Part XIV:The Old Elf Lands
10th of Felsite, 383The sun was heading to the west when the travelers crossed the bridge over the Rooters of Buttering, continuing their long journey to the South and Waterlures.
They had walked only a few dozen yards when they sighted a flock of rabbits grazing among the lush meadow-grass. Seeing the approaching group, the rabbits raised their ears and swiftly jolted away in different directions.
“It is a sign! A sign from Ôsed!” Astesh said clasping her hands in front of her chest.
“Blessed are we by Her presence, indeed!” Sibrek said with glee as the rabbits scurried away in alarm. “Oh Ôsed, Almighty in the Sky, thanked and praised you be for your guidance and protection on this journey of ours!”
They circled around the old tombs of Parchedblew where ancient law-givers of the Just Union were buried. The stories told by Papos of the place had made them wary and cautious of the place. One might never know if the taint of necromancy still lingered upon it or restless spirits stalked the surroundings.
The sun was low in the clear western sky as they followed Risenwheel, a brook bordering the Playfull Hill and the Steppe of Trades. In the southeast they caught glimpse of the towers of a fortified structure peeking above treetops. It was most likely Bridledsandaled, which had once been built by a powerful group of bandits according to Papos' legends. Whether it was still occupied by them, he knew not.
The travelers decided not to find out. The safety of the non-fighters was first, not heading off to do heroic deeds.
The setting sun painted the sky in vivid colors, turning from a fiery orange to purples and pinks. The group was at the outskirts of the Awe-Inspiring Forest, searching for a place to set camp before it was dark. A cold moist rose from the grass, seeping through their clothes -- a reminder that summer was still some ways off.
Tanzul made a fire from some dry fallen branches between a tall and thick highwood tree and a walnut tree, next to a pond with reeds growing on its banks. It was a good spot, sheltered from the cold wind that blew from the east that rustled the grass and leaves and bit through cloth.
“We may not have made much headway this day,” Maloy said as he threw a few larger pieces of wood into the fire. “But it was a pleasant stay at the inn. The pheasant roast -- though small it was -- itself made it a worthwile stop.”
“Hm, other than that, the meal was a bit of a disappointment, I'll have to say,” Sibrek said, his eyes locked on the dancing sparks and flames. “Yet, despite not being the best of meals, it was a nice change to what we have had on the road. A 'king's feast', certainly not, but satisfying enough it was, yes.”
“It was food and it filled us,” Osod, the llama man joined in. “One must learn to appreciate even the smallest of things the Gods put before us. There may come a day when one looks back at the stew and roast with yearning -- sustenance should not be taken for granted.”
“Of course it should not be taken for granted!” Idar scoffed. “Only a fool would think so!”
“There is no need for raised voices,” Osod turned to the dwarf calmly. “What one may think clear, may not be such at another time. Clarity is not given either, and temerity may lead to blindness.”
“Well, as long as one pays their respects to the Gods, one need not worry of hunger,” Idar continued, easing down her tone. “The Morning of Wind will see to it that the fields grow wheat, the bushes prickle berries and the hollows of Deler's peaks have an abundance of plump helmets. One just has to remember that she requires her due. Before planting: the Ceremony of Ash and the Rites of Seed and Sowing; in late Felsite -- not long from now -- the sacrificing of the largest of sprouts during the Dance of Beginning; the Festival of Cheese and Dimples in high summer; and all the regular offerings, daily prayers, and so on, so on...”
Osod looked patiently, waiting for Idar to continue.
“You remember these -- of course, the priests handle most of it -- and there'll be food. No doubt about it. But you neglect them, well, you can blame yourself,” the dwarf continued, stoking the fire with a stick. “The real catch is that there are all these nasty buggers of darker gods that like to mess things up. Break the order of things. Nökor the Dead Funeral of Tombs coming to wilt the plants when all should be well -- and not only plants, mind you, she'll come for anything living, torment them enough that they end their lives
willingly... And as if she wouldn't be enough, there's a whole slew of others, like Bazsa the Sinful and the Hellish.”
“The Reviled Ones,” Maloy raised his head and said instinctively upon hearing the names. “Cursed be them for defiling these once pure lands.”
Idar paused for a moment to gather her thoughts. She tapped her foot on the ground nervously, not sure of where her train of thought was headed and she didn't like that. It made her feel frail and insecure.
“Ach, so you see, it is the bad ones you have to worry 'bout. They're the ones causing uncertainty,” she concluded rather anticlimactically.
“Hm. I see you agree with me then, in a manner,” Osod said stoically. The llama man's answer confused Idar. She did not get what the camelid was implying. Osod noticed Idar's baffled look and continued, “It is like the Way of Mater: we can but follow the Rainbow when he shows it to us, we may guess what lies along the path when we walk under its many colors, but we may never know what awaits us at its end until our mortal bodies come to the end of their journey.”
“Well, I dunno about gods and such... Never been one for them, I guess,” Dimbulb, who was having real difficulties following the conversation, chipped in hesitantly. “I mean, all those rituals and such sound like an awful lot to do... I never done so, no prayer or such to those beings. I just been taking care of myself and my buddies, and, and most the time we got something to eat... I think it's enough.”
“And right you are there,” Osod turned to the hippo man smiling and put a hand up on his shoulder. “You, at least, have learned to appreciate the simple things.”
11th of Felsite, 383Tanzul snapped awake to the whisper of Dimbulb and a nudging on his shoulder, “There's sumthin' moving there.”
It was dark, but the stars in the night and the still crackling fire gave some light. Galel was up, too, and Coni, waking folk up one by one.
Tanzul grabbed his spear as he got up and peered into the dark. It was hard to be certain, but it surely looked like something -- some
things -- were moving. Slowly approaching.
Like a predator stalking its prey.
Before the travelers could prepare their defenses a giant dingo jumped on Coni from within a dense thicket of bamboo with much barking and branches snapping.
Fortunately Coni had quick reflexes and she leapt aside, kicking the dingo hard in its paw as it streaked past her.
More giant dingoes rushed forth from the dark. There was a whole pack of them.
Battle began with everyone struggling for their lives, swinging here and there hoping to score a hit in the dark. It was a flurry of fur, tumbling bodies and flashing steel with lots of yelling, screaming and barking.
Idar yelled in pain as one of the giant dingoes bit her in the chest with its huge maw. The teeth dug in, tearing flesh and muscle. The dwarf felt a sticky warmth begin to grow in her side as she bashed her assaillant with her flail.
Tanzul lost focus for a moment when Idar screamed again after another vicious bite sunk in. Before he regained his composure and managed to pull his spear from the head of a dingo he had put down, another feral beast sprang on him, flinging him backwards and on the ground, stunned.
The world spun around Tanzul in a blur and all he could make out in his daze was Galel yelling, “AGH! You mangy bastard!” as one of the monsters tore into the ostrich man's wing. He heard it followed by Coni's shouting, “Hold on Galel! I'm coming!”
Galel screeched in pain as the dingo shook him by the wing. He could feel something vital being torn apart.
Poor Pife tried his best to dodge and avoid the fighting in his panic, but his jittery jumping only attracted the attention of one of the beasts. It rushed to him and bit him in the leg. It was fortunately not a deep wound, but enough to make Pife fall down.
Instinctively Pife punched at the creature as he fell, hitting it rather ineffectively, and then curled into a ball, hoping his spikes would discourage any further attacks.
“They're everywhere! They're trying to encircle us!” Maloy yelled as he struck his spear into the gut of one dingo. “Stand your ground! Don't let them separate us!”
The fight went on and on. It was hard to know how they were faring against the giant dingoes amidst all the chaos and darkness. The air was filled with snarls and yelps, thuds and cracks, yells and screams, and the occasional moan and whimper.
But despite the havoc it seemed that the heap of dingo corpses kept slowly growing, while all the adventurers were still up and breathing -- or at least not unconscious or dead.
Soon the last of the dingoes ran whimpering into the woods. As a couple of the party turned to run after it, Sibrek looked around worriedly and shouted, “Where's Astesh?”
Then they heard a scream from the opposite direction.
All turned to run towards the scream.
They came upon Astesh whose clothes were badly torn and soaked in blood. She was just rolling away from a dingo's onslaught as the first of her rescuers arrived, Idar's mace hitting the chubby beast in the belly with a mighty slap and Maloy's fist crushing its rear paw.
But the dingo put up a good fight -- it dodged and shook off blows, biting Idar nastily several times. It looked like things would turn bad for the dwarf until Maloy grabbed the monster by the scruff, bit it in the head, his majestic nose flopping over the dingo's eyes.
Maloy savaged the beast by shaking its head firmly in his mouth. There was crunching, squishing and spurting and finally a loud snap as the dingo fell to the ground with a whimper.
The elephant seal man then put it out of its misery with a spear to the head.
Osod was tending to the wounds of Idar who was in a bad shape. She was bleeding from multiple wounds around her body, the ones on her right side and gut looking the worst. She couldn't stand on her own and was propped against the trunk of the thick highwood tree at the camp. Her flail was on the grass next to her and she tried to still grip it, but her hold was weak and her breath was heavy.
“These bites go deep,” the llama man said with his calm voice, though it contained a hint of worry as he inspected the wounds closer.
“I'm a
--wheeze-- mess, ain't I?” Idar wheezed and grimaced. “It hurts... It's
--wheeze-- hard to breathe... Say, there isn't much hope for me, right?”
“You may still pull through. I do not think it is as bad as it looks,” Osod answered. “But I do not want to give any false hopes. I will look over you for the rest of the night, stay and keep company. If there is still breath in you when day dawns, the Gods have decided it was not your time...”
“Well, guess I got some
--wheeze-- breathing to do then,” Idar said and tried to smile, but managed only a pained grin. “Not going to give Nökor the pleasure to get this
--wheeze-- dwarf give up life, if I have a say...”
There were many wounded after the fight. It was by far the worst Tanzul and his group had faced during their journeys. Pife was in shock and unable to stand at the moment. His wounds, however, were not bad and would heal quick. Astesh was shaken and had lost her ability to grasp, but despite all her gruesome wounds she would live, though she would have to manage without her right ear.
And Galel... Galel was faint due to blood loss, his right wing hanging limp and all bloodied. It was unlikely the wing would heal, but then again, a ostrich man's wings are pretty pointless anyway: what use are wings that are unable to fly?
In the morning things looked brighter -- everyone was still alive and Idar breathed normally. A crutch was made for her from plum wood and the journey south continued in fair weather. If all went well they would arrive in Waterlures within a couple of days.
They reached the southern end of the Steppe of Trades, traveled through a small stretch of the Jungle of Intricacies and came to the Teal Swamps before morning was over.
The natural scenery in the forested wetlands was amazing: stretches of reeds still half-frozen, the icy bog ground crunching beneath their feet, brooks and streams joining in a gorge to form a larger waterway...
“Look at the beauty of these lands,” Maloy said as he took in the view.
“Yes, one can almost forget the dreadful events of last night,” Astesh replied as she watched a flock of birds fly over them. “And all the dangers that lurk in these wild lands... But we survived the beasts sent by the Prince. Ôsed guided our paws in the fight. The Rabbit protects us, and if She wills, we will reach Waterlures.”
“These used to b-b-be safer lands,” Pife chipped in knowledgeably, looking at his maps and assorted notes while they walked. “The elf rangers from Ula Tefe patrolled here, kept the paths safe for travelers. B-b-but that is long ago, and now this is a w-w-wild place. The Old Elf Lands they are called now in the Fence of Amusement.”
When they reached the Forest of Rooters, the air was much colder and snow still covered some parts of the land, while dark clouds had shrouded the sky. Snow fell gently from the sky and a thin mist rose from the forest growing thick with ginkgo trees and patches of bamboo.
“Ow!” Galel yelled as a branch slapped him in the face. “Watch it with the branches, Dimbulb!”
“Uh, sorry...” Dimbulb turned around, letting loose another branch he had pushed aside. It narrowly missed Galel's head. “There's so many branches in the way. I try, but...”
“It's alright, just be careful,” Galel grumbled as they continued their way through the forest.
Snow had turned to rain, the sky was clouded even darker and the mist was thicker deeper in the woods. Galel wrapped his cloak tighter around him as he eyed the surroundings, trying to get a glimpse of where the sun possibly was, but it was hard with the leaves and darkened sky. It was hard to know which way they were heading. And he had a feeling that the ones in front didn't know and were leading them in circles.
“Are you sure you know where we're going, Tanzul?” Galel raised his voice so that the fox man could hear him. “It seems like we're going in circles or zig-zagging all over the place.”
“Yes... No... I don't know!” Tanzul snapped irritatedly from the front. He had for some time known that he hadn't the faintest of ideas of which way was which. He just kept going on in the hopes the mist would lift soon. But it didn't.
Finally they stopped their wandering and took shelter from the rain under a knotty and bent ginkgo tree with a rather broad crown. It was cold, damp and they were all sogging wet -- and it didn't help that they appeared to be lost.
“So, we're lost then, huh?” Idar sighed deeply, leaning on her crutch.
“Yes, I'm afraid so,” Tanzul confessed. “Unless any of you have a better sense of direction...”
“None of us can tell the way in this weather. We'll just have to hope the sky clears soon,” Maloy tried to ease Tanzul's burden.
Edzul scoffed and grumbled with his arms crossed in front of him, kicking some dirt.
“Well... We
could just pick a direction and see if the dice of Jalew favor us,” Coni suggested after a moment of silence.
“Hah!” Galel mocked. “As if we've had much luck during the last day. We'd just end up even
more lost.”
“I'm afraid I have to agree with Galel. It's no use heading one way if we can't keep to it. It's hard keeping one's bearings in this weather,” Tanzul said. “No, I think we'll just have to wait.”
“Indeed, sometimes waiting is the best course of action,” Osod the llama man approved with a nod.
Edzul grumbled even more, leaned against a tree and slunk to the ground.
“It's only getting worse,” Galel said grouchily from under the canopy, water dripping from the leaves onto his head.
They had waited for some time, but the mist had turned into a fog, reducing visibility even more, and the rain kept pouring and pouring. If possible, the travelers were even more wet and they were shivering due to the cold.
“Ôsed must have a reason why the weather is like it is,” Sibrek tried desperately to find a positive aspect to all this, but had difficulties believing his own words. “Though, it is said that She can be a bit of a trickster sometimes. Perhaps this is one of those days...” He sighed and continued, “Since there is nothing else we can do but wait, some semblance of shelter would do no harm...”
“The ways of Nature are unpredictable,” Maloy said. “All this has a part in the Cycle -- we may not like it, but it is how it is... This fog, it reminds me of my life at the coast. We had often these great thick fogs there. The air was all white and hazy, obscuring the surroundings -- you could barely see the ground in the thickest of them. It could be a bit disconcerting at first, but then you heard the lapping of waves against the shore, distant cries of seagulls somewhere, and the damp air carried with it a scent of brine and seaweed. Everything might have looked alien, but you knew you were home.”
“That does not sound bad,” Sibrek said. “It actually sounds quite beautiful and calming, in a way.”
“Yes, that it was. And even this fog is so in a sense, though, there is something unnerving about its stillness. It is a bit... Sinister, perhaps?” Maloy said as he looked around the ghostly-grey surroundings. “Yet, there despite its eeriness, there is a certain beauty to it. One can not deny it.”
Edzul threw his arms up in the air at Maloy's words, gave a sharp huff and motioned furiously at the elephant seal man.
“I'm sorry, I didn't quite catch it,” Maloy frowned, trying to understand the dwarf. He turned to the hedgehog man and said, “Could you help, Pife?”
“Uh... Yes...?” Pife replied nervously and gulped. He understood very well what the Silent had said and didn't like the idea of having to translate it. However, he could hardly refuse, but he could change the meaning of the dwarf's word... “H-h-he said that
'yes, it is pretty', he agrees very much to it...”
Edzul looked angrily at the hedgehog man, puffed, his face all red and waved his hands even more frantically,
«What!? That's not at all what I said, you miserable spineless pincushion! Now do your job and tell that sack-nosed blob of lard what I really said or you'll regret it!»“You sure? I don't think that's quite what he meant,” Maloy furrowed his brow and twitched his big nose.
“Well... Um... It's... Uh... He...” Pife had difficulties forming words and shifted awkwardly. After a while he straightened himself and spoke, “Now, t-t-these are his words, n-n-not mine... Remember that... Ok, ok, here we go...
«Can't deny it!? Why, I'll not just deny it, I'll curse the whole of nature! I'm starting to be sick and tired of all the 'nature this and that' babbling and bunny worshipping business of you lot. 'Oh, it's the Gods' will' and 'there's a reason' -- what a load of bollocks! Not everything has a bloody divine purpose, for cryin' out loud!»”
Sibrek and Astesh clutched their chests and gasped at the dwarf's slanderous words.
Maloy turned to face Edzul who held a tuft of grass in his hand. He was slapping it against his palm agitatedly. Pife whimpered and fidgeted when Edzul continued his tirade, “
«What use is all this greenery around us? It's just getting in our way, whipping us in our faces, trying to crush our spirits, to drown us, maim us -- its doing its best to kill us or lead us astray all the time! To the Hells with it all, I say! All this nonsensical praise and prattle sounds like the demented talk of some knife-eared tree-loving elf!»”
“Is that so? And might I ask what is wrong with elf talk or loving trees?” The elephant seal man confronted the dwarf.
Edzul steamed as his hands began to signal his next lines, and again Pife translated, gulping, whimpering, squirming and letting out a pitiful squeak out once in a while (and many a 'oh dear'). “
«Can't trust an elf, can't trust nature! This, this is what Nature is,»” Edzul motioned around with his hand at the barely visible surroundings, “
«It's nasty, foul, unpredictable, unreliable, uncaring and cruel! You sow the fields. Great. Now just hope there'll be enough rain. Oh, the harvest looks to be good this year? Fine, just wait until Nature decides it's time for weeks of heavy rain and then the grain rots in the field. Way to go Nature!»”
“Eek,” Pife whined, feeling like he was sinking into the ground with his burden, “S-slow down, Edzul... I n-n-need time to translate...”
Before anyone could respond, the dwarf continued, “
«The stone, the stone you can trust. Look at the mountains! The monuments of Deler -- not some twitchy-nosed coney -- sit sturdy under the sky, battered by this Nature of yours, staying solid and true; reliable and steady since the birth of the world. Now that you can rely on, not this fickle green-stuff that'd serve better as fuel in the furnaces! It'd be a service to turn it into a deep mining pit, or better yet, pump the molten stone from deep within and flood the whole damn surface with magma!»”
“Enough! Now you lis
--MNGflfg!--” Maloy's reply was cut short.
There was silence. Everyone stood still, looking at Maloy at Edzul: the dwarf had thrust the tuft of grass into the elephant seal man's mouth.
Osod began to chew his mouth in a very llama-like manner, and a barely audible “huh” came out of him.
Maloy turned around slowly, stupified and, not knowing what else to do, crawled in the opposite direction to get out of the situation.
After ten yards or so he stopped, spit the grass out of his mouth and looked curiously at the sight opening in front of him.
The fog revealed a dark, brooding wide mound stretching ahead of him. No plant nor grass grew on it and it appeared not to be an entirely natural formation.
Without further thought he crept closer, and began circling it.
The mound was made of packed dirt and peat, with limestone boulders peeking through the barren soil in places. It certainly was not natural and looked like an ancient burial mound. Shivers ran up Maloy's spine the nearer to the peat walls he was, but it could have just as well been the cold that caused it he surmised.
But what really tingled his senses was when he noticed that the branches reaching over it were twisted and knotted even more so than in the rest of the forest. They looked sickly and half of them were dead -- like contorted skeletal limbs stretching out for help. He grasped his spear tighter. He knew it would be best to turn back and tell the others, but something drew him forward.
Then he heard a branch snap behind him. Something large approached him from behind.
He stopped and turned around slowly and silently.
A large dark form -- almost as big as he -- lumbered towards him. Maloy prepared his spear and braced himself.
“Maloy? Maloy?”
It was the voice of Dimbulb. The hippo man had followed him.
“What is this place?” Dimbulb asked with a worried look on his face. “Don't rush off like that... You could get lost.”
“Look, I'm not at all happy with how things went back there with Edzul,” Maloy sighed, relaxing his grip on the spear. “I needed just a breather so I could calm down. Some time alone... I guess getting into a fight about nature with a dwarf was pretty inevitable, wasn't it?”
“Yah... I guess?” Dimbulb replied, though he was unsure of it. He didn't have much experience with dwarves before this long journey of theirs.
“In any case, I think we should take a closer look at whatever this thing is,” Maloy continued. “Make sure it's safe here... I have a bad feeling about this place. There's something off about it... Like some kind of foulness or sickness lies upon it.”
Maloy and Dimbulb crept onward silently and crouched. As they came around the mound's end, they saw a cleft cut into the peat and a door at the end of it.
“There's a door,” Maloy whispered. “Maybe this is the home of some... Thing?”
“Should we go tell the others?” Dimbulb asked, an uneasiness taking hold of his voice.
“No,” Maloy replied, knowing deep inside that they should return. Yet, something made him want to press on, see what lay in the mound and handle it on his own. A certain kind of curiosity or want for heroism, perhaps? “We better check it out now. There is no knowing what could creep out behind our backs if we left...”
He snuck closer to the door as silently as he could with his flippers. “Besides, it could very well just be the home of a forester or hermit.”
The door was made out of roughly cut flitches and had a handle made from a gnarled branch. There were gaps between the portal and the frame -- it was of crude make, but served its purpose. The door had weathered into a silvery grey color and the lower parts touching the soggy ground were all rotten. It barely held together.
Maloy pressed his ear against the door and listened. No sound. All he could hear was the thrumming of the rain.
He took a deep breath and reached for the handle...
The door opened.
The air rushing out of the gloomy chamber showered Maloy and Dimbulb with a volley of smells -- none of them pleasant. It was a repulsive hodgepodge of damp and moldy earth, decay, fragrant herbs and something rotten, all topped with the stinging stench of urine. It made them wince.
Bundles of dried herbs, bone chimes and crude charms hung from the dirt roof. On the left side of the chamber, in front of a rough limestone wall, was a large quern. Pieces of meat had been thrown around it sloppily. The peat floor around the quern had dustings of what could only be bone meal -- judging by all the bones all about. In fact, there were several skulls that looked like of humanoid origin in the middle of the room.
Maloy felt his muscles tense as he looked at the chamber and began to have a suspicion of the source of the meat there.
He turned to Dimbulb, put his finger in front of his mouth and hoped that the hippo man understood the meaning of it. Dimbulb nodded, raising his finger to his mouth, and began to tiptoe behind Maloy.
Maloy crawled forward. A passage opened from the end of the chamber leading deeper into the mound.
Crunch.“Oops,” Dimbulb whispered, looking on the ground. He had stepped on some bones.
Maloy glanced angrily at the hippo man, then turned his attention to the passage nervously. He waited for a while.
Nothing.
The elephant seal man continued forward into the dark. With every foot the air felt heavier, more oppressive.
Maloy felt his heart begin to race faster and faster. He gripped his spear ever the tighter, readying himself for whatever creature of evil waited him.
But despite preparing himself, his heart leapt into his throat and began pounding like a drum when from the gloom a monster stepped forth.
A large humanoid, at least twice the size of a man, leered at him with its three baleful eyes. It was slavering and twisted, its limbs jutting out in unnatural angles, its skin all wrinkled, and a pair of thin wings with stretched skin spread out from its back.
“What havvve we here?” The creature gurgled, cocking its head sideways. “Who entersss the home of Keth Juggledcurrrled the Sable uninvited?”
Maloy instinctively thrust his spear at the creature of the Night with a yell, but it dodged it with unnatural speed and lashed out at the elephant seal man who narrowly avoided it by backing up against Dimbulb.
“I ssseee Fate has brrrought you here...” It smirked and gave a vicious grin, before snarling out loud and charging the uninvited guests.
The man of shadow kept leaping away from Maloy's and Dimbulb's futile attacks, returning with heavy blows on Maloy's shield.
Dodge, thrust, lash, block.
Finally Maloy's spear struck it in the arm, the creature shrieking and flailing with its limbs, but it only gave Dimbulb an opening to swing at it. The hippo man's two-handed sword cut into the same arm Maloy had hit, tearing deep into the flesh.
Stab in the gut. Scramble away from the monster. That was Maloy's way in this fight.
Dimbulb, however, took a more straight forward approach.
“Evil thing of the Night!” Dimbulb bellowed as he bullrushed the monster, surprising and knocking it over and bashing its foot into pulp with the pommel of his blade.
It screeched and flailed as it rolled on the ground.
Before the monster or Maloy could react, Dimbulb chomped on its grotesque head, latching on firmly with a crunch. The panicking monster tried in vain to kick the hippo man, but managed to score only a mere bruise in the belly.
With barbaric and animalistic ferocity Dimbulb then shook the man of shadow around, his teeth digging in deeper into its head.
There was a sickening crack and crunch as its skull collapsed.
Maloy stood up, wiped the dirt and gore off him and looked at the unmoving body of the twisted being.
“Well, I guess that's the end of that then...” He said, leaning on his spear for support. He had begun to shake after the encounter. He hadn't felt fear during the fight, but now it all rushed in.
“We better take a quick look around and then head off to tell the others,” The elephant seal man said to Dimbulb whose eyes were all bloodshot with rage, drool mixed with blood dripping from the corner of his mouth.
“...and I want to make it absolutely clear that I, as a dwarf, do not approve of the words of the silent one,” Idar did her best to wash her hands from the incident between Edzul and Maloy. Sibrek and Astesh were still quite shocked by it all, worrying that such words might attract the attention of Darker Powers.
Tanzul didn't pay much heed to it. He was more worried about where the elephant seal man and the hippo man had gone. They had been away for some time now. Perhaps they were just having a talk, trying to figure things out? Maybe to calm down? It had been a nasty fight, certainly, but not anything that couldn't be overcome. He hoped they hadn't gone far and lost their way in the fog -- it was something that could certainly happen with Dimbulb.
“...it's just that these mountain folk from the deeps, they have these weird thoughts about the surface world. Many have never seen the sun, living all their lives in the dark,” Idar continued her rambling. “You can hardly blame them -- not that it makes this acceptable -- for misconceptions of Nature then. They probably fear it, too. Superstitious lot they are.”
Edzul who was a bit further off pleased of himself and gloating, stared icily at Idar.
“Us hill folk, on the other hand, we, we live both underground and on the surface,” Idar kept on going, Sibrek and Astesh listening to her more of courtesy than interest. “We understand
both ways of life: the life of the miner and that of the surface-dweller. We respect all the gods. Not just the gods of rock... So, just to be clear, again, despite Edzul being my kin, I do not approve of this. Not at all. No.”
A crashing approached the group from the fog-shrouded forest. Tanzul, Galel and Coni all whipped around to see what it was.
Maloy and Dimbulb emerged from the grey haze scampering and rushing to them, panting and looking distraught and frightened.
“We have to leave this place! We have to leave now!” Maloy yelled with a sense of urgency in his voice. “This place is the home to something very evil -- we saw it! We faced it! Gather your stuff and let's move! Now!”
Confused and alarmed, the group did as Maloy said and they headed out into the fog. As they walked, hoping to find their way out of the forest, the elephant seal man explained what had happened at the mound. All were shocked that they had been so close to the nest of something evil and not been aware of it. Pife almost fainted and they had to stop for a while.
The capybara folk Sibrek and Astesh prayed to Ôsed, while the llama man Osod asked Mater for guidance.
Eventually the fog cleared, but the rain kept pouring with no end sight.
They took their bearings, now that it was possible, and the uncertainty of where they were headed left. The journey could continue with a clear direction again.
The Forest of Rooters and its harrowing events were left behind and from the woodland's southern border the vast wetlands of the Teal Swamps opened up again.
There was not much talk during this part of the journey. Everyone was slightly dispirited or still disturbed by Edzul's tantrum, despite them making it out of the accursed fog in one piece. But at least the tension between several group members eased slightly after Coni and Osod brokered a truce between Maloy and Edzul along the way.
The scenery didn't change much as they made their way through the Teal Swamps: swathes of grass and reeds, murky bog ponds and the occasional tree and small patch of forest here and there. The rain kept coming, sometimes only a drizzle, sometimes a heavy downpour.
They followed a winding stream to the south as the day went on and the sun began to inch towards the western horizon behind the endless thick, dark clouds.
(Continued in next post...)