This is a tale of a time long ago, when the Gods did not meddle in the world as they do today, but left space for heroes to do mighty deeds. It begins far from any city of men or othermen, and far from any wilderness filled with peril, on a treeless hill in the highlands where nothing could be grown but eggfruit vines and pignuts. On that hill there lived three brothers. The brothers were poor, but of good character, and good sons to their aged father. Their father was healthy and strong, but one day he fell from the back of the one podigast they owned, and was killed. The brothers mourned him, and called together all their kin from the other hills near and far, so that they might drink and feast in their father’s memory. Their little house was filled for a little time with cousins, and wives or husbands and children of cousins, and nieces and nephews, and they drank more wine and ate more flesh than they could afford, and sent off their father into the long night in as grand a manner as any Duke.
When the three brothers had made farewell to the last of these visitors, they found that they were missing one thing. It was a clock that their grandmother had brought with her many years before, when she first came to the farm from a town of the lowlands, carrying their father in her belly. The clock had never worked, not since the old man had been a little boy, and its brass wheels lay beneath a dome of green glass like some treasure sunken beneath the sea. The brothers thought when last they had seen this clock, and none could recall for certain, but each was sure it had been at its place on the mantelpiece when the burial feast began. None of their kind would have stolen the clock, of that they were certain, but each recalled having seen a woman at the feast who they did not recognize. Continue reading
Staameral was the strongest Argandarr in all the lands – he stood at least ten feet tall, and it was commonly agreed that was at the shoulder. He was also clever (for an Argandarr) and had as many wives as there are stars in the sky, for his virility was immense beyond question. He was a blacksmith and beyond that he was a weaponsmith. One day, a traveller from a distant and mysterious land brought Staameral a piece of metal. It was strange and peculiar stuff, being not quite like silver and not quite like gold, and yet shiny and stronger than steel. This piece of metal was only the size of Staameral’s little finger, yet he bought it off the traveller for a handful of rubies (Staameral was immensely rich too). When questioned, the stranger was stubbornly mysterious, and would only admit that the metal had come from a strange land across the sea to the south. He would say no more and left, never to be seen again. Staameral took up his huge blacksmiths hammer, and powering up his forge, crafted a dagger from the piece of metal. He made it perfect and unique and it took him and his five apprentices fifty days and fifty nights to craft it, and then Staameral went home, because his many wives were impatient at his absence. He left his five apprentices to guard the dagger, because he had a gut-feeling that it was IMPORTANT in capital letters. Continue reading
I don’t usually role play in MMOs, but if someone else is acting in character I am always happy to play along. I haven’t seen many people role-playing in Guild Wars 2, so was quite pleased when this exchange began.
Uh oh, I think.
UH-OH, I think.
In the meantime, the other member of his party, who I originally ran over to help res, has been killed again while he has run off to talk to me, and I go back to res him again…
*teleports*
Araxtiara, by the way, is a name taken from an RPG character who was a dweller in a city of the Undead. As you can see from her picture, she is in her pre-undead form. And she is just wearing the first level of crafted light armour gear, I didn’t go out of my way to dress her inappropriately. Her back story is here.
My name is Texeliara Araxtiara Cinciara Hmarj, and I was once alive. I am writing this in Korodan, my native tongue, and it feels good to see the shapes of familiar words. No one here remembers more than fragments, so I have been forced to speak Debrasian, the tongue of our enemies from over the sea, or Gef, which was spoken by the ancients.
I was born in the seventy-sixth year of the War. I was born to a woman named Cinciara Hmarj, in Baerica on the river Hmay. It was in spring, which is warm and dry in Baerica, and the Hmay is broad and slow and the colour of caramel in that season. I know this because I lived in Baerica until I was twelve years old. It was a peaceful town, far from the front, and it had many gardens of trees with flame-coloured flowers. There were ten thousand people there, or a little more. I was raised at the Number Five creche, and then at the school named Major Jaldaen, which was esteemed the best of the schools of Baerica. I was very clever and took the awards for composition, arithmetic, and history in the year I was twelve. Continue reading