《A FORGEMASTER OF WAYLAND》Chapter thirty-one: A Slight Detour
Advertisement
A red blush was just fringing the coaled outlines of the treetops and hills in the east when I returned with Gort who had been secreted off the road to the inn just west, near where we had first entered it the day before. I picked a new spot, safe enough for the short time we expected to be delayed at the Inn and went on alone looking forward to what would still be an early breakfast there. I saw Brann in passing the second warehouse, lining up his bearers, laden with a few more goods than he had arrived with.
Brann spotted me, gave a cheery wave and laid his finger to his lips. I returned the wave and pointing to the inn, went on. As usual I was last to table. Thavis and Brock were finishing up, based on the number of plates, an astonishing breakfast. I picked at the remains.
Thavis seemed in good spirits. "We are to join Brann before the warehouse soon as we finish. He has put aside two bows and a stocked quiver each, for us to carry, otherwise we should go unencumbered, save for our own things, of course. Speaking of which your - venture this morning went well?"
"Well enough," I replied. "Our other companion waits just west for us."
We signed out of the Inn and joined Brann. Reintroducing Gort caused a small argument between Brann and his peers, settled with much reassurance on the part of Brann that the device was a good for a wealthy client that we were selling, not a attempt to replace workers. Otherwise, the bearers seemed to consider the artifact no more than a clockwork curiosity and ignored it. Sort of like having a car at the turn of the century, I guessed.
With Brock leading, we soon circled the town avoiding the roads then on toward the climbing slopes of the north.
I now understood the true worth of the travois, for they were narrow and unlike wheeled wagons or trundles could be pulled over anything or lifted like stretchers over creek beds and small rifts. Also far easier to replace a broken pole than to fashion a new wheel. The bearers seemed adept at handling them and managed without complaint. Gort proved his worth helping to haul the loads up slopes where hands and feet both touched ground in the climb and as an anchor along goat trails so narrow only a fool would try them not safely roped one to the other. It quickly became clear why the Dervin pass was the only commercial route north.
I was no expert bowman, but with my width of chest and musculature offsetting a shorter reach managed a fair natural draw. Also, I had come to realize that my height was not much different from those about me here despite being generally shorter than the citizenry of Illinois. I had bow-hunted a little before, so managed to skewer a few wild rabbit and a goat-like creature I was assured was good eating. Something at least to supplement such dried or salted trail supplies as our merchant provided. As Brock and Thavis seemed skilled with setting game traps, at least our diet would be varied.
Advertisement
It was the third day since I had left the cabin near Corbell and there seemed as yet no indication we would clear the range soon. We eventually stopped for dinner and since we were losing the light, contemplated whether to travel any further. Brock squatted down in front of me.
"We could make my nephew's barrows tonight, were we to travel on but there is no need. Better we come on it by daylight, I say."
"Certainly no need to kill ourselves stumbling around this mountain in the dark, I agree. We are not blessed with those eyes of yours, Brock."
"Aye then. Camp here for the night." The Nublin squinted at the surrounding rock. "There's outcrops there, there and there" he said, jabbing at protrusions across the narrow ravine we currently occupied. I'll help ye hang yer hammock."
Brann had supplied, as well as the bows and a few camp items, tight woven woolen hammocks threaded with long sticky ropes which I conceived as a trail luxury.
"The ground's flat just here," I said. "I would be just as happy rolling out my mat."
Brock sighed, and explained as if I were a bit slow. "I wouldn't unless forced to it, William. Things crawl about these mountains as sting badly once the rock cools off of an evening. Best to hang the hammocks from the tarred ropes when possible or wrap up tight in them cocoon like if not. T'were more comfortable hanging in 'em anyway."
"Oh. Thanks for the tip, then."
I looped one hammock rope around a crag while Brock pounded a cleat into the mountain face opposite, and attached the other end to it. I leered at the result which bowed down to within two feet of the ground when tested with my weight. I have no experience with hammocks save the garden variety. I watched carefully when the others bedded, and was the last to do so.
My first attempt landed me squarely on the ground beneath it. I tried again, spreading the thing open, taking a seated position in its center. I lifted one leg slowly off the ground and into it, laid back, then drew the second up and gingerly nestled it in. The woolen sheet drew up in a pocket around me and suddenly it seemed quite stable, and very comfortable. The slow rocking motion was hypnotic and I slid into the deepest sleep I can remember.
I woke with the light, more rested than I would have thought possible, my slumber dreamless and undisturbed. I remembered that I was ensconced in a hammock and frighteningly, realized I had no idea how to get free of it without dumping myself out onto the rock. I waited quietly for the others to arise. They seemed to have no trouble and bustled about untying the contraptions and storing them away. Brock noticed I was still swinging away in mine and approached, looking down at my recumbent form. "Will you not be joining us then? Mean to sleep the day away is it, William?"
"I don't know how to get out of this thing. Can you hold it on the one side while I..."
Advertisement
Brock broke out in a rasping laugh. "Naw, I'll leave ye here till we be done then come fetch you out!"
There was some sniggering from the bearers and even Thavis and Brann traded mobile expressions.
"Here now," chided Thavis, "everyone has a first day in these things, no need to make sport. One leg down first, William, then get your balance on that, and up with you. Brock, help the man so he doesn't end on his arse!"
It proved not the trial I feared and I too, soon had everything ready for travel.
My first sight of a Nublin barrow-town came into view before noon. The dwellings were above ground for the most part. They looked like large half buried eggs with rock shard walls roofed over with a thatch of the reedy mountain grass that seemed to infest every crack in the slopes here. Timber shored openings lead back into the near face of the mountain, and above these openings several other smaller bores made their way inward. I saw no signs of workshops or such. I mentioned this to Brock.
"All that's inside where it's cooler work'in summers, and warmer work'in winters."
He pointed up. "See the smokes?" I looked, and although the mountain currents dispersed it quickly, smoke did rise from several of the bores scattered high above the mine-like entrances.
"Others facing the current bring in air and some, surfaced with mica, reflect light down in where needed. Not into the workin' shafts themselves a'course. A waste a' labor that would be, but the top veins, as played out, well, we expand on 'em and make use of 'em, eh?"
Thavis seemed to take the Barrow in stride, but Brann and his bearers ogled everything and seemed skittish. However, Gort seemed more an annoyance to these people. Like a neighbor parking a buldozer in your driveway. Relations between humans and Nublin, I recalled, had not always been friendly.
Brann cleared his throat, and piped a question at Brock. "Are you sure we will be welcome? I always thought your people lived below ground and hated strangers."
"We don't live in holes, lad but we do work the ores, and like to get the most out of our labor. It's hard work and once trued out there's no reason to let all that work go ta waste. It's all simple enough when you get the hang of it. We bunk above ground like everyone else, not as you may have heard tell. As for strangers, well, did ye enjoy yer trip here Brann? Like 'ta be visitin' right regular all social, now you know where we be?"
"Eh, if I were a mountain goat maybe. I didn't notice any roads about."
"It be because there are none. We don't lay em." We walked on and Brock waved at a few bearded faces as we went, continuing his commentary. "We don't live in caves either. Well, perhaps some dry, dead ones as we discover in our work if well trued out and cleanable. But that's just chance and circumstance. There's clans as pan for the metals in some areas, and others as grow crop, mostly. Some hunt and husband animals. Each clan tends to specialize, and we trade back and forth regular for our needs. But the mountains, aye, that's the prime land as we see it. Dell or cliff, it is safer, and that we know it well."
"Surprised then that you are moving your clan to the lowlands."
Brock winced. "Well, the hills can only support so many. As the numbers strain the land's ability to support us we form new clans and find fresh land, though we are not prolific breeders as you folk seem to be. Some seasons a few of us must look to the bottom lands for a time. Generally we can return in a few generations, as our numbers wax and wane."
"So you're caught in a population increase right now?"
"That's the straight of it. But I'm bound to make the best of it and Chord and yours could make things easier and better for my clan in this so's I am decided to be good neighbors, as we must be neighbors in any case."
"That's a good plan. I know Chord is eager to have you around. He has an open mind, and an eye for profit. You couldn't have chosen a better course."
"Aye that is how I see it, too. Do you have that fancy bit I traded you for the beer back when we met?" As I still had it in my pouch, I said yes.
"You might put the broach on then. It's my clan symbol on it. That'll confuse this bunch some, stir up questions for me but earn you a bit of respect meantime as well."
I smiled, thinking on this. "So you are a bit of a rebel among your own eh?"
Brock puckered his lips inward,causing his facial hair to blouse like feathers fluffed on a strutting bird. "Never hurts to tweak a beard, now and again."
Brann's eyes glittered with a sudden thought and again drew Brock's attention. "Your people here, do they weave? Do you use rugs, tapestries, the like?"
Brock nodded. "Some. Mostly we cure furred Skins and such, but some will weave, and O' course, such fancy clothes as we wear must come from somewhere, you know." Brock fingered the roughly carded wool of his shirt, and pulled down on the stinking cured leather of his jerkin.
Brann pursed his lips. "While export might be, unnecessary, perhaps some metals trade for larger woven things, like rugs might bring me back quite ah, often, even given the terrain. Is there someone in particular I should talk with?"
"The clan chief, Stenn Orehammer-- a cousin of mine. You will meet him directly, as that is where we are going now. Mind ye, he is not the open-eyed liberal I be." While I managed not to choke on this statement, I did notice that Brann started to take an even keener, more measured interest in the village as we walked.
Advertisement
-
In Serial9 Chapters
A Titan's Crusade
Erik Thayne spent most of his life being brutally ridiculed and tormented for his weight and physical appearance, among other things. A social pariah and diagnosed with an eating disorder no one has an explanation or treatment for, Erik spent years trying to overcome his issues with his personal image and escape the ridicule and vicious torment of his peers. After years of dedicated effort, and a fresh start in a town away from his childhood and adolescent tormentors, he had finally begun to truly realize what he'd been striving for all along. Only, fate apparently has other plans because in the blink of an eye, Erik found himself snatched from Earth and taken to another universe, another world, where he is offered the chance to be more than he'd ever imagined. Now, he has to fight to restore the Balance between Chaos and Order on a world of swords and magic, in a universe governed by the System's laws, which resemble those of RPGs from Earth. Erik learned to embrace the things about himself that others taught him to hate, using them to reforge his physical identity into something more removed from his old self-loathing. But can he learn to embrace the darkest parts of his mind just as he did the reviled aspects of his body and become who he needs to be to succeed in the task set before him? It might just prove easier to stalk in the dark as a monster than to walk in the light as a man... *This is my first time publishing anything I've written to a public audience. Due to formatting issues, I forwent traditional stat-screens for something a little less problematic, delineating stat screens by separating them from regular text with horizontal lines in a lighter-grey coloration. Let me know if you like them or not. Criticism is entirely welcome, but please don't hate on my work after only reading 1 chapter. This is a writing project I intend to complete but I have committment problems so we'll see how long this goes on. Also, fair warning, as the description implies, the main protagonist is intended to be someone who has been treated cruelly, developed antisocial tendencies, and ultimately has to question his own humanity--or lack thereof. This story is not intended to be brutally dark but I will definitely be trying to follow a darker theme. It is intended to be violent and some scenes later in the story might be...alarming. There will likely also be some light, non-graphic (think more implied with crude jokes and conversation than actual details, there will be no full-blown sex scenes)relationship scenes planned later and if you're opposed to either a bisexual or gay main character, stay away. I haven't yet decided which way he's going to swing but the odds on him being straight are relatively miniscule, and I've always wanted to write a story about a gay man who basically looks like a lumberjack because who doesn't like giving conventional stereo-types the middle finger? This will NOT be a harem story, and I have no intention to focus on romance over action--it's a consequence of character development where I'm concerned, not the be-all-end-all of the story. The cover-art does not, in any way, belong to me. It was an image titled the Druid King (by duskanmarkovic according to the file name) which I found on Google Images. Until I can get something commissioned, this is the best stand-in image I could find.
8 106 -
In Serial31 Chapters
The Forgotten Lands
The lands close to the edge of the world, which is marked by an ever-present fog, are known as the barrens. A blighted land in which crops struggle to grow , with only the very poor and desperate to occupy the scarce villages. Naturally making it a haven for outlaws.It is in one of these barrens that a raider called Raegan was born and raised, feared and respected by the cut-throats he grew up around.The world has been told that magic is responsible for cursed regions known as the Forgotten Lands. For this reason anyone with the gift of magic are labelled abominations, a crime punishable by death and enforced by the Malleus Maleficarum, the worlds leading religion. Raegan is one such abomination, untrained in whatever magic he may have.Even in the lawless barrens those with magic aren't looked upon favourably, and so Raegan has kept his 'gift' hidden from all but his closest friend. But now he wants to leave behind the dangerous wasteland that is his home and everything he has ever known, in the effort to seek new experiences.No matter where this new path will take him, good or bad.
8 86 -
In Serial32 Chapters
Everyone Dies Alone but not necessarily in space
Djaer is a lonely outsider from a species of interstellar tyrants, who finally has his dream job: a waste transport mission expected to take thousands of years, with nobody to bother him, and a small group of delicious humans to subjugate and ultimately consume. He was just settling in to relax for what felt like the first time in his life, when he finds out W.A.S.T.E. Unincorporated has saddled him with an assistant. It mostly seems like she only exists to annoy him, but it turns out there's more to her than meets the eye. Join an ensemble cast of characters in exploring a universe in which life is nasty, brutish and all-too-long, as they uncover the truth of who really makes the galaxy tick, and try to do something about it.
8 113 -
In Serial22 Chapters
World War Zed
World War Zed : The Survivors' Stories - It is ten years since Britain declared itself free of the Zombie menace. This book compiles the untold stories of survivors across the world, how they survived, how the spread of the Infection impacted on their lives, and how they fought against the moaning horde of undead that threatened the very continuation of the human race. (Horror / Fan Fiction, Fan fiction of Max Brooks' World War Z.)~If you've read this and fancy more zombies, or something that isn't fanfic then I've got the zombie novel WalkerZ on my profile.
8 107 -
In Serial56 Chapters
Majo Magica
All of his life, Itsuki wanted to be a hero...so that is precisely what he set out to do! He registered as a Mage and started his journey to help anyone who needed him! His first person who needed his help was a young girl with no memories, needing his help in finding an amulet similar to her own. So the two set off on their adventure, discovering many things about the world, and even meeting the thirteen Witches, women of incredible power that the world fears. Schedule: 1 Chapter every Saturday (May vary from time to time) ! Please leave a rating, review, or comment for this series so I can figure out what you like and dislike about the series so I can improve
8 134 -
In Serial17 Chapters
Heathers On Instagram ✔️
Last book (maybe) to be in the "...On Instagram" series. Users and ships in first chap! ????<>-That non-binary kidDISCLAIMER! I DON'T OWN HEATHERS! ALL RIGHTS GO TO THE OWNERS!Started: 27/7/18Ended: 30/8/18
8 152
