“Has King Gundar any answers for you today?” asked Thluna.
“Silence only. I asked him how he became so loved by his people,” Sungar told him. “Even those who disagreed with him. The songs don’t tell that. Hazred and the other skalds tell of how he so impressed the Red Tiger tribe by slaughtering a leucrotta, armed only with one of their ritual claws. And of the time he and his warriors lay siege to the Black Raven aerie near Raven Rock, and smashed fifty raven eggs.”
“Weren’t you with him that day?” asked Thluna. “Was it truly fifty eggs?”
Sungar smiled. “That legend is for Gundar, not me.”
“You must forge your own legends,” said Thluna. “The Thunderbeast has told us how.”
“No easy directive,” Sungar said. “The shamans tell us that the behemoths still live in the depths of the High Forest, but they also say nobody has seen them since before the time of Uthgar.”
“A great adventure in the making,” Thluna said. “A chance to undo what has been.”
“We did nothing wrong!” Sungar’s voice echoed across the Crags.
“They don’t see it that way,” Thluna informed him, pointing toward the camp in the distance.
“They weren’t there.”
“No,” Thluna said, “but they’ve heard the story. No songs will be sung of it, but the whispers will linger for a long time.”
“Then we must find something for them to sing,” Sungar declared, “and sing proudly. When we return to Rauvin Vale, I will pick a party and lead it into the High Forest. The Thunderbeast would not assign an impossible task. Now, how fares the chosen vessel?”
“Vell? He has not yet roused, but Keirkrad believes he is himself again.”
“Odd that the beast should choose him. What do they say about Vell the Brown?”
“Apart from the color of his eyes, there’s little exceptional about him. He is one of the warriors who generally stays behind to guard the camp during expeditions.”
“By his own choice?” asked Sungar.
“I don’t know,” Thluna admitted. “He has few close friends. Though he has already reached the age to claim a mate, he has not. He defers to the warriors with more glory to their names.”
“He may find himself with more friends after this, and women besides,” Sungar said. “The beast chose him, and when we go into the High Forest, Vell will be with us.”
Thluna nodded. “I will let him know when he wakes. For the moment, I have a recommendation.” He looked down at the grave of King Gundar. “We are but a day’s ride from Grunwald. Some of the men plan to visit it. Most of them were born there.”
Grunwald was the abandoned dwarf hold on the edge of the Lurkwood, discovered and settled by the Thunderbeasts. For a few generations they forsook their nomadic ways and thrived at tree felling and lumber cutting. But when Gundar died, the first act of his successor Sungar was to withdraw from Grunwald.
“If orcs have settled in Grunwald,” said Thluna, “then the men wish to clear them out.”
Sungar stroked his beard. “They may go, if they wish. I will not prevent them.”
“You should go, too,” advised Thluna. “The men were denied a Runehunt, so let them have this instead.”
Sungar cocked his head. “Is a chief to obey his warriors, or the other way around?” he asked, a trace of annoyance in his voice.
“Both, when the cause is right,” said Thluna. “But a chief should not put his own considerations above those of his tribe.”
“Is that what you think I’m doing?” snarled Sungar.
“No,” Thluna said firmly. “But there are those who might.”
Sungar paced. He saw the wisdom of Thluna’s words.
“Why should I go to Grunwald?” asked Sungar. “To invite more comparisons between me and Gundar; or to let them all plead to move the tribe back there?”
“Neither. Show them you’re above those concerns,” Thluna said. He paused a moment, gauging Sungar’s reaction. “You cannot make them forget Grunwald. Many of our people never had the opportunity to properly leave it behind. You need to give them that now. It is like a fallen comrade. Only when he is buried and grieved for, can we move on.”
For a long time Sungar and Thluna stared silently at King Gundar’s cairn. Though neither of them spoke, both thought of their dead fellows, buried so far away in the dismal earth of the Fallen Lands. They, too, could never be mourned properly.
“This whole trip is about embracing our history,” Sungar said. “Consulting our ancestors to find our present path. Grunwald is part of that history.”
“So we’re going to Grunwald?” Thluna said. He erupted in a wide smile that betrayed his youth.
“You forget,” said Sungar. “I was born there, too.”
Images and thoughts swirled through Vell’s mind as he floated in heavy unconsciousness. Something was lost when he awoke. When the darkness parted, Vell sensed places, faces, and ideas that he could not quite seize, though they would haunt the edges of his mind in ways he could never speak of with a fellow Uthgardt. He seemed to recall dreams of escape—of widening his horizons beyond his tribe and its way of life. These were not new dreams, but traces of something that was always there, now bursting into light.
When he awoke, he pushed those feelings deep inside himself. The sensation scared him. Something had changed in him—but what?
Vell found himself in a tent full of ceremonial animal horns. The air smelled sweet from wild sage. This was a tent of honor, he realized. He rose and strode from the tent into the Thunderbeast encampment tucked among the rugged Crags. The sun blazed brightly. Vell’s muscles felt tight, and a new energy swelled in his limbs. All around him, Uthgardt he had known all his life looked at him in a new way. They greeted him with eagerness, even with reverence, but with fear as well.
Vell had dreamed not of being somewhere else, but of being something else. That image stayed with him even after the dream itself was gone. Now in his waking, he felt as if something of himself was lost; yet he did not feel empty, but overstuffed. His psyche felt as if some new identity had been crammed into him and was preparing to burst out from his muscles. But what was it?
Keirkrad rushed up to him. Despite his astonishing age, the shaman could move with catlike speed.
“Vell!” he said. His old frame could not keep still, he was so excited. “What do you remember?”
“The eyes of the beast staring at me from above,” he said. “And then … nothing.”
“You have been touched by the Thunderbeast,” Keirkrad told him, resting a gnarled hand on Vell’s shoulder. “Our totem chose you as his vessel. This is the greatest honor an Uthgardt could receive! How do you feel?”
“Different,” said Vell. He ran a hand over a tense muscle. “Like I could fell a giant single-handed.”
“You have seen the Battlefather’s favor as few ever do. Your destiny is assured,” Keirkrad said. Through all his kind words, he was peering deeply at Vell with his watery blue eyes, trying to gauge him and figure him out. Vell had experienced this often in his childhood; his brown eyes were so rare among his people. He sometimes found that Uthgardt who seemed to be looking at him were merely looking at his eyes.
At that moment, Thluna arrived. The young warrior commanded enormous respect within the Thunderbeasts, even among those much older and more experienced—perhaps even more respect than Sungar.
“Vell, you have risen!” he said. “Have you further messages for us?”
“Messages?” Vell asked, puzzled.
“The beast spoke through you,” Keirkrad said. “It said ‘find the living.’ ”
“ ‘Find the living’?” repeated Vell. “What does it mean?”
Thluna sighed. “If you do not know, we surely do not.”
“It means the Thunderbeast wants us to find the living behemoths that still dwell in the High Forest,” Keirkrad supplied, chin held high. “Surely that should be clear.”
“It is a matter of some disc
ussion,” said Thluna. “We had hoped you might clarify.”
“No,” said Vell, shaking his head. “I’m afraid not.”
“Vell has been touched by the Thunderbeast,” Keirkrad said. “He may know more—or be capable of more—than he realizes right now. Sungar should keep him close at hand.”
“Yes, he does,” Thluna said. He lowered his voice slightly. “He plans an expedition into the High Forest, for a select group from the tribe—he’s still debating who, but it includes both of you. Do not share this for now.”
Keirkrad’s ancient, lined face broke into a wide grin.
“The chieftain is wise. I only wish we could have done this years ago.”
“But why should I be included?” asked Vell. “I am honored, but …”
“Surely the Thunderbeast chose you for a reason,” Thluna told him. “It may not have been as simple as delivering a message—Uthgar may plan a further role for you. We shall see. But in the meantime, Sungar has planned something else.” Thluna turned from the two of them and addressed the tribe at large. “Hear me, Thunderbeasts!” he cried. Soon dozens of warriors were assembled before him. Thluna’s voice was not deep, but he spoke clearly and well.
“Spread the word. Our assembly at Morgur’s Mound has been successful beyond our dreams—successful thanks to your faith. An additional pilgrimage will be made. We came here to seek our history and our heritage: to learn something about ourselves by knowing where we have been. So we shall take down this camp and make the path to Grunwald.”
A deafening roar came up from the tribe. Keirkrad led Vell aside and up a low hill on the edge of the Crags, where they could look down on the camp being disassembled for the journey to their new destination.
“Vell,” he said. “You heard Thluna. We shall go into the High Forest seeking to regain the Thunderbeast’s favor for our tribe.”
“A task for heroes of legend,” Vell said. “I can’t imagine myself in that company.”
“What man can know his own destiny?” asked Keirkrad. “Yesterday you were but a voice in the chorus, and one weaker than most. Now you shall stand close to Sungar, and have his ear. He shall respect your counsel as he respects that of the boy Thluna.”
“And as he respects yours,” Vell added.
“Less than you may think.” Keirkrad shrugged. “I am an old man.” A frown crossed his ancient brow. “We are alike, you and I. I felt the calling of the Thunderbeast at a young age. Once, I left my parent’s tent at night and went wandering into the Lurkwood in a blood trance. For days I walked in the cold of deepwinter; not for nothing am I called Seventoes. I saw orcs, ettins, and a hunting party of the shapechanging Gray Wolves, but none of them saw me. By Uthgar’s grace, I was invisible to them.
“Then, as I lay in an animal’s burrow freezing to death, I saw a vision of Morgur’s Mound—when I first saw the mound itself years later, it was exactly as I had seen it in my mind. Then in the bitter cold of the burrow, the strange, radiant force of the Thunderbeast reached out and touched me, and I returned to my parents and our tribe, warm and with a calling. I knew I would be shaman.
“The priests who answer to me are capable, but lack that special relationship with the beast. I fear for what will happen once I die, and for what will happen to our spiritual life. Perhaps we will become like the Black Lions, worshiping our totem in name only while truly revering Silvanus or Tyr. At least that would be a better fate than that of the Blue Bears, lost to Malar’s depravity. Already many members of our tribe favor the outside gods over Uthgar. I have prayed for a true successor. Could that be you, Vell?”
Vell stuttered. “I don’t know.…”
“I may be able to clarify for us both,” said Keirkrad. “I would like to use my magic to look inside you.”
Vell stood a bit straighter and silenced a little cry inside himself. “This is well.”
Keirkrad’s watery blue eyes latched onto Vell’s brown ones, and he placed his hands on Vell’s bulging forearms. He chanted a few mystical syllables, and his glare grew all the more intense, his blue eyes growing wider and clouding over with a whitish film. Vell trembled silently as the shaman’s frail hands dug into his muscles with surprising strength. He summoned the will not to pull free from the old man’s grasp as his sour breath enveloped Vell’s face in slow puffs.
Then Keirkrad released him and took a few steps back. The shaman’s gaze fell to the ground and he shuddered with fists clenched, making twisted claws of his hands.
“What’s wrong?” asked Vell. But Keirkrad said nothing. “Tell me,” he insisted.
“You’re afraid,” rasped Keirkrad. The old man wore a disgusted frown. He spoke through his gasps for breath. “I have seen your soul. Why do you fear the gift you have been given?”
Gan took a deep breath when he arrived at the ditch surrounding Llorkh. Wider than a road, and too deep to climb out of easily, it had been magically dug by Geildarr a few years back. It forced visitors and caravans arriving at Llorkh to visit checkpoints manned by Lord’s Men.
The hobgoblin followed the ditch until he reached a checkpoint, a considerable distance outside Llorkh’s fortified walls. A black-armored soldier approached him while his two fellows kept watch from a safe distance.
Gan still carried the battle-axe that he and Dray had found. He had spent a dozen days marching through the Fallen Lands and the Graypeaks, and in that time it had scarcely left his hands. He found that he needed it in his grip even when he slept.
Even Gan, with the sentiments of a hobgoblin, felt a wave of disgust as he approached Llorkh. The ditch looked like a cruel gash in the earth, and all around, nature itself seemed to have surrendered to civilization’s needs. Bare of trees and grass, the rocky plains were dull and dead. The surrounding mountains bore the ugly scars of mining and forestry. The city walls stood tall, plain, and bare.
“What business have you in Llorkh?” the Lord’s Man, called Clavel, demanded of Gan. Though Clavel modeled his speech and manner on the Zhentilar, a certain authority was lacking in his voice as he faced down the huge hobgoblin.
“I wish an audience with Lord Geildarr,” Gan said.
“An audience with the mayor?” Clavel said. “For what reason?”
“I fought in his army against the shades.”
Clavel placed his hand on the hilt of his sword.
“Geildarr doesn’t want you here, hobgoblin. Go back to your tribe. Whatever’s left of it.”
Before the Lord’s Man could react, Gan swung the huge axe. The brunt of it struck Clavel head on, and though he was not badly wounded, the blow was enough to send him flying backward and rolling down to the bottom of the ditch. Two other Lord’s Men jumped forward with their weapons at the ready, but Gan lowered his axe.
“I am not here to fight,” he said. “I wish to offer this artifact to Geildarr in atonement for my failure, and that of my tribe.” He laid it on the ground before the guards.
Nervous glances passed between the Lord’s Men. Then, from the shadows behind the checkpoint, an unlikely figure emerged. Small and trim, she moved with the lithe authority of someone thoroughly in control. Her age was difficult to guess, but she appeared to be recently entered into womanhood. Her honey-brown hair hung in a short crop around her smooth oval face. She was dressed in tight black clothing with a sword at her side. The guards’ eyes followed her closely. She strode between the Lord’s Men and stood in front of the hobgoblin without fear, leaning over to inspect the fallen axe. Her fingers traced its lines.
“Geildarr accepts,” she said, and strolled back to the checkpoint with girlish grace. She cast a look over her shoulder at the hobgoblin. “Bring it,” she commanded. Gan leaned over and picked up the axe. The woman took a moment to glance down into the ditch as she passed, where Clavel, his robes smudged with dirt, was struggling to claw his way out, bringing more dirt down onto his face with each desperate grasp. She told the other guards, “Leave him down there till tomorrow morning, then demote him two points of ra
nk.”
As Gan walked past the guards, he asked, “Who is she?”
One guard wore a lecher’s smile as he watched her walk away, admiring the grace and poise in her every step. The other shrank away from the slight woman in nervousness. But they answered together, “Ardeth.”
Gan followed Ardeth past the checkpoint and into Llorkh. He had never been in a city before. Most of his life had been spent in the Graypeaks with his tribe: hunting, making war on rival humanoids, and occasionally performing services for the Zhentarim, including this last assault that crushed his tribe’s warriors. He didn’t doubt that what was left of his people would shortly be destroyed or subsumed by one of their rivals, but he felt only the slightest tinge of remorse. Hobgoblins respected strength, and if strength resided in this Geildarr, it was in Geildarr’s service that he belonged.
Llorkh seemed largely unburdened of the decadence his people associated with city living. Whether made of wood or stone, the buildings were spartan and simple, and even the tall one in the center, which he rightly figured was their destination, had little grace in its design. The streets were uncrowded, many of the houses showing decay as if they had been long unoccupied. The people who were visible were largely soldiers—humans or orcs—and downtrodden human workers, their clothes dirty and ragged. This was not a city, he decided, so much as a stronghold, geared for war and defense above anything else.
He respected that.
Bound for the Lord’s Keep, they skirted a large square where homes and shops were better maintained. A variety of stock animals brayed in pens here, and many of the caravans that he had sometimes witnessed crossing the Dawn Gap sat under guard.
Soon they came to the Lord’s Keep, its guards casting puzzled looks but nevertheless letting Ardeth and Gan through without question. Just before the door, Ardeth pivoted back on the hobgoblin.
Son of Thunder Page 3