A Brief History of the Expedition to Settle Wallpearl: Part II
There were multiple reports that came to the court in Oilhonor about what happened at Wallpearl; but, the most expected: a reproachful response from the easterly elves, never came. In late 103, Urdim was in correspondence with an elven scholar that had traveled to view the remains of the old human monastery in the Braided Desert. Urdim asked why the elves had abstained from directly contacting Wallpearl. Similar expeditions lead by the Id Shis clan had met with angry condemnation a year prior. By then we had also become aware of an exploratory expedition the elves had undertaken to Tangnathir in 75, and testimony had confirmed the initial expedition to Wallpearl had seen elven sails out in the sea during their only summer. The response was succinct:
We felt no need to assist. We saw that those who inhabited that island were capable. Your expedition was simply blind, and needed to be made to see them.
To pick back up with Nish Goldenforded:
Mor had come with the one migrant train from Flaxenmanor. I think she was some kind of drifter, before she came to the island. But she seemed to understand it. And she was uncooperative because of that, from the start. Mebzuth, didn't come out much by that time. He stopped helping us assemble the ale hall, he'd just give us orders through me. When someone would fall, he'd say the bears would come down in the fall and go back to his writing. Mor got angrier every time. It was after we found the weaponsmith Feb's hand in camp one morning that Mor convinced me to square away enough supplies to buy equipment. The bears weren't coming, but we couldn't make Meb understand that. He just kept burning things in his fireplace and waving us off.
The merchants from Adilkovest provided me with their ledger, showing the sale of 1 crate of food for an old copper mace that they had bought from some human's in a settlement named Newbrush. Nish continued:
Mor said, she had to do something. She wasn't ever the most physical of people. I tried to stop her because of that. She refused. She left camp one night, when we knew Ibmatnentuk Er was around. The ravens had gone quiet. When the birds went quiet, that meant he had killed them, and would be coming to the camp next. Mor shoved past me as I was locking up for the night, barricading the door as we'd taken to doing at that point. There wasn't much. Just a bellowing howl, and nothing else. When we went looking for Mor in the morning, we found her because she had struck Asen, as he tried to steal her mace from what he'd thought were her dead hands. She looked horrible, but it was the first time I'd seen her smile in weeks. Her mace was covered in fur and blood, and she clutched it desperately. Using it to drag her useless legs along as she pushed to the treeline, as another howl let out. We were starting to run back to camp when we heard it. But she crawled towards it.
For a month, the settlement stabilized. Attacks from the beast had ceased, though their makeshift guardswoman disappeared. This gave them time to build a wall that stands at Wallpearl to this day. The cuttings stopped as well. It was found in recovered notes that the expedition leader sternly objected to this, striking a member of the expedition when they refused his orders. By that point though, he'd already been replaced by Nish as expedition leader. Much of Nish's account from here is likewise filled in by his books that he kept. There is much about the efforts of obtaining the stone necessary to construct their defensive keep. Hours recorded for the working day, run into the 12 and 16 hour shifts. Israthian and Kestian elements of the expedition offered parallel petitions to commemorate the Beast for the settlement's victory against it and for it's valorous defense of them, before both petitions dissolved as they fell into infighting over which it was. The statue was still built, and erected in the town square, where it stands to this day.
It sounds insane, but it did defend us. I don't know, what insanity it and Mor had for one another, but they slew countless creatures out there for 2 seasons. Running about and brawling themselves, before melting back into the forest. I think I saw the beast once then, at the edge of the settlement. It stood at the gate, and saw our statue. Covered in blood, it was red. Like a ruby idol. It simply turned away. I think it was satisfied then. But that, was right before the end. We had a village meeting. The few of us that were left. Meb had taken to saying that a relief force would arrive in spring, but it'd been 2 seasons since we'd seen anyone by that point. We lit the signal fires, on the coast to hail a passing ship for aid.
The remaining accounts come from the merchant sailors that recovered the expedition. What they found, was a flight of birds too numerous to count having ravaged the village. One especially large bird being found beneath the foot of Nish, collapsed in exhaustion by the doors to the bunkhouse. Which is why his account stops there. Records from the boat, and the receiving port, indicate that there were 2 dwarves barricaded in the keep that were likewise retrieved. Mebzuth being amongst them, refused to leave. Remaining in his room, and saying that he would hold out until relief arrived. Insisting that it would, and barricading his door until he was left to his fate.
It is difficult to tell what mania took him. Fey, enchanting dwarves from afar drive us to insanity, can we not fulfill our goals for them. There are persistent rumors that the Baron of Fortressmerge had discovered the misdirection Mebzuth Brassoils had used upon him, and that there was a hammerer waiting for Brassoils to step off the boat when they reached port. It is simply known that when the relief force, lead by future expedition leader to Wallpearl Alath Toradzuntir arrived a season later, Mebzuth's study was abandoned. All of his papers having been burned.
Following this failure, the Guild for Surveyors and Geogrpahers were commissioned to verify all expeditionary plans. The request of Alath Toradzuntir to recover Wallpearl, being the first to undergo that rigorous review. My expedition was the next after that.