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Undead
Chains
Like the snowflakes falling
from a cold darkened sky,
and the raindrops from a stormwind blown
aInto my path, I walk at night.
My vision is clouded, my dreams are careened,
my mind has spoken, my heart unseen.
This the weave of fate could be?
This the nameless song believed?
Images of days brighter than this -
iIntrinsic life better than an Immortal's kiss.
The judgement, it stands.
The jury remains,
bound no more by undead chains.
A dance with illusion, the music now stills,
and wings that fly oft from void's windowsill.
~ Psychi
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Song of Eylhaar
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~ by Aengen
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There is a lady wild and fair
In whose dark eyes sleeps dark despair.
The night is lost in her black hair.
xxShe sails the ocean of
the wind
xxBetween earth and air.
Farewell all love,
Farewell all pain.
Farewell all rage,
Farewell all blame.
Farewell desire and hope of gain.
She'll wash your spirit clean again.
Her home is at the world's last gate
Where all must come or soon, or late
Led by the certain hand of fate.
xxShe greets you there
by night and day,
xxLow or high estate.
She holds all love,
She holds all pain.
She holds all rage,
She holds all blame.
Be wise, all you who meet her gaze...
The lady of all final days.
And there is rest, in her dark hall -
The storms of life fade past recall
In the peace of night's long fall.
xxShe offers shelter from
all woe,
xxAnd then gives back all.
She gives back joy,
She gives back strife.
She gives back hope,
She gives back life.
She gives us to the world once more
And sets our spirits free to soar.
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Book of the Void
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~ by Rashahaverik
Debarsaive
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Table of Contents
Introduction
The Tale of Urrem'tier.
The Gift of the Maiden.
The Chant of
Aldauth.
Introduction
Urrem'tier
is vast in his power and grandness. But even so, he and his
aspects still sometimes take a personal interest in the affairs
of mortal men. What follows are three tales of each of the
aspects of the Lord of Death. The first, set in modern times,
is of Urrem'tier, master of the void. The second tale is of
Eylhaar and takes place in the past, on the night Shard was
taken. The final tale is of Aldauth. Master of pain, torture,
and foolish deaths. His is not truly a tale, but a chant said
to be heard by those in the most painful throes of death.
Believe these tales or not, but it is foolish to think that
the gods do not watch us carefully.
~ Rashahaverik
DeBarsaive
The
Tale of Urrem'tier
In the town of Riverhaven
there once lived a thief named Grundgy. Grundgy was one of
the worst of thieves and it was not long before he came under
the scrutiny of the law. His antics were petty. A purse stolen
here, a merchant robbed there. Still, the town guards feared
that Grundgy would do some serious harm one day. Grundgy was
a Gor'tog. He used his strength, instead of stealth, to get
what he wanted. Left to do what he pleased, Grundgy might
hurt someone. The fear of the town soon became reality.
One day Grundgy tried
to steal a loaf of bread for his morning meal. But Grundgy's
victim was a stubborn, old baker and instead of letting the
oversized thief have the bread; the man resisted. He cried
out for the guards, and took a swing at Grundgy with his rolling
pin. Grundgy was shocked! In his panic, the huge Gor'tog backhanded
the poor baker, and took off down the street running. Before
he knew what was happening he had passed through the city's
east gates, and was running towards the wilderness.
Behind him he heard
cries of anger and astonishment. Someone was yelling for people
to stop him. Someone was yelling for the gates to be closed.
Grundgy ran in blind terror, his heavy feet leaving deep tracks
in the dark soil. Grundgy plowed through the underbrush before
him, blindly rushing ahead. Small cuts began to appear over
his body as the plants shredded both skin and clothing. Finally,
after what seemed like an eternity, Grundgy stopped. He looked
down at his hands. The loaf of bread he carried was reduced
to crumbs. But that was not what caught his attention. Across
his gray-green fingers were trails of blood. Blood, red and
rich had spread over his knuckles and across his wrist. Grundgy
silently stared at the blood. His mind raced as he remembered;
the baker calling out, Grundgy swinging his fist at the man,
the feel of bone breaking...
When he had struck the
baker, his great strength must of crushed the frail man's
skull. Grundgy started to sob, tears running down his wide
cheeks. "I never meant to hurt him!" he lamented. Behind him
he could hear the shouts of the guards, as they hacked their
way through the underbrush. Grundgy stood on his weary legs,
and started running. He crashed through the foliage, hoping
to escape the justice of the town. He did not make it far.
His wild flight had
led him into a dismal swamp. It was a vile bog that reeked
of death and decay. He tried to move forward, but his great
weight sank into the yellowish, gray mud. From behind him,
he could hear the clang of metal armor, and the whistle of
steel being pulled from scabbards. Muffled curses floated
over the bog, along with the promises of final justice. Grundgy
began to beg and plead to all the gods he held dear in his
heart. But as the footfalls of the guards became louder, his
pleas turned into threats, his prayers into curses.
"Selfish gods! Is there
not one who will help me?" Grundgy screamed. A bleak darkness
filled his vision, and a voice, as cold as the grave, spoke
to him. "I will help you," the voice assured. "Take my tail,
and strike down those who would give you their false justice."
When Grundgy's vision cleared, he saw floating before him
a sword of blackest obsidian. The length of his arm, the sword
seemed to radiate power and strength.
"There he is!" Grundgy
turned to see half a dozen of the guards hacking through the
briars and reeds. He quickly turned, and grasped the sword.
He felt a small prick, then a rush of power as strength flowed
into his tired limbs, and aching muscles. Crying in triumph
he leapt towards the guards, a vengeful gleam in his eyes.
When the fierce battle
was over, Grundgy surveyed the carnage around him. The bodies
of the guards lay strewn about him, hacked and mutilated.
Grundgy began to cackle loudly causing his voice to boom across
the empty quagmire. Grundgy's glee was cut short however as
the bleak darkness returned. Its chilling voice spoke to him.
"You have used what is mine ...and for that privilege I will
take my payment."
Grundgy began to feel
the sword in his hand twist and turn. The cool feel of stone
was replaced with that of a squirming insect. Grundgy screamed
as a scorpion, blood red, crawled up his arm and towards his
face. When the last of Grundgy's anguished howls had echoed
across the swamp, the scorpion sank silently back into the
mud. There it would wait until, once again, it was needed
to serve the folly of men.
Return
to the Table of Contents
The
Gift of The Maiden
It had been a cool,
fall day when the woman had sent her husband to die in the
war. He had left when the trees were showing their brightest
colors of the year. He had brushed her cheek gently with his
hand, and had told her that he would be back in time for their
child to be born. But the months had passed and no word of
him was heard. Now, the only word that was being sent was
that the Dragon Priests were sacking Shard.
The woman looked out
her window to the south, in the direction of the great city,
where she had met her love. There was a dull, orange glow
that filled the night sky, and a sinister, black cloud that
snaked up into the heavens, covering stars like some flowing
burial shroud. The sound of horses made her shift her attentions
to the road. Racing past were her neighbors that lived on
a small farm to the south. They called to her as they galloped
north, shouting out words of warning, words of fear.
"Run! Flee as fast as
you can! The dark army approaches!"
Stories of the Dragon
Priests filled her mind. Tales of slavery and torture. Tales
of sacrifice and cannibalism. Her tear-filled eyes tore their
gaze from the window, and settled on the crib of her childern.
She smiled sadly, and said to herself, "He would be so surprised
if he knew we had twins." Her hands covered her face, as her
whole body shook with lament. "My love," she groaned. "What
shall become of us?"
Her mourning was interrupted
by a soft knock from the doorway. Almost unconsciously the
woman went to meet her visitor. Before her stood a maiden
of incomparable beauty. Silky locks, black as ink, framed
a fair-skinned face. Her tall, statuesque form was clothed
in a simple gray dress, and from her slender shoulders flowed
an ebony cloak. Clasped in her delicate hands was a simple
basket woven from grape vines. The maiden's full lips held
a smile for the woman, but her dark eyes seemed to radiate
a cold emptiness.
"May I come in gentle
mother?" the maiden said. Her soothing voice filled the woman
with an unnatural calm. "I have lost my way and it seems that
it is a most dangerous night to be on the road."
"Please, please come
in," answered the woman, "you are right. Tonight is no night
to travel."
"But it is a good night
to travel," replied the maiden, "just not on the roads." She
smiled as she stepped inside the cabin. Looking about, the
maiden sat down next to the crib of the sleeping twins. "And
these are your children," the maiden said, half to herself.
She turned her head to gaze at the mother. "It is a shame
that their father cannot see them while they are still so
young."
The woman nodded in
reply, her eyes filling with tears. "Oh, I miss my love so!"
she cried.
The maiden stood and
wrapped her arms about the woman. "Peace, gentle lady," she
said soothingly. "If you trust in me, I will take you to him,
and your children also." The woman looked at the maiden, her
tear filled eyes searching for answers. The maiden nodded
slowly, and held out the basket she carried. Within were three
small plums, blacker than any the woman had seen before. "I
grow them myself, gentle lady," the maiden said. "They are
bitter sweet, but they quench the thirst, and soothe the hunger."
The woman looked from
the basket to her children. She then turned to the window
and stared at the dull orange glow, growing ever brighter
on the horizon. For a long moment nothing was said. Finally,
the woman nodded slowly and turned to answer the maiden. But
when she looked, the maiden had vanished. All that was left
was the basket resting on the table. The woman glanced one
last time out the window, gently picked up the basket, and
turned to feed her children.
Return
to the Table of Contents
The
Chant of Aldauth
I am the steel that cuts you
deep
I am the foe that makes you weep
I am the help that never comes
I am the life-line made undone
I am the bolt that strikes from high
I am the pain that never dies
I am the flame that burns the flesh
I am the woe that gives no rest
When death comes slowly
Look for I
And see my visage by your side.
I am the wound that bleeds
you slow
I am the cure that no one knows
I am the poison in your cup
I am the fever that runs amok
I am the cloud that blocks the sun
I am the reason that you run
When death comes slowly
Look for I
And see my visage by your side.
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And now dear reader,
I bid you good night. Say your prayers softly, and hope that
when the time comes for death to visit, it will be swift,
and merciful.