"My Queen." Lorbam Brightbury, Champion of the Walls of Rhyming, bowed, his muddied armor dripping on the cave spider silk rugs at his feet. Behind him, the flaps of the tent rustled shut, their expensive embroidery out of place in this war camp. He put that thought firmly out of his mind. Now was not the time to mention the nobilities love of comfort and excess.
The Poet-Queen, his Queen, Morul Trailedtorch, looked up from her reports, her steel blue eyes drooping with exhaustion underneath her adamantium helm. He armor, though spotless, seemed to hang on her frame as if it bore the weight of the entire world. The etching on it showing past victories of their nation, so much hope. He must have been looking for a time because she need to motion for him to continue.
"The goblins have outflanked us to the north and south. Our thrust westward is blunted by ranks of speargoblins and bowgoblins. The elves are reporting heavy casualties in their skirmishes and the men have retreated to prepared positions south of the Hills of Roasting." He paused, unsure of how to continue.
She waved him silent before he could, however. "I know. Reports have been filtering in all day about this . . . tragedy. Shin has refused my prayers." She leaned back, her obsidian throne grinding at her armor, and closed her eyes. "How are our warriors holding out against them?" Lorbam knew better then to become familiar with the nobility and had prided himself on his distance from them. Still, the queen seemed to have grown even colder then usual as of late. However, it was his duty to ensure the safety of his nation and carry out the will of his Queen. Above all, Lorbam took his duty very seriously.
"To be blunt, my Queen, poorly. The recruits are falling like flies and even with our truly legendary dwarves bolstering them, we are losing more and more each moment. The goblins, in a rare moment of ingenuity, have deforested the field between the southern and northern hills. It must have taken them nearly a year to destroy such a jungle." Lorbam shook his head. They must have had help from somewhere. He left that thought unvoiced.
"Regardless, our southern flank is breaking, the recruits in a rout back toward our camps along the river. The northern flank is holding, but I've received reports of a large force of bowgoblins being sent there as well as . . ." He paused. The severity of what had to be said made him question how to say it. ". . . demons, my Queen." Her eyes snapped open, wide, at the word.
"Demons? Here? How many?" Her mind drank in the enormity of his words. It had taken the Mountainhomes of the Walls of Rhyming almost a full century to prepare and launch this offensive. The wealth of their trading nation had been poured into armor, weapons, rations and defensive positions from which to launch such an undertaking. Add the treat of demonic invasion to he reports she already had received . . .
"Reports are sketchy, as few who face them survive. Before the last dwarf messenger went mad, he mentioned a 'sea of fiery red' and 'an army of hell.' Even without the demons, however, our thrust toward the goblinhomes has failed, my Queen." He stared directly into her eyes, their strange dullness a polar opposite to his own bright and fierce eyes. "Even should we reach their obsidian towers, past all the bowgoblins and demons, we would loose too many dwarves to properly breach them. The Two Hundred should be able to bolster our retreat, buy us time for an orderly withdraw."
Queen Morul sat gazing at him for a long moment, seemingly unable to grasp the monumental disaster that loomed before them all. The flaps of the tent stirred briefly at some passing breeze, thick with the smell of ash and sulfur. Somewhere in the distance, a mule whinny-hawed at his handler. The faint sounds of orders being barked drifted in. For a time, neither said a word.
"You are wrong in that, Champion." The Queen's voice rang out clear and strong, despite the exhaustion evident in her form. "Of our Two Hundred Legends, only ten remain." Lorbam gasped. He knew it was bad out there, but this was catastrophic! The pride of the Walls of Rhyming, slain by goblin hands. He stumbled backwards, falling to a knee as the enormity of it washed over him. Kadol Tuftgrinder, he who could slay ten goblins with his twin blades; Kikrost Heartsway, the mother of legends herself, able to shoot a titan in its eye from four hundred paces away. A hundred other names and faces leapt to his mind. A hundred stories, of friends and companions, of sieges and war.
"Yes. Today, the Walls of Rhyming has lost a greater portion of it's strength then it had ever before. Today, because of the failure of our trade partners in coming to our aid, I have denied Shin Silvertrade." Lorbam had not the strength to respond. For many years, Shin Silvertrade had been the deity of the Kings and Queens of the land. True, some had worshiped Vosh or Doduk the Bronze Musics, but most had followed Shin and the Walls of Rhyming had grown wealthy for it. The Queen closed her eyes wearily, though her voice still shone with power. "Aran, Lord of Strength, it is he who now holds my soul. For truly, it is strength we must have for the trials to come."
"Champion, recall all troops to the eastern side of the river Hatetugged the Glitter of Climates. Lead the goblins into their own field. We'll have to set up ambushes of green recruits to lead them on," she held up her hand at his intake of breath, "else they will gather and attack enforce." She looked at him with those hard, tired eyes. "Some sacrifices must be made, Champion." He swallowed and nodded, understanding her orders but not able to face them just yet. "Mass our crossbowdwares on the eastern side of the river and destroy the bridge once the last of the dwarves are across. We'll force them to wither in our rain of fire."
"What of the other bridges, my Queen?"
"Station the remaining Legends at those with the melee recruits we have left and support them with crossbowdwarves once the tide of goblins splits. As much as I'd like to destroy every bridge from here to the Tight Sea, I can't afford to cut off the plains so soon." She stood, her shoulders firm. Motioning to some unseen servants, she began to fasten her armor tighter about her chest and waist. "I will head to the next bridge north to support the efforts there. You head to the south." The Queen yanked a hammer out of a nearby stand, letting the masterwork object fall to the floor, like so much kindling. All around the tent, orders flew and dwarves prepared to head out, oblivious to the wealth they left behind.
"Today, the goblins of the Torments of Uncertainty will know the power of dwarven rage."