across the plains to establish a new outpost. We mean you no harm strangers!” Though Jiram was nervous he showed it not, though he did clutch his book tightly to his chest as he awaited a response. While they waited the rest of the dwarves stood still, not wanting to draw a hail of arrows onto themselves and their comrades.
“You are far from the mountains dwarves of Understars! I find your claim to be unlikely. I may be inclined to believe you were it not for the fact that you travel with the Forestblight.” The voice was coming from the figure who had taken aim at Dod, and only now did it become clear what they were up against. Some how they had been ambushed by a party of elves, though none of them had expected to see elves in the plains.
“Surprised dwarves? Think we only inhabit the forests and pretty places of the world? It is our duty to protect all of nature not just the pleasant parts!” The elven leader slowly approached the group, his bow never falling and his muscles quivering from the effort of keeping the string drawn. “What brings you here Forestblight, run out of deer to kill and trees to chop down on the other side of the mountain? Maybe you had a run in with a prairie dog who called your mother bearded troll spawn?”
Dod quivered, but did not move from his prone position on the ground. He’d never expected to meet an elf out here, but it did make sense to him now that he considered it. A cold raged boiled inside of him, brought forth by the crude insult slung at his mother. His hand ached to grip the haft of his axe, but somehow he managed to control himself for a minute longer.
“Which one of you dwarfs is the diplomat of the party; we would
discuss your terms of surrender. Your kind is unwelcome here, but you did not know that. We will not punish you for your ignorance, and if you surrender peacefully we will return you to your halls unharmed.” This from a different elf, one with a bow pointed directly at Jiram’s heart. This elf had a deeper voice and seemed more commanding than the other, and was obviously in charge. Jiram looked down at the ground for a moment, the moment it took him to decide his course of action.
“Alas my fair friends, we have no diplomat in the party. We do, however have standing orders to defend ourselves against anything that stands in our way. We will continue on with or without your consent elf. . . “The tension suddenly increased with the dwarf’s words. It was clear now that they would sooner die then surrender.
None of the dwarves were prepared for this ambush, and as such none of them were properly armed. This having been the fact it did not stop Railick, who was taking his meal next to one of the wagons, from picking up his pick axe. The elf that was trained on him made a threatening gesture at the move and called out to him.
“Dwarf remain still, there is no mine to dig here! Move again and I will be forced to lay you low!” The warning was in earnest, for the elves had no fondness of killing. It had been their plan to threaten the dwarves, for violence was all they truly understood. They were not prepared for the dwarves to resist however, given the favorable terms of surrender they had offered them.
“Though I be not a diplomat, I am prepared to discus the terms of your surrender. If you lay down your bows now and return from whence you came we will not harm you. If ever you return to bother us again after this day you will be met with open hostility on sight. This is your one and only chance to give yourselves up.” It appeared the bookkeeper had a spine after all. The Baron had not chosen poorly when he decided to make Jiram the leader of this group, and now his decision was paying off for the first time.
The elves could only laugh at the dwarf’s comment, since they so obviously had the dwarves with their pants down. The lead elf took a step closer and looked Jiram in the eye before he spoke. “You can’t be serious dwarf, you have no hope to resist us. Give up now or we will be force to slay you.” There was a sound of concern in his voice now for he truly did not want to harm the dwarves. Still, it was clear that neither side would stand down now, thus violence would ensue.
It all started with a flash of movement, an elf who couldn’t keep himself in check any longer. With a twang of a bow string a wooden arrow was loosed, the razor sharp tip tearing through the air with incredible speed. There was no time to react, how could there be. The arrow found its target in an instant, striking Bailick directly in the chest. The arrow felled him where he stood, and the dwarf dropped to the ground with a grunt. His ration’s and water skin spilled across the ground as they fell from his limp hands.
Once it had begun it could not be taken back, after that first twang followed six more, and arrows flew into the group from all directions. The elves aim was amazing, and not one of them missed their target. Railick was struck in the shoulder with an elegant wooden arrow, but responded with violence of his own. With power lent to him by pure rage the dwarf lobbed his pick axe right back at his attacker.
The sharp tip of the axe struck the poor elf right between the eyes, knocking his hood back off his head with a sharp jerk. The sickening sound of bone and brain being destroyed filled the air almost the instant after the sharp thud of arrows striking flesh had done the same. The power of the blow knocked the svelte elf back into the air, his feet knocked out from under him instantly. No one had time to morn his loss however as else where violence began to erupt.
Jiram took an arrow to the heart, or so it would have been if the thick leather book had it not been clutched to his chest. Still the force from the blow knocked him off his feet, and soon he was staring up at the sun from his back. His attacker had already knocked a second arrow and was about to correct his mistake when a hefty axe blade turned the majority of his spine into splinters. As he fell to the ground with a silent cry of distress Jiram could see a short figure standing behind him with a grim smile on his lips.
Ranger Dod was standing there, an already broken off arrow sticking out of his right thigh. If it hurt, the murderous dwarf did not show it, and it certainly didn’t reduce his lethality at all. Taking a cue from Railick the ranger lobbed his axe at an elf that was attempting to reload for another shot at Enza, who’d taken an arrow to the chest and was lying on the ground trying to draw breath.
At once the sound of an axe blade rending flesh filled the small area, followed directly by the disgusting concussion of marble smashing through a chest cavity. Jiram’s looked frantically in the direction of the concussion to see Tindel standing over the exploded corpse of another elf. He took had taken an arrow to the chest, but he seemed alright other wise.
In the matter of a few seconds four elves were dead along with two dwarves who had been laid low. In the moments that followed Tindel was forced to join in with the throwing, tossing his heavy hammer end over end at one of the elves who couldn’t bring himself to shoot again. His hesitation was rewarded with a painless death as the marble head of the hammer turned his skull into a cloud of misty gore.
It was unclear what happened next, as Jiram was still stunned by being knocked down. But as time passed he was helped to his feet to see what remained of his party. The elf that had shot down Bailick had escaped, fleeing when he saw their arrows had not been as effective as they had planned. Only now did the bookkeeper notice Seed standing over the corpse of the last elf, who had some how been chopped in half with the blade of his hoe.
“Quickly my friends, get Enza and Bailick onto the wagons, we must turn back!” This was Jiram’s only order, but it wasn’t necessary. Railick had already picked up his brother’s limp body and thrown it across the bench of one wagon. He was about to leave the rest behind when he was forced to give into his wood and fell atop his brother. It wasn’t long before Jiram was the only dwarf left standing, the rest of his group could not help but give into the pain.
Madness over took the clerk then, all the death around him had changed him in an instant. His heart beat in his chest like a bomb about to explode and it was all he could do to reach the wagon before he too collapsed onto the ground. It was a grim sight, six elves dead and seven dwarves scattered about on the ground and wagons. The plains ran red with the blood of the fallen, the result of the animosity held mutually between dwarf and elf alike.
<This is probably all I'm going to be able to do tonight. I leave work in less than an hour and I doubt I'll have the will to write any more. Then again you never know Will continue tomorrow if you guys want to see more and I don't get blocked off the sight hehe.> <edited>
[ January 11, 2008: Message edited by: Railick Stonemane ]