Frey looked at Krisvel, although his cheeks were in shadow, he saw a tear shine. Their faces were very close to each other. Behind them, the wisps of mist rising from the river's surface had thickened rapidly, and they could barely see the water. Krisvel moved closer to the powerful figure of Frey.
"If he hadn't come this far, he wouldn't have met you."
They kissed awkwardly, tentatively, barely touching lips. Then, Frey bent down to take her long hair in her hands. They leaned toward each other again, embracing more greedily as the second kiss deepened. Passionate, hands began to travel and explore the other's body over the thick layer of cloth that covered Krisvel's body and the robust plate armor that Frey possessed.
They leaned in too far, and Krisvel gave a little exclamation as they fell from the trunk of the tree and sprawled on the soft, damp earth.
"My armor and cloak are muddy." Frei said.
“Perhaps it would be better if you took it off. We could lie on your cape and my cloak, because the ground is wet.”
Beneath the shadows of the deadly mountains, sheltered by mist and illuminated by moonlight, they made love.
♦ ♦ ♦
“Where have you been, Frey, and why do you look so pleased with yourself?” Elysia inquired sullenly.
"Next to the river." Frey replied innocently. "Walking."
“You have chosen a bad night to go out for a walk.” Elysia replied at the same time that she raised a thin eyebrow. “Look at how the fog is thickening. It is not natural.”
Elysia felt her fear seep into her bones, and her right hand rested involuntarily on the hilt of her sword. She suddenly remembered the mist that covered the wastelands surrounding the Circle of Stones a few weeks ago, and what that mist hid. And she looked over her shoulder into the darkness.
"If you're right." Home Frey “We should tell Dieter and the baron.”
“I have already informed the baron's master-at-arms, and they have doubled their guard. It's the only thing they're willing to do."
"And what are we going to do?"
“It's my turn to get some sleep, Frey. It's your turn to stand guard."
Elysia lay down in the back of the wagon, on some sacks of grain, and wrapped her cloak tightly around her. The mist continued to thicken and muffled all sounds except Frey's restless breathing.
When Elysia finally managed to sleep, she had gloomy nightmares in which the dead rose from their graves.
♦ ♦ ♦
In the distance, a horse neighed uneasily, and a huge hand pressed against Elysia's mouth. She fought furiously using her claws as she wondered if Lars had come looking for revenge.
“Shut up, cat girl! Something is coming. Don't make the slightest noise."
Elysia, in a daze, came fully awake. Her eyes were dry and tired, and her muscles ached from sleeping on the grain sacks. She felt exhausted and without energy.
“What is it, Frey?” she asked her quietly, but Frey gestured her to be quiet while she sniffed the air.
"Whatever it is, it's been dead a long time."
Elysia shivered and pulled her cloak tighter around her body. She felt fear start to churn in the pit of her stomach, and as the meaning of Frey's words became fully apparent, she had to fight to suppress the terror that washed over her.
She peered out into the mist that covered the land and blocked vision beyond a spear's length. Straining her senses to the max, she could barely make out the wagon in front of her. She glanced over her shoulder, afraid that some ghastly figure from the shadows might creep up behind her.
His heartbeat sounded like a rumble in his ears as she remembered Manfred's words. He imagined bony hands reaching out to grab her and carry her away into a deep dark grave. Her muscles felt as if they had frozen, and he had to force them to move in order to bring his hand to the hilt of his sword.
“I'm going to take a look around. If there is any enemy, I will take the Tank Role, you take care of protecting Krisvel.” Frey whispered, and before Elysia could argue with that decision or follow him, Frey quietly stepped down from the carriage and vanished into the surrounding darkness.
At that moment, she felt completely alone. It was like waking up from a nightmare to find herself in an even worse one. She was isolated in the dark, dank mist, and she knew that just out of range of her perception lurked ravenous, fearsome creatures. Her sixth sense told her that it was, and that stepping away from the carriage meant death.
And yet, as Frey had said, Krisvel was out there, sleeping in Mrs. Winter's wagon. She imagined her lying there as an immeasurable force slammed into the door and the wood sagged inward to reveal…
She drew her weapon and jumped out. The thud of her feet seemed to him as loud as the tolling of a bell; her senses were extremely heightened by fear. He strained to make out details as he made his way around the outer circle of carts to where he knew Krisvel was.
Each step seemed to take forever, and she cast wary glances around her for fear that something would sneak up behind her. She described detours around the deep shadow areas. She wanted to scream with all her might to alert the camp, but her survival instincts prevented her from doing so. If she screamed, she drew the attention of the dire onlookers…and that would mean death.
A figure stepped out of the shadows, and Elysia raised her sword. Her heart jumped into her throat, until she noticed that the figure was covered in leather armor and a metal helmet. "A guard." she thought to herself, and relaxed. But when the figure turned, Elysia nearly screamed.
The face was devoid of flesh, and the silvery light of the moon was lost in the empty sockets of its eyes. Age-gnawed teeth smirked at her from the lipless mouth, and then she saw that the helmet she had originally mistaken for a guard's was bronze, covered in verdigris, and etched with runes that surely betrayed its existence. It was a piece of magical armor. From the creature's tattered tunic and cloak, she caught a stench of mold and rotting leather.
As her figure swung at him with her rusty weapon, Ella Elysia stood for a moment motionless; then, reflexively, she pulled away from her hastily to her side. The thing's sword cut lightly across her ribs, and her pain seared her flank. She then noticed in the movement of the ancient tendons that showed under the paper-thin skin of the hand that held the weapon, and she countered with a blow aimed at her neck. She was able to move her body thanks to the training received by Frey, even though her mind was in horror.
The blade pierced the creature's slender neck, and several vertebrae cracked. Her second blow slashed across her chest like a butcher's cleaver through her bone. The warrior from beyond the grave fell like a puppet with its strings cut.
As if Elysia's blows had been a signal, the night was filled with moving figures. She heard the crack of splitting wood and the cries of terror from the animals, as if a spell holding them mute had been broken. At some other point, Frey bellowed into the night her war cry.
Elysia ran through the mist and nearly bumped into Dieter as he stepped out of a wagon. He was fully clothed and clutching a large axe.
"What is happening?" she asked her yelling over the din of screams.
“They attack us… They are undead.” Elysia replied, and the words left her lips in ragged gasps.
"Enemies!" Dieter yelled. "To the weapons!"
He uttered a war cry akin to a wolf's howl, and a few weak responses came from the surroundings.
Elysia decided to make a dash for Krisvel's quarters, but figures stepped out of the shadows between two chariots, stabbing at her with long, curved swords. She dodged one to the side and parried the other with her sword. Immediately, two new skeletal creatures gave him impudent smiles. She flung her sword at the leg of one, and it fell the moment the edge pierced her knee.
Mind numb with terror, Elysua fought instinctively; she jumped over the weapon with which the being that was prone on the ground was attacking her, and then she nailed a blow with her heel and broke its spine. Almost in unison, she traded sword blows with the other, until she finally cut him to pieces.
She then saw that two of those monsters were smashing the door of Mrs. Winter's wagon, exactly as she had feared they would. From inside her came the sound of a chant that she assumed was a prayer, and she prepared to charge, but her eyes were dazzled by a sudden blue flash. Behind the lightning strikes, a powerful smell of ozone filled the air, overpowering even the stench of rot. When she could see again, the remains of the two skeletal monsters were lying on the steps of the wagon.
In the doorway stood Mrs. Winter, calm and unruffled, her left hand encircled by a halo while her index finger released a few light girls. She looked at Elysia and gave her an encouraging nod.
Behind the sorceress, a mute Krisvel pointed over Elysia's shoulder. She turned to find a dozen undead before her, bearing down on her. At the same time, she heard Dieter and his men running to meet the warriors from beyond the grave, so she joined the charge.
For the catgirl, the night then turned into tumultuous chaos as she hacked her way through the camp in search of Frey. At one point, the mist thinned, and she pushed trembling children under a cart away from the bodies of their dead parents. The man lay dressed in a nightshirt, and the woman, near him, gripped a broom handle like a spear.
Elysia heard a noise and turned to face a gigantic warrior from beyond the grave, who was on top of her. Somehow, she survived the attack.
Dieter and Elysia fought back to back, until they found themselves in a pile of bones crumbling to dust. Then the battle receded from the catgirl as the mist thickened again, and for a moment she found herself alone and surrounded by the piercing screams of the dying.
Then a passing figure attacked her, and they exchanged blows. Suddenly Elysia saw that it was Lars. He wore a frozen smile, revealing the holes of his missing teeth, and foamed at the mouth with terror. Frantic, the man lashed out at Elysia, for he had gone mad with fear.
"Damn whore!" she gasped as she unleashed a sword strike that would have brought down a tree.
The catgirl ducked to let the weapon pass her and delivered a sweeping thrust that pierced the hunter's heart. Lars sobbed as he died, and Elysia wondered just how mad the man had really gone. If the hunter had killed Elysia, her death could have been attributed to the attackers. Then she returned to the fray.
Turning a corner, she was met by a score of warriors from beyond the grave being pushed back by the furious thrust of Frey's greatsword. Suddenly, after a few flashes, the area around him was empty. She turned her head to look for Mrs. Winter to thank her, but the woman had vanished into the mist. When she looked forward, she saw Frey stunned but still maintaining his composure.
Sometime before dawn, the raiders fell back into the hills, leaving Baron Von Deyl's warriors staring at ruined carriages and corpses.
As the first light of morning appeared, Elysia watched warily as Frey inspected the rubble of the ancient stone arch. The stench of stale air and rotting bones rising from within nauseated him. She turned to look down the mountain, where the surviving outcasts were setting up funeral pyres from the remains of the chariots to cremate the dead. Nobody wanted to bury them so close to the mountains.Elysia heard Frey growl with fierce satisfaction, and she turned around again. Frey was expertly running his hand over the broken stones, on the surface of which the engraved runes formed a faint web, and then he raised his eyes and gave her a wild smile.“There is no doubt, catgirl; the runestones that guarded the entrance were split from the outside.”Elysia looked at him as suspicion washed over him. She felt enormous fear.“Looks like someone has given the Von Deyl Curse a hand.” she whispered.♦ ♦ &diam
Elysia ducked just as an arrow splintered the wood of the parapet before her. She bent down to pick up a crossbow from the hand of the guard who had been killed when an arrow pierced her neck. From her He groped for a bolt and struggled to load the weapon with it; finally, she got it.She jumped to her feet. Fire arrows flashed overhead like shooting stars, and from behind her came the smell of burning. Elysia looked down from the parapet, and she saw the goblin wolf riders surrounding the camp like a pack of beasts rounding up a herd of sheep. She saw the green skin of the horsemen gleam in the light of the flaming arrows, which also highlighted the yellow of their eyes and fangs."There must be hundreds of them." Elysia thought, and she mentally thanked Frey for the presence of the moat, the stakes, and the wooden wall that her partner had made them build. At the time, it had seemed like an unnecessary effort to them, and Frey was cursed by everyone; but now the cons
The corpulent corpse of Dieter lay in the doorway of the Baron's bedroom with one side of his head caved in. Elysia imagined she would bolt out the door in a rage when a prepared enemy struck her from the side.She leaped like a lioness over the body, rolling to the ground before standing up and looking around the room. The old baron lay in bed with a knife through his heart, his blood soaking the bandages on his chest and the sheets.The catgirl glared at the chair Manfred was sitting on. He had the sword stained with blood."The curse has been fulfilled at last." the playwright stated in a strained voice, which also contained a high-pitched note of hysteria.He looked up, and Elysia shivered because Manfred's face seemed like a mask, as if something strange was looking at her from inside her."I knew it was my destiny to end the curse." declared Manfred as if making a comment to pass the time. “I knew it from the moment I killed my mother.
After the calamitous events with the Von Deyls, we set off deep into the shadowy mountains. It was a long and hard journey, and the mountains we traversed didn't make it any easier. The hunger, the hardships and the constant threat of the goblins that roamed the area did not help my mental state; perhaps I was particularly sensitive when I first beheld the dingy grandeur of the ancient ruined city-fortress of the dwarves, lost among those remote peaks for so long. In any case, I remember that I had a terrible omen regarding what we were going to find in it and, as will be seen, my fears were fully justified...Elysia, 'The Adventures of the Dark Hero', vol. I,Printed in Riverheim, Arcadia.♦ ♦ ♦A scream echoed through the cold mountain air, and Elysia drew her sword and went on guard. Snowflakes were falling and an icy wind ruffled her long black hair. She threw her woolen cloak over her right shoulder to fr
“In the name of the son, you have been well! We were in a bit of trouble,” declared the tall, dark-haired warrior, at the same time making the Sign of the cult of the triumvirate on his chest. He was a handsome man despite his rough appearance. His armor, though dented, was of the highest quality, and the intensity of his gaze made Elysia uncomfortable. "Apparently, gentlemen, we owe you our lives" added the sorcerer, who was also richly dressed. His brocade robe was edged with gold thread, and scrolls covered in mystic symbols were attached to rings that adorned it. His long blond hair was cut in a peculiar way, since from the center of the wavy strands rose a crest although it was somewhat short. Elysia wondered if it was the badge of some mystical order. The armored man's laugh rang out like thunder. “It is the prophecy, Johann. Didn't the priestess say that one of our brothers from Lothal would help us? Praise be to the father! It's a good sign, no doubt." <
All that long day, as they approached the wall, Elysia realized how much those ancient structures had suffered. What from a distance produced a sense of timeless strength and security, on closer inspection became as dilapidated as the road they were traveling on.The wall that, like a stone curtain, blocked the passage into the valley was four times the height of a man and passed between sheer sheer precipices. The signs of neglect were obvious, like the moss that grew between the cracks in the huge stone blocks, the channels that rainwater had made in them, and the yellow patches of lichen. Some areas were blackened as if by great tongues of fire, and a large section of the wall had collapsed.Her companions kept silent, because desolation covered the group like a shroud. Elysia felt depressed and nervous. She had the sense that the spirits of old were watching them as they pondered the crumbling remnants of that ancient greatness, and at no time did she take her hand
From the window of the tower where the dwarfs had lodged them, Elysia looked down the cobbled street. Outside, the snow had begun to fall; behind her, the others argued in low voices."I don't like it," Zauber said. “Who knows how extensive an underground area can be? We could search to the end of the world and not find the sword. I thought the dwarfs were guarding it.”“We must have faith.” Aldred replied, his tone calm and implacable. “The Father wants us to find the sword, and we must trust that he will guide us to it.”“Aldred, if Father wishes the sword to be returned, why didn't he place it in the hands of your three brothers who have gone before us?” Zauber asked, a hint of hysteria creeping into his voice.“Who am I to speculate on the All-Father's motivations? Maybe it wasn't the right time. Perhaps he wants to test our faith. In me you will not find an unbeliever. You don't have to come with
“What has Priestess given you, Sir Frey?” Johann Zauber wanted to know, and Frey abruptly put the document in the magician's hand.“It looks like a map of the city, surely a copy created by a Chronicler. It seems to cover all the ground that Prince Beliar's expedition explored.In the light filtered by the crystals above, the sorcerer inspected it, then scratched his head. Elysia looked over his shoulder and saw only tiny runes scrawled and connected with lines of different colored ink. Some lines were thick, others thin, and some dotted."It doesn't look like any map I've ever seen," declared the wizard. "I don't see him head or tail.Frey's lips curved into a contemptuous smile.“I'd be surprised if you turned it on, because it's written in Engineer code. Thanks to a friend, I am barely able to understand it.”"We are in your hands, sir Frey, and in the Father's," the Paladin said. "Lead us."
“Take the sword!” Elysia yelled at him.But the stunned Frey was in no condition to heed the advice, and besides, he wanted to spill blood. He took an unsteady step toward Oleg, who was standing where he had left him, howling as he clutched his nose. Then, hearing Frey's staggering footsteps, she looked up and let out a tremendous bellow of anger and pain. He rushed toward his foe, crouching low and arms outstretched, intending to once again ensnare the dark hero in a deadly embrace. Frey remained where he was as the monster charged into a thunderous race towards him, as unstoppable as a runaway horse-drawn chariot.Elysia didn't want to look… The mutant was big enough to crush Frey, but she couldn't look away in horror.Oleg reached where Frey was. His massive arms began to close, but at the last second Frey ducked and dove between the monster's legs, then spun around and lashed out with the chain, which wrapped around the mutant's ankle. Fre
"Ulber?" I ask. Ulber Roger?"Do not call me that way!" The man's voice approached the scream. "Address me as 'Sir'.""Do you know this idiot?" Frei asked.Elysia nodded. Ulber Roger was a philosophy friend of Elysia's owner before the catgirl had murdered her mistress and escaped from her. He had been a quiet young man, very studious and could always be found in libraries according to his mistress. He had probably never exchanged more than a dozen words with her in the two years he had been friends with her mistress. He also remembered that Roger had vanished. There was a bit of a scandal… something to do with some missing library books, and he also remembered that some Inquisitors had shown interest."Stop!" Roger yelled at him in his thin, irritating voice. "You are my prisoners and you will do as I command for the remainder of your wretched lives."“Will we do as you bid us for the rest of our worthless lives?” Elysia looked
Elysia noticed that all the patrons were looking at the innkeeper strangely, as if he had spoken at the wrong time, or said something they had never expected him to say. But she dismissed that thought. Maybe they were just scared. Who wouldn't be with a servant of the Dark Powers housed in the castle that overlooked the town?“He is wicked like a dragon with a toothache. Isn't that right, Helmut?"The peasant the innkeeper had just spoken to froze in place like a rat staring at a snake."Isn't that right, Helmut?" the innkeeper repeated."It's not so bad," replied the farmer. "Considering how evil warlocks are.""Why don't you storm the castle?" Frey asked, and Elysia thought that if the dark hero couldn't guess the answer from the beaten-dog looks of those louts he was more stupid than he looked."Because the monster is there, sir" replied the farmer at the same time that he dragged his feet and looked at the floor again."The
The idea must occur to readers of these pages from time to time that my companion and I were under the influence of some curse.Without any effort on our part, and without any desire on my part, we managed to meet all manner of worshipers of the Dark Ones. I myself often suspected that we were really doomed to oppose his plans without ever understanding why; but such speculation never bothered the Dark Hero.Frey took all such events as they came, with a groan and a resigned shrug, and dismissed any such speculation as that of a useless and vain philosopher.However, I have thought long and hard on the matter, and I have the feeling that if there is a power in this world that opposes the servants of evil, perhaps it was the one who sometimes guided our steps and even protected us. What is certain is that we often stumbled upon some of the most outrageous and malevolent schemes perpetrated by the most unlikely of evildoers...Elysia, 'The Adventures of the
The desire to kill reverberated through Jasmine's brain, and the darkness rooted in her soul threatened to overtake her completely. Madness bubbled through her veins, and bloodlust flooded her as if she were a drug; her carnage gave him ecstatic pleasure. She wanted to find the black-armored warrior and kill him, for of all the enemies she had faced, he was the most powerful: a worthy offering indeed to the god of Wrath. At the last second, when she was about to brush aside his sword and kill him, her fate, in the form of her own idiotic followers of hers, had intervened to separate them. She wanted to find him again and finish the fight.And then she saw the girl. As if against her will, she gazed at the frightened little face that peeked out from where she was hiding. He knew what he had to do, because it was time to end this once and for all, to take the first step on the path that would end in eternal life, to take advantage of the opportunity offered to him of a glorious
Jasmine watched as the great cannon blasted the third breach in the city wall, then decided enough was enough. They had to save powder for the next fortification they came to, and the gaps were big enough for their soldiers to squeeze through. The defenders were tired and bewildered, so the time had come. She signaled to the bugler, and he sounded the advance blast. Marching to the beat of the human-skinned drums, the beastmen sprang into motion.Jasmine felt the thirst for blood rise within her, and with it, her desire to offer souls to the god of Wrath. She that night she would make him a great offering.♦ ♦ ♦Elysia watched as the tide of beastmen surged across the grounds, and archers began firing from the ramparts. They chose their targets calmly, methodically, and efficiently, and fired. Arrows pierced the darkness, piercing chests, throats, and bestial eyes. As the infernal drums beat, the relentless bloodthirsty beastmen continued to adva
Elysia watched the clouds overhead, racing across the sky like a mass that twisted and undulated in a strong wind. The color of the forest had changed from a light green to a darker, more ominous hue; she seemed as if the trees, like everything else, were waiting.She was standing on the parapet at the top of the wooden wall, and she was looking across the fields, straining to catch any sign of movement in the undergrowth. By her calculations, it was the end of the afternoon. Next to her was Frey, who was looking at his sword with disinterest. Every ten paces along the wall there was an archer, one of the woodcutters, men who could hit an ox's eye from two hundred paces, and measuring the distance between them and the line of trees, Elysia realized. realized that this was a slaughterhouse. Any attackers would get bogged down in the plowed fields and be easy targets for archers.She tried to let that thought reassure her, but she couldn't. Night in the woods was not lik
Elysia looked up at the ornate golden hammer that gleamed in the early morning light streaming through the open door of the temple. The runes etched into the Hammer's head reminded him of the ones adorning the blade of her own sword, but that didn't surprise him too much. Her sword had been the most prized possession of an Order of paladins and it seemed only fitting that the sword be engraved with holy signs.There were few people present; only some old women who were sitting cross-legged on the floor and praying. The babies with their mothers were outside, getting the cool while they could, and Elysia guessed the air might be unbreathable in there with the doors closed.The temple was a simple sanctuary with a simple altar, except for the presence of the Hammer, which was used to bless marriages and contracts. The Father, The Mother and The Son were not very popular deities there, since most of the woodcutters looked to Belial, Lord of the Forests and God of the Eart
Kat hurried toward the base of the watchtower because she felt the need to be alone. She had grown tired of sitting by the large central bonfire, and not even Frey's presence reassured her. She felt very alone in the midst of all those busy adults; in reality, there was no one with whom she could talk, and for the first time she realized that she no longer knew anyone in this world and that she had no place in it. Her flames reminded him too much of the Kleinsdorf fires. The ladder barely creaked under her bare feet as she climbed toward the trapdoor with the agility of a monkey.Elysia was sitting alone, and she was looking into the darkness. She had long since set the sun like a bloodstain on the horizon; the moon had risen through the sky, its silvery light bathing the surroundings. A gentle breeze cooled Kat's cheeks and made the forest whisper and murmur ominously. Elysia watched him mesmerized, lost in her own thoughts, and she hurried across the tower and sat down besi