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<BR><I> Here is part 2 I hope you enjoy!
<BR>
<BR>Chris
<BR>
<BR>***********</I>
<BR>
<BR>
<BR>Metamor Keep
<BR>Winter Assault
<BR>
<BR>23 December 707CR - 3pm
<BR>Borne by a powerful upper level weather pattern, a bitterly cold wind
<BR>hissed a sibilant, sinister curse across the featureless plane of ice. Made
<BR>dark by the depths of the water over which it had frozen, the ice had the
<BR>look of obsidian, worn smooth by the constant winter wind. Located high
<BR>above the treeline, the alpine lake was a featureless black plane in a white
<BR>landscape, broken only by stone and the occasional hardy, tortured looking
<BR>shrub.
<BR>Out upon the center of this blackness was a collection of still shapes,
<BR>most of them thickly garbed in fur to ward off the bitter winter wind. They
<BR>sat in a rough circle, five of them in all, around a sixth figure sprawled
<BR>supine upon the ice. The five sat with legs crossed, backs straight under
<BR>their heavy winter garb, wispy trails of mist the only revelation that the
<BR>motionless figures lived. The sixth also breathed, but was not garbed
<BR>against the elements though it wore fur.
<BR>The supine creature seemed wrong somehow, its legs inhuman, the fur
<BR>that covered its body natural despite its hauntingly human appearance.
<BR>Appearing half hunting dog and half human, it was an amalgam of the two. A
<BR>thin red mist rose from the unclothed body, spiraling upward in seeming
<BR>defiance of the shrill wind hissing across the ice. From long, animalistic
<BR>feet, wrists, and brow the red mist rose from slashes in the flesh of the
<BR>female creature. The others sat at five points around her; at hands, feet,
<BR>and head. Scribed into the black ice was a circle which encompassed the
<BR>half-human beast, within which was scribed a five pointed star. The body's
<BR>spread limbs and head defined the five points of that star, the five others
<BR>sitting outside the ritual circle as they worked their magic upon the body
<BR>within.
<BR>Weather mage Kundar Lusk sat at her head, as the master of the ritual,
<BR>leading the intonations as he watched the blood-red mist rise from the
<BR>lesions in her flesh. The spell drew itself from the very life force of the
<BR>female bound within the circle. He did not know her name, but he was forced
<BR>to grant her a grudging respect for her temerity, her bravery. She had been
<BR>a spy, within the very walls of Nasoj's own bastion. Only carelessness of
<BR>one who knew her true nature had betrayed her presence, leading to her
<BR>capture attempting to send word to those to whom she owed allegiance.
<BR>She had proven strong and resistant to the interrogations of Nasoj's
<BR>inquisitioners, mages, and torturers, and had never broken. At least, never
<BR>broken in a manner that would make her speak. Her mind had shattered,
<BR>leaving her mad. All she knew now was terror, which Kundar had fostered to
<BR>assist in the working of his spell. Fear liberated more force from a soul
<BR>than any other emotion, even love.
<BR> Withdrawing his attention from the nearly completed weave of blood and
<BR>weather magic, he looked about at the four others arrayed upon the ice
<BR>before him. Kundar was a northerner, born and raised at the foot of
<BR>Horshiah, the great glacier, and found the dry cold to be refreshing. He
<BR>wore a minimum of garb, warmed by the magic he wove. Two of the others were
<BR>also of the northland, though not from as far north as Kundar. One was the
<BR>earth mage Kiyle Jan, who was nearly as icy as the lake upon which they
<BR>worked their magic. She was a vicious creature dedicated to war and death,
<BR>be it against those Lutins under their very command, or the Keepers they
<BR>would soon be facing. She simply liked to kill.
<BR> Kundar respected only her power, though he would have liked to break
<BR>her icy will. Her body was as lissome as any southlander courtesan, but her
<BR>attitude was all polar wolf. That she was subordinate to him in this
<BR>campaign irked her to no end, which gave him some satisfaction.
<BR> Huk Chjarikuk was a generalist mage, his talents covered the gamut of
<BR>magics, from fire to earth to weather. He was at the victim's right hand as
<BR>second to Kundar. Though he had a wide range of talents, they were all a
<BR>great deal weaker than any practitioner of specific forces. He was a
<BR>steady, calm contemplator, seemingly slow to reach any point of decision,
<BR>but swift to act once his mind was set. Kundar enjoyed having the man at
<BR>his right hand, for he was a follower, and worked well in Kundar's shadow.
<BR> The other two were less known to the weather mage, their magics being
<BR>almost completely alien to him, though both were similar practitioners of
<BR>blood rites. Tum Yi was from the east, a place he called the Dragon Sands,
<BR>but had little else to say on the matter. Not that he could say much, his
<BR>language being almost as alien as his meditative magics. The man wore even
<BR>less than Kundar, the discipline of his body being such that he seemed
<BR>immune to the elements. His magic was something Kundar could not identify,
<BR>seemingly equal parts alchemal and sacrificial, the bald man going through
<BR>prisoners and animals at a rate that left even the vicious Kiyle amazed.
<BR> The last and most miserable of their lot was the Sathmoran warrior
<BR>mage, Thorne. A young fellow not long past his final tests of Mastery. His
<BR>chosen force was fire and lightning, making him absolutely miserable in the
<BR>cold and dry north. His bitter hatred of those who banished him from the
<BR>south sent him north, where his undisciplined ambition helped him to rise
<BR>swiftly in the ranks of Nasoj's magical ranks. This was the man's first
<BR>campaign, though Kundar suspected that he was well versed with fighting by
<BR>magic and steel.
<BR> The man also held a simmering hatred for anyone more powerful or in a
<BR>place of power above him, which put him in confrontation with all the other
<BR>mages of their small circle on this mission, for he was the most minor of
<BR>them even if his power was among the most powerful. Kundar could not help
<BR>but chuckle at the soft southerner with his thick layering of furs and his
<BR>waste of magic in keeping himself warm.
<BR> Kundar turned his attention back to their prisoner, a Keeper far from
<BR>her home spying for their survival. She had worked for many years, if what
<BR>Kundar had learned was true, to help thwart Nasoj and his minions. She,
<BR>among them all, was not clad whatsoever. Runic patterns had been shaven
<BR>into her grey and brown pelt, some of which shimmered with active power
<BR>while others were quiescent. Her body did not feel the cold, despite the
<BR>fact she was literally frozen to the surface of the ice. Kundar had
<BR>invested a small tidbit of his weather spell to sustain her body's warmth,
<BR>lest she expire too swiftly.
<BR> With luck, the sustaining magic would keep her alive for a week or more
<BR>while the weather took its strength from the consumption of her spirit.
<BR>Once her soul was no more her body would swiftly fail, activating the last
<BR>of the runes shaven into her fur and etched into the ice. The resulting
<BR>heat would melt through the surface of the lake, obliterating the evidence
<BR>of their magery here and losing her corpse forever in the dark depths of the
<BR>alpine lake.
<BR>---
<BR> General Shatterbone met them near the upper treeline in the first
<BR>throes of a mighty blizzard, his fur lined leather armour tucked up under
<BR>his scarred greyish green chin. He glared up at the assemblage of taller
<BR>human mages as his personal retinue gathered closer around him. The wind,
<BR>briefly calm as the heavy warm air mass came in from the southwest pushed
<BR>aside the cold northern wind, left the snow falling in thick, heavy sheets
<BR>straight down.
<BR> Kundar came to a stop before the general, looking down upon the shrewd,
<BR>cunning Lutin war-chief. "Your forces prepared?" he asked in the common
<BR>tongue, forcing the Lutin to speak a language other than his own. The ugly
<BR>Lutin scowled, then nodded shortly.
<BR> "Yes." he turned and waved a hand toward the half-seen treeline a few
<BR>hundred paces further down the slope. "They slay watchers, scouts. Mole
<BR>near place. No warning."
<BR> "Good. They move once darkness has come." Kundar nodded as he walked
<BR>past the Lutin with little more regard than that necessary to give his
<BR>orders. The other mages, arrayed loosely out behind him in their concealing
<BR>white furs, said nothing, too depleted from their spellcasting. "A fog will
<BR>rise soon, and the storm will come with dawn. Tell them to dress warm, or
<BR>they shall die." Kundar could care less how many of the noisome beasts
<BR>would freeze to death in his blizzard, for even with half their number
<BR>frozen they would still have enough to overrun the Keep. They still had the
<BR>giants, trolls, and ogres to add their muscle to the Lutin's speed and
<BR>ferocity waiting in the wings.
<BR> He was more worried about their one surviving tundra mole, and its
<BR>positioning. Three others had died in the summer and fall of various
<BR>ailments, leaving them but one to continue their offensive. His feet
<BR>crunched through the thin, dry snow as he headed down the slope of the
<BR>mountain toward their pavilion within the distant treeline. They would
<BR>remain there through the night, recuperating their strength, and move to
<BR>follow the army with the dawn. He knew that they would face the harder
<BR>trek, into the teeth of the very blizzard that they had just summoned, but
<BR>he was confident in his ability to find his way in the very worst of
<BR>weather.
<BR> After all, he had been watching the passes from these very heights for
<BR>years, avoiding or decimating what few patrols ever came this high. He
<BR>heard the rubbing, squealing crunch of snow behind him as his retinue
<BR>followed, their own minds on whatever orders Nasoj had given them before
<BR>they left his citadel a month ago. Kundar had his orders, which were known
<BR>to him alone, and he knew that the others had their orders.
<BR> He simply wondered which of them had been ordered to slay him should he
<BR>falter, or who would do so no matter /what/ their orders had been.
<BR>---
<BR> The blizzard hit with the force of an angry god half way through the
<BR>night, threatening to rip their pavilion from its moorings. The mages paid
<BR>scant attention to the moan of the wind beyond their magically protected
<BR>canvas walls, intent upon their various meditations. The acolytes that had
<BR>erected the tent knew what weather would be coming, and had taken
<BR>appropriate measures to secure their dwelling.
<BR> Outside trees whipped and bent, their limbs shattering with the cold
<BR>and the force of the howling gale. The sound was muffled, almost inaudible
<BR>over the wind, but when a nearby tree was sundered, everyone heard it. Luck
<BR>prevented a stray limb from crashing down upon them, but not by much.
<BR>
<BR> Their armies fared worse, attempting to move into the teeth of the
<BR>blizzard, sheltered only by the short, dense pines through which they
<BR>traveled. They stayed high on the eastern and western slopes of the
<BR>mountains, just below the treeline, where there would be few, if any, farms
<BR>or grazing livestock. Those hardy souls they did find living at such
<BR>heights were quickly overrun and dispatched before they were able to escape
<BR>or cast warning spells.
<BR> Through the night they moved, setting a brisk pace despite the wind.
<BR>Heavy garments and showshoes helped them slog through the driving snow,
<BR>though countless bodies fell to the wayside, frozen even as they marched.
<BR>Those that fell were quickly stripped of everything usable by those
<BR>following them, leaving naught but a frozen body to be buried in the snow or
<BR>ravaged by the wolves that ghosted the army.
<BR> Lower on the slopes were the cavalry; Lutins riding huge dire wolves
<BR>thick with their winter pelts. They cleared the path, working as scouts and
<BR>skirmishers, locating larger farms and directing the armies around them so
<BR>that there would be no unnecessary battles that might risk detection. Those
<BR>huge, voracious beasts made swift prey of those that fell. Ogres and Trolls
<BR>followed in the train of the cavalry, herded along by the Giants that
<BR>commanded them. Even as far down the slopes as the wolves and giants
<BR>traveled they were still well above most of the agricultural lands of the
<BR>soft Keepers who huddled securely in their warm cottages in the bottom of
<BR>the broad valleys.
<BR> By dawn the greater majority of their forces had reached their staging
<BR>points and set up camps. The few tents were of whitewashed canvas to blend
<BR>in with the snow; erected for commanders and those mages that would support
<BR>the armies. Not that camouflage was a big issue with the blinding whiteness
<BR>of the driving snow. Soldiers bedded down where they were able. Being
<BR>hardy northern creatures that was not a great problem for them. Often
<BR>enough they lacked even the cover of trees on their tundra territories, and
<BR>blizzards were nothing new to them.
<BR> Scouts among the wolf riders were sent out to ward the perimeters of
<BR>the camps, kept in touch by their wolves' natural sense of location.
<BR>---
<BR>
<BR> Darkness came early with the growing force of the blizzard, turning
<BR>white-out into black-out. The winds picked up continually during the day,
<BR>making Kundar's trek toward the distant keep a laborious one. The mages'
<BR>circle only lost three acolytes in the trek, though, which they considered a
<BR>good balance considering the conditions. They made it to their staging area
<BR>shortly after dusk, guided by Kundar's weather sense and understanding of
<BR>the valley, stopping less than a mile from the Keep's northern curtain wall.
<BR> Around him gathered the other four mages, their acolytes, and several
<BR>dozen other mages that would be supporting the assault. They had set up
<BR>their command post in a thick copse of pines, stretching canvass from trunk
<BR>to trunk to help block out most of the wind, relying on the thick branches
<BR>of the trees to block both snow and wind.
<BR> Thus sheltered they went over their attack plan one last time, the
<BR>support mages nodding silently as they accepted their orders. Kundar and
<BR>his four would do nothing unless the Keep was somehow forewarned. His
<BR>skirmishers had reported that no one had made contact with the advancing
<BR>armies and survived. Those they had sensed attempting to make their way to
<BR>the Keep along the few roads were left alone so long as they did not stumble
<BR>across the Lutins. Kundar and his generals knew that the Keep would still
<BR>expect a few stragglers to brave the storm, both from the north and the
<BR>south. A sudden cessation of northern traffic would make them suspicious.
<BR> Once their plans were discussed and cemented together, those mages that
<BR>would command the Lutins, Giants, and other forces were let away by their
<BR>wolfrider escorts. Those that would be supporting the battle, or standing
<BR>in reserve, remained behind. Kundar and his circle would be doing nothing
<BR>during the initial assault save using their divinations to monitor the
<BR>progress. There had been no alerts, so they did not expect more than a
<BR>token resistance from those manning the walls.
<BR> This was not the greatest of battles Nasoj had ever planned, Kundar
<BR>knew, as he had been there for many planning sessions, but it was the best
<BR>that could be done before the armies became restive and began to disband.
<BR>Their earlier attempts at a summer campaign were undone by the actions of a
<BR>few brave keepers, either by accident or design. Those creatures were now
<BR>targets, to be slain wherever they might be found. A score of assassins had
<BR>been dispatched to scour the Keep once it was secured, their only orders
<BR>being to find and capture those specific Keepers.
<BR> A rat, a white rabbit, a skunk, a fox. The lord of the Keep, and the
<BR>leaders of the two major religious factions. They were focal points for the
<BR>Keepers, and their public executions would work to demoralize those
<BR>defenders that would undoubtedly band together in an attempt to resist the
<BR>new owners of Metamor.
<BR> The castle spirit was the express purview of other mages, and out of
<BR>Kundar's hands. Another small circle of Moranasi mages was focused on the
<BR>capture or distraction of the spirit, to prevent its intervention in their
<BR>assault. Kundar did not know where that secretive circle was, as they had
<BR>preceded the army by weeks.
<BR> He rubbed his hand across the amulet he wore around his neck as he
<BR>examined the maps one last time in the dim magelight hovering above the
<BR>table. Nasoj claimed that the amulet would protect him against the
<BR>lingering effects of the transformational spells, but he did not know how
<BR>far he could trust that claim. The magic had been altered by the Keepers
<BR>over the years, so it may not have any touch of the Great Mage any longer.
<BR>Each of the other mages in his circle possessed a similar amulet, though the
<BR>rest of the humans in the army did not. They were expected to assist in the
<BR>initial assault, then withdraw from the area affected by the spells.
<BR> He let the magelight wink out, taking a few moments to calm himself,
<BR>listening to the shriek of the wind across the canvas walls around their
<BR>shelter.
<BR>---
<BR> With the darkness came movement, like cockroaches in the shadows, as
<BR>dark forms rose from the flanks of the mountains surrounding the Keep.
<BR>Unseen, even against the white snow, due to the pure white of the world
<BR>surrounding the otherwise peaceful castle, those dark shapes swiftly swept
<BR>down toward their prey. The castle, unknowing, hulked large and solid
<BR>against the shriek of the wind as the invaders gathered at the base of the
<BR>walls. Milling about, the sound of their activities whipped away in the
<BR>moaning wind, their presence missed by those manning the top of the wall out
<BR>of sight some forty feet above.
<BR> Larger forms trudged up among those already milling about at the base
<BR>of the wall, long ladders carried between them. The long iron ladders were
<BR>quickly raised upright into the wind, their tops coming to rest against the
<BR>crenellations high above. The larger shadows moved to steady the wider
<BR>bottoms of their ladders as the smaller shadows quickly swarmed upward.
<BR> Some, already left cold and stiff by the bitter, unyielding cold, fell
<BR>from the ladders, or slipped on the leather-wrapped iron rungs. Regardless
<BR>of the method of their fall, it invariably proved fatal as they crashed
<BR>against the ice-coated walls and smashed down into those milling around
<BR>below. None of those grumbling shadows paid any heed, walking on the
<BR>corpses in their haste to ascend the ladders and let the battle finally be
<BR>joined.
<BR>
<BR> Pacing back and forth before the battlements, the guards atop the walls
<BR>clutched their heavy winter garments close about them in a vain attempt to
<BR>hold out the biting cold and stinging wind. They walked in pairs, making
<BR>contact with others as they moved from one tower to the next, turned, and
<BR>paced back the other way. They grumbled to one another, lost in the
<BR>darkness with only the wooden railing to one side and the cold stone on the
<BR>other to tell them where they stood upon the narrow parapets. None appeared
<BR>pleased to be there, though twice as many were there than would normally
<BR>have been the case.
<BR> Someone, some asinine, paranoid soul had claimed that they would be
<BR>attacked, on the eve of the most important holy day of the entire year. In
<BR>the middle of the worst blizzard in centuries.
<BR> At first glance, one may not have seen many of those guards amidst the
<BR>blowing snow and ice, their fur-lined garments caked with a rime of ice, but
<BR>they were for the most part visible to one another when they got close. One
<BR>of the castle mages had replaced the usual torches with spell-glows, giving
<BR>them at least a little light to see by.
<BR> Seth did not like those glaring yellow spheres of light, for they did
<BR>not burn with fire, or heat, or anything else he had ever known. Eli did
<BR>not countenance their creation, did not accept the foul taint of magic.
<BR>The ermine circled each one of the lights widely with each circuit of his
<BR>patrol, his companion shaking her head at his unbending intolerance of the
<BR>helpful aids. The human female was turning to give him a sharp reprimand
<BR>for leaving her side yet again when the ermine saw her shadow suddenly
<BR>double in size.
<BR> Staring in some confusion, he backed further away when she spun, the
<BR>shadow separating from her, then suddenly falling to the stones of the
<BR>parapet. As it did, the steady glow of the evil lights gleamed from its
<BR>face.
<BR> A Lutin face, split nearly in half by Alan's heavy sword. Suddenly
<BR>shadows were lurching toward them, appearing out of the snow like wraiths,
<BR>steel gleaming in the light as three more closed on Alan, whose sword
<BR>flashed and thrust. None seemed to notice the ermine, who's white fur
<BR>blended into the snow entirely save for the hard black dots on either side
<BR>of his muzzle.
<BR> Alan hollered, her voice almost entirely lost in the shrill cry of the
<BR>frozen wind, two of the shadows dropping heavily upon the first, barring the
<BR>third. "Raise the alarm!" Seth finally heard as a shadow blocked the
<BR>nearest magic glow, the source of that shadow dropping over the lip of the
<BR>castle wall and raising a huge axe. It was twice the size of any Lutin Seth
<BR>had ever seen. Staggering against the hard wooden railing, the ermine spun
<BR>and raced away as Alan went down under a furious blow from the ogre's
<BR>massive axe.
<BR> He pelted past shadow after shadow as the invaders milled around on the
<BR>parapets, none of them giving the white ghost slipping past them any regard
<BR>as they slaughtered anyone they found manning the walls. Vivid red dashed
<BR>the monochromatic coldness of the winter night, the sight crushing Seth's
<BR>soul, calling up a wailing cry from his small chest. His horrified cry went
<BR>unheard, even as he reached the distant tower and hammered on the door with
<BR>his small fists. Shadows loomed close, casting the wooden portal into
<BR>darkness as the nearest magic light was occluded by an attacker.
<BR> Seth dropped, scrambling away just as Lutin axe hammered into the
<BR>center of the door, making it shudder heavily. The ermine slid and stumbled
<BR>toward the far edge of the wall, knowing there was a sleuce there so that
<BR>rain could drain off the parapets. Finding the narrow, curved path, he
<BR>plunged forward. The Lutin did not pursue, losing the white shadow in the
<BR>driving snow as it slid around the curve of the tower. Instead of
<BR>attempting the narrow path the Lutin turned back to join its brethren at
<BR>battering upon the doorway.
<BR> Seth reached the bottom of the walls in short order, ignoring the
<BR>numbing cold of water soaking into his fur, and charged as swiftly as his
<BR>short legs would allow across the bailey. He knew that if he kept moving in
<BR>a straight line he would end up against the wall of the keep itself, where
<BR>he could find a door, and raise the alarm.
<BR> They were under attack! On Christmas Eve, of all times. Nasoj and his
<BR>forces truly were as evil as every legend had painted them.
<BR> A shape suddenly plunged out of the white darkness, slamming with a
<BR>sickening crunch onto the stone in front of the startled ermine. He knew
<BR>the wolf too, Lanscome, a kind fellow who never could keep his armour on
<BR>straight. Now he would never have to worry about it any more, for he had no
<BR>chest to cover with it, nor a left arm to put it on.
<BR> Death did not care, not one whit, claiming the wolf's spirit with the
<BR>same swift brutality as it had claimed Alan. The ermine, still screaming
<BR>soundlessly into the white nightmare around him, found himself stumbling
<BR>over other still forms scattered about the base of the wall. He heard the
<BR>harsh bellowing voices of the attackers mingling hauntingly with the shrill
<BR>howl of the wind as he fell over yet another body, this of a Lutin who had
<BR>stepped just a little too far in its initial climb over the wall to land
<BR>face first in the courtyard below. Seth scrambled over the swiftly
<BR>stiffening corpse, his paws stained red with its blood, and continued on all
<BR>fours.
<BR> He found the Keep wall with his head, an impact which left him crumbled
<BR>and stunned for several breaths before he was able to regain his wits and
<BR>stand once more, moving to his right along the wall. He prayed that he
<BR>found a door before he was guided back around to one of the towers by the
<BR>wall, for the first time in his life truly hoping that his tiny voice was
<BR>being carried to his God.
<BR> Apparently his prayers were heard, for he came to a door within a few
<BR>short strides. Grasping the latch, he lifted it and plunged himself against
<BR>the door even as the wind howled into the opening. Just within the doorway
<BR>the castle was plunged into sudden darkness as the torches were snuffed by
<BR>the cold wind. Another light sprang into existence swiftly enough, hovering
<BR>brightly over the head of a startled raccoon dressed in somber black
<BR>tailored festively for the ongoing celebrations. At his side was a skunk,
<BR>her eyes wide as she clutched the raccoon's arm, pulling her tail close
<BR>around her as the cold wind howled down the passageway.
<BR> "Lutins!" Seth screamed, "We are." he was never able to finish his
<BR>statement as a sudden agony blossomed in his back, sending him staggering
<BR>forward a pace, filling his lungs with blood as his head dropped. Standing
<BR>four inches out of his chest was the rusted, pitted tip of a Lutin saber,
<BR>which suddenly vanished as the rapidly dying ermine was yanked backwards.
<BR>His last sight was of the raccoon drawing his hands together, the sudden
<BR>bright flash leaping from those hands lost as the ermine's world faded, the
<BR>hard stone that met his falling body unfelt and unseen.
<BR>
<BR>
<BR> And so it begins.
<BR>
<BR>***
<BR>
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