Baron Werholdt cursed his thrice-damned luck. If he did not hurry, it would all fall apart at the seams.
He rode at the head of four hundred halberdiers, his personal guard on chargers and riflemen set up on the flanks. His steward had summoned his forces with impressive speed, but he was still on the back end. That princely captain and his motley crew of miscreants had risen before the dawn and set out with speed. Werholdt had thought he would catch them on the moors, but somehow they had covered the bog as if they had flown, and they were now getting dangerously close to blackland territory, where no one save the dead dwelt. The forest around him was thick, the trees so old, some men whispered they were splintered from Athel Loren during the War of the Ancients.
His prized steed Magnus knickered, stamping out of step momentarily as if he caught a foul wind on the air. A number of other horses did as well, and their riders weren't too enthused about the whole affair either. He would have to ask Ludenburg how he managed to keep an outfit in this wilderness.
"Easy men!" Captain Fridolf cautioned the troops. The trees seemed to absorb the sound, the words sounding almost too heavy to carry. Werholdt spun in his horse and glared at his second, snapping at him. "Be quiet!"
Despite the thick trees, it was eerie they heard no sounds ahead. Ludenburg and that upstart Kayden had to have come to battle now. Perhaps the clash of steel would have not traveled far, but the blackpowder weapons surely would have. It was driving the baron mad!
It had all been so simple. He could make a killing by taxing Baron Adelbert's caravans through the pass, publicly dismissing his reserve men to show his goodwill from the rising tensions, and secretly keeping them as bandits to raid Adelbert's caravans after they were taxed. Plausible deniability, control of the pass, extra income, it was all perfect! But then the Grey Mountains had to belch forth the Wyvern Company, and Adelbert had to get them to mediate the problem. Werholdt had no choice but to "hire" them to take out the bandits, and now that he had done so, he was going to find sergeant Ludenburg and help him crush this nuisance. In the forest, there would be no witnesses. Hardly any of the rangers even came this far. A few of the Dwarfen prospectors that came from the mountains told tales of strange happenings in the wastelands here. Ghosts in the hills, trees whispering to each other, mutated chaos giants, ghouls crawling out of endless catacombs wrought from Gorbad's invasion, and some even spoke of a black witch of terrible power. He hardly believed any of it, but the long march made the mind wander.
"My lord, the scouts have yet to return." Fridolf informed him.
"Yes, I am well aware of that, Captain. Why don't you go and find out why?" The Baron remarked derisively. All around him, he merely heard the sound of footsteps and horses snorting. He groaned and turned to Fridolf. "I said, why-" His words fell away when he saw Fridolf's corpse dragging along the ground, his foot snagged in his horse's stirrup. A long arrow protruding from his neck. Even as his eyes went up to the rest of his men, he saw a volley of arrows stream out of the trees of the upper embankment. They scythed into the men, punching into necks, faces, hips, and some even pierced the armor of their breastplates, albeit in the thinner sections of the side. He was so aghast, his men began to yell before he could even begin to speak. He found his lungs at the second volley, drawing his sword.
"Form up you whoresons!" He cried, but by then his riflemen had already begun to fire sporadically into the treeline. Perhaps it was his imagination, but there were sparks of flame and plumes of smoke on the opposite end of the road as well, to the south. His sergeants began to bellow orders, calling the men into formation as the onslaught continued. What swordsmen he had raised their bucklers, and the halberdiers had formed into lines so they might charge, but even as they tried to move, men fell in the midst of their ranks from a resounding boom out of the treeline. Grapeshot!
The shouts of men and cries of the dying was drowned out by a foreboding, sonorous horn. The Baron wheeled his cavaliers around with a raising of his sword, his knights gathering to him roughly as an eclectic assortment of men with shields of brass, the symbol of a crimson wyvern emblazoned on them, charged into the fray. At their head was a massive dwarf, armored head to toe and wielding a large axe it would take a team of men to handle. Werholdt was about to cry for his men to charge, when he felt a pressure in his back, something jerking him forward. He looked down, and saw a neat hole having gone through his breastplate. Damn Versignon, that bastard had promised him the bloody thing was bulletproof! He managed to glance behind him, to see men with pikes and skirmishers with pistols step out. They bore forest colored surcoats, but their standard was the same brass and crimson. The only one not in standard regalia was a striking, princely figure in dark blue and mail, with a sidesword in one hand and a pistol in the other. He looked built for court rather than battle, but there was a hardness to his eyes. He had done this before.
"Myrmidia! For the Wyverns!" He roared as he blocked a thrust by a spearman and cut down the baron's man with a swift riposte of his sharp sword.
"Damn this whole thing to hell," Werholdt tried to say, but it only came out as a whisper. He lost balance, teetering off his horse, and darkness took him as his knights fled into the wilderness, overpaid and overvalued.
3 days later...
"And he fought valiantly, slaying the bandit leader himself, in fact." Kayden added pointedly, clapping the wounded baron on the shoulder.
Werholdt was stricken with pain, but he gave a pained, fake grin to better sell the story. The summit had convened as soon as was applicable, which in turn happened to be right after Werholdt had been patched up, a blade put to his neck, and an ultimatum made and settled. The three leaders sat in a small pavilion, under a flag of truce, once again uncomfortably near the wastelands but this time, on an open field with a mixture of forces waiting outside. Under the scrutinizing eyes of Baron Adelbert, Werholdt had relayed the tale, with Kayden added in smooth additions to the narrative whenever the captain felt prudent.
Evidently, the Wyverns had sorely pressed the brigands under the terrible Ludenburg, who had apparently taken up to banditry once his contracts with Werholdt had been terminated. Wishing to see the deed done, Baron Werhold and his men had valiantly gone to the aid of Kayden and the Wyverns, halting Ludenburg's escape. The Baron and the Bandit Captain had faced one another, old friends turned enemies, a traitor and a true son of the empire, and under the canopy of the dark forest they had clashed blades until Werholdt had taken his head. The cur had even shot Werholdt, breaking the terms of the duel, but the Baron had gritted his teeth and powered through with his faith and steel.
All horseshit, of course. But to both keep his head and reputation, and since the Wyverns had finished the contract and sniffed a betrayal by the bastard Werholdt, they had tripled the price of the original contract and were given provisions for another fortnight. Adelbelt need not worry about the "bandits" anymore, and Werholdt got to be hero, while the Wyverns did the dirty work. Kayden wanted to make a reputation, but the money had been more important. The trek through the mountains had been perilous, and some of the money had been lost. He had been afraid he had no funds left to pay the men the next season, but now he had some breathing room in that regard.
"I misjudged you," Lord Adelbert said to his rival, inclining his head slightly. It was hard to say if he believed all of it, but clearly at least part of the tale had been sold to him.
"Think nothing of it," Werholdt croaked through the fresh wound, waving him off. Adelbert turned to Kayden, smiling a smile that spread his grey mustache.
"You as well, my boy. You do tight work. I'll remember that."
Kayden returned the smile, and gave them both a courtly bow. "Thank you, my lords. It has been my esteemed pleasure to have worked under the service of such fine march wardens of the Empire. If you'll excuse me, however, I must see to my men."
"Of course."
Kayden stepped out of the pavilion, the Halberdiers standing at attention glancing at him appraisingly. Kayden ignored them, seeing his oldest friend across the short pathway to another tent. Morek the Ironbreaker enjoyed a pipe, leaning against a crate and blowing rings at small intervals. When the dawi saw Kayden, he raised his pipe to him. Kayden motioned for him to follow, and the two stepped past the quartermaster and his clerks hurrying along and various guards going about their business, making it to their side of the large camp where Kayden could finally relax.
"Count the gold?" He asked the dwarf. Morek gave a 'hrmmph' as a response. That meant yes, in his experience. "And we're good?" He asked. Morek gave a wave of his hand, tilting his head. That usually translated for 'for now.' But they had many miles before there was someone else with any real contracts. There was little but deadlands from here, other than the occasional farmstead or inn on the traderoad. Maybe a hundred kilometers of marching before they truly made it into Wissenland, and then the men would earn a place to spend their coins, and it would start all over again.
The two were halted in their camp by a short, plump woman wearing a kettle helm too big for her head. On her back was a crossbow, and she gave a crisp salute, despite the helm obscuring her vision. "Captain Kayden, sir!"
"Yes, Merie?" He asked the halfling. Before she could speak, he raised a hand. "At ease."
She lowered her hand and raised the helm off her head so she could see. "Erm, there's a visitor for you sir. He came in by a Black Coach. He says he has a contract for us..."
Kayden and Morek met the man, a tall fellow with a civilized bearing. Kayden could not place his accent, but despite himself, the vague promises and shifty manner about his patron intrigued him. He took a change of clothes and a wash of his face, and stepped into the black coach after some small deliberation. They had money now, but it would dry up soon, and whatever this was about, Kayden had always gained victory through audacity.
He rode at the head of four hundred halberdiers, his personal guard on chargers and riflemen set up on the flanks. His steward had summoned his forces with impressive speed, but he was still on the back end. That princely captain and his motley crew of miscreants had risen before the dawn and set out with speed. Werholdt had thought he would catch them on the moors, but somehow they had covered the bog as if they had flown, and they were now getting dangerously close to blackland territory, where no one save the dead dwelt. The forest around him was thick, the trees so old, some men whispered they were splintered from Athel Loren during the War of the Ancients.
His prized steed Magnus knickered, stamping out of step momentarily as if he caught a foul wind on the air. A number of other horses did as well, and their riders weren't too enthused about the whole affair either. He would have to ask Ludenburg how he managed to keep an outfit in this wilderness.
"Easy men!" Captain Fridolf cautioned the troops. The trees seemed to absorb the sound, the words sounding almost too heavy to carry. Werholdt spun in his horse and glared at his second, snapping at him. "Be quiet!"
Despite the thick trees, it was eerie they heard no sounds ahead. Ludenburg and that upstart Kayden had to have come to battle now. Perhaps the clash of steel would have not traveled far, but the blackpowder weapons surely would have. It was driving the baron mad!
It had all been so simple. He could make a killing by taxing Baron Adelbert's caravans through the pass, publicly dismissing his reserve men to show his goodwill from the rising tensions, and secretly keeping them as bandits to raid Adelbert's caravans after they were taxed. Plausible deniability, control of the pass, extra income, it was all perfect! But then the Grey Mountains had to belch forth the Wyvern Company, and Adelbert had to get them to mediate the problem. Werholdt had no choice but to "hire" them to take out the bandits, and now that he had done so, he was going to find sergeant Ludenburg and help him crush this nuisance. In the forest, there would be no witnesses. Hardly any of the rangers even came this far. A few of the Dwarfen prospectors that came from the mountains told tales of strange happenings in the wastelands here. Ghosts in the hills, trees whispering to each other, mutated chaos giants, ghouls crawling out of endless catacombs wrought from Gorbad's invasion, and some even spoke of a black witch of terrible power. He hardly believed any of it, but the long march made the mind wander.
"My lord, the scouts have yet to return." Fridolf informed him.
"Yes, I am well aware of that, Captain. Why don't you go and find out why?" The Baron remarked derisively. All around him, he merely heard the sound of footsteps and horses snorting. He groaned and turned to Fridolf. "I said, why-" His words fell away when he saw Fridolf's corpse dragging along the ground, his foot snagged in his horse's stirrup. A long arrow protruding from his neck. Even as his eyes went up to the rest of his men, he saw a volley of arrows stream out of the trees of the upper embankment. They scythed into the men, punching into necks, faces, hips, and some even pierced the armor of their breastplates, albeit in the thinner sections of the side. He was so aghast, his men began to yell before he could even begin to speak. He found his lungs at the second volley, drawing his sword.
"Form up you whoresons!" He cried, but by then his riflemen had already begun to fire sporadically into the treeline. Perhaps it was his imagination, but there were sparks of flame and plumes of smoke on the opposite end of the road as well, to the south. His sergeants began to bellow orders, calling the men into formation as the onslaught continued. What swordsmen he had raised their bucklers, and the halberdiers had formed into lines so they might charge, but even as they tried to move, men fell in the midst of their ranks from a resounding boom out of the treeline. Grapeshot!
The shouts of men and cries of the dying was drowned out by a foreboding, sonorous horn. The Baron wheeled his cavaliers around with a raising of his sword, his knights gathering to him roughly as an eclectic assortment of men with shields of brass, the symbol of a crimson wyvern emblazoned on them, charged into the fray. At their head was a massive dwarf, armored head to toe and wielding a large axe it would take a team of men to handle. Werholdt was about to cry for his men to charge, when he felt a pressure in his back, something jerking him forward. He looked down, and saw a neat hole having gone through his breastplate. Damn Versignon, that bastard had promised him the bloody thing was bulletproof! He managed to glance behind him, to see men with pikes and skirmishers with pistols step out. They bore forest colored surcoats, but their standard was the same brass and crimson. The only one not in standard regalia was a striking, princely figure in dark blue and mail, with a sidesword in one hand and a pistol in the other. He looked built for court rather than battle, but there was a hardness to his eyes. He had done this before.
"Myrmidia! For the Wyverns!" He roared as he blocked a thrust by a spearman and cut down the baron's man with a swift riposte of his sharp sword.
"Damn this whole thing to hell," Werholdt tried to say, but it only came out as a whisper. He lost balance, teetering off his horse, and darkness took him as his knights fled into the wilderness, overpaid and overvalued.
3 days later...
"And he fought valiantly, slaying the bandit leader himself, in fact." Kayden added pointedly, clapping the wounded baron on the shoulder.
Werholdt was stricken with pain, but he gave a pained, fake grin to better sell the story. The summit had convened as soon as was applicable, which in turn happened to be right after Werholdt had been patched up, a blade put to his neck, and an ultimatum made and settled. The three leaders sat in a small pavilion, under a flag of truce, once again uncomfortably near the wastelands but this time, on an open field with a mixture of forces waiting outside. Under the scrutinizing eyes of Baron Adelbert, Werholdt had relayed the tale, with Kayden added in smooth additions to the narrative whenever the captain felt prudent.
Evidently, the Wyverns had sorely pressed the brigands under the terrible Ludenburg, who had apparently taken up to banditry once his contracts with Werholdt had been terminated. Wishing to see the deed done, Baron Werhold and his men had valiantly gone to the aid of Kayden and the Wyverns, halting Ludenburg's escape. The Baron and the Bandit Captain had faced one another, old friends turned enemies, a traitor and a true son of the empire, and under the canopy of the dark forest they had clashed blades until Werholdt had taken his head. The cur had even shot Werholdt, breaking the terms of the duel, but the Baron had gritted his teeth and powered through with his faith and steel.
All horseshit, of course. But to both keep his head and reputation, and since the Wyverns had finished the contract and sniffed a betrayal by the bastard Werholdt, they had tripled the price of the original contract and were given provisions for another fortnight. Adelbelt need not worry about the "bandits" anymore, and Werholdt got to be hero, while the Wyverns did the dirty work. Kayden wanted to make a reputation, but the money had been more important. The trek through the mountains had been perilous, and some of the money had been lost. He had been afraid he had no funds left to pay the men the next season, but now he had some breathing room in that regard.
"I misjudged you," Lord Adelbert said to his rival, inclining his head slightly. It was hard to say if he believed all of it, but clearly at least part of the tale had been sold to him.
"Think nothing of it," Werholdt croaked through the fresh wound, waving him off. Adelbert turned to Kayden, smiling a smile that spread his grey mustache.
"You as well, my boy. You do tight work. I'll remember that."
Kayden returned the smile, and gave them both a courtly bow. "Thank you, my lords. It has been my esteemed pleasure to have worked under the service of such fine march wardens of the Empire. If you'll excuse me, however, I must see to my men."
"Of course."
Kayden stepped out of the pavilion, the Halberdiers standing at attention glancing at him appraisingly. Kayden ignored them, seeing his oldest friend across the short pathway to another tent. Morek the Ironbreaker enjoyed a pipe, leaning against a crate and blowing rings at small intervals. When the dawi saw Kayden, he raised his pipe to him. Kayden motioned for him to follow, and the two stepped past the quartermaster and his clerks hurrying along and various guards going about their business, making it to their side of the large camp where Kayden could finally relax.
"Count the gold?" He asked the dwarf. Morek gave a 'hrmmph' as a response. That meant yes, in his experience. "And we're good?" He asked. Morek gave a wave of his hand, tilting his head. That usually translated for 'for now.' But they had many miles before there was someone else with any real contracts. There was little but deadlands from here, other than the occasional farmstead or inn on the traderoad. Maybe a hundred kilometers of marching before they truly made it into Wissenland, and then the men would earn a place to spend their coins, and it would start all over again.
The two were halted in their camp by a short, plump woman wearing a kettle helm too big for her head. On her back was a crossbow, and she gave a crisp salute, despite the helm obscuring her vision. "Captain Kayden, sir!"
"Yes, Merie?" He asked the halfling. Before she could speak, he raised a hand. "At ease."
She lowered her hand and raised the helm off her head so she could see. "Erm, there's a visitor for you sir. He came in by a Black Coach. He says he has a contract for us..."
Kayden and Morek met the man, a tall fellow with a civilized bearing. Kayden could not place his accent, but despite himself, the vague promises and shifty manner about his patron intrigued him. He took a change of clothes and a wash of his face, and stepped into the black coach after some small deliberation. They had money now, but it would dry up soon, and whatever this was about, Kayden had always gained victory through audacity.