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    1. Austronaut 9 yrs ago

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Dramatis Personae

Captain Hollerman - Rieklander, badly wounded.

Warrior Priest - Name? One eyed

Balgar the Demonhearted - Chosen of Tzeentch
Longsword made of mist and darkness
The bitter taste of fear filled Hilde’s throat. The arrow that felled Captain Hollerman brushed close enough that she felt the wind of its passage. A great gout of blood sprayed from the Captain’s lips and then soldiers were dragging the stricken man back towards the wagons, around which the soldiers instinctively formed. The great wooden shapes were a bastion of civilization, however illusory.

Hilde looked down the winding forest path. There was just a chance that if she struck her heels to the horse's flanks she might escape the ambush while the beastmen were focused on the other soldiers. Hot disappointment flooded through her mouth as a group of gangling creatures rushed from the trees onto the road in front of her, closing of her escape. The blew a variety of gnarled animal horns, whether signaling or merely for the joy of it, she couldn’t tell.

“Shyalla keep me,” she whispered, more in desperation than in hope. Somewhere down the line of the caravan a man was shouting orders. It seemed to break the spell of surreal terror that gripped the soldiers. The shrieking chaos took on more order and the heavy sound of shields slapping against shields raised a counterpoint to the screams and howls of the enemy.

Sensing that whatever slender hope of salvation there way lay in that direction, she sawed at the regins hauling the reluctant horse around. The animal screamed as an arrow, fletched with filthy crow's feather, struck it in the haunch. Cursing, she hammered the animal's flank with her heals, sending it racing down the trail in a staggering run.

Ahead of her a knot of grotesque beastmen broke the treeline, hacking into the stragglers who had not yet been able to form up. She saw a goatfaced beastman slit the throat of a wounded halberdier and lap the blood gushing down the front of his uniform. A dying Reiklander, Franz, a swordsman whom she had always hated, stabbed the creature through the stomach with a long knife. His face was drawn and she realized he was clutching the squirming masses of his own intestines with one hand.

For a second she thought she would reach the temporary safety of the shield wall, but with a suddenness that was shocking even in the whirl of battle, a great axe crashed down on her steed's neck. A shower of hot liquid sprayed her as the ugly iron weapon bound in the horse's flesh. The wielder was a great minotaur with a snake like tounge. Its mass was sufficient to check even a galloping horse and suddenly she was flying forward through the air. Pain exploded through Hilde’s body as she smashed into the ground, the breath expelling from her chest in a dull whump. For long moments she could do little but gasp for air even as she saw the gigantic minotaur rush towards her. With a desperate yelp she pulled a pistol from her belt, pulled back the hammer and fired. The harsh crack-pop of the weapon seemed a faded and washed out thing in the screaming confusion of the battle, but the minotaurs knee exploded in a gout of blood and cartilage. With an oddly bovine scream the beast toppled to the ground, the thud of its impact shaking leaves from the trees. Still it dragged itself towards the defenders intent on murder and feeding.

“Shayalla,” Hilde moaned and started to crawl towards the wagons, her mind unable to even consider reloading the weapon.

A black armored hand reached down and seized her by the back of the neck, lifting her into the air like a sack of grain. The chaos warrior laughed like mountains cracking, holding her aloft like a trophy. He called something in his vile language which, thankfully, she didn’t understand. Then he spoke a single word she did recognise. Slaanesh. The blasphemous name of the Chaos Prince of Pleasure. Hilde’s mind seemed to flee her body, though she felt herself screaming. She was back in the covenant, the night the armed men had come. She was praying to Shyalla for mercy, but no mercy came, not that night, or for many more nights until Dieter and his pistoliers had caught the northmen and their captives on the march.

Time seemed to elongate and she was staring down at the intricately designed black armor, its seductive carved runes made her eyes water, it's brass adornments grotesque and baroque. She could even smell the odd musky perfume of the warrior, something like incense mixed with blood and other, less identifiable scents. Then the warrior suddenly staggered back, half a dozen plate sized dents appearing in his armor and he fell to his knees, his grip slackening. Something, not blood, leaked from the joints of his armor. The beast men around the warrior fell like mown wheat, punched from their feet as if by invisible fists.

Her knees hit the ground with a painful crunch and she was suddenly scrambling towards the cloud of stinking smoke around the handgunners. One of the soldiers reached forward and grabbed her as she neared, hauling her into the line of men. He was a slightly older man with a scarred face. She had seen him around but not spoken more than a few words to him.

“There are a dozen Chaos warriors back in the woods,” she shouted, instinctively raising her voice around the firearms. She pulled her second pistol from her belt and pulled back the hammer.

“And thank you!”

@POOHEAD189
Sorry my first post is a bit light, just wanted to get something up before I went to bed!

Forests were never comfortable places Hilde thought as she touched her heels to the geldings dappled flank. The horse whickered nervously as it moved alongside the marching men. There was hardly room for it, the trees pressed in close enough to touch. Hilde supposed that is why the Captain had called the few scouts to the front and rear. The hoofs made dull clopping sounds on the damp earth. It had rained recently enough that they didn’t kick up dust, but long enough ago that the road wasn’t a muddy quagmire. Shyalla be praised for small mercies.

The warrior priest, Father Heinrick, turned to glower at her as she approached, his one eye filled with baleful fire.

“You should not be here whore,” he snarled. The captain laid a restraining hand on the priest's shoulder.

“Now is not the time,” he declared in a quiet voice that left no one in doubt that the conversation was over. It had been the captain's decision to allow her along, even though many of the men would have agreed with Heinrick’s assessment. Hilde new better than to open her mouth to argue with the priest. She laid her hand gently along her horses neck as it skittered again.

“Something is wrong,” she declared with sudden certainty. Somewhere behind her a man screamed, his voice tearing the misty forest like a thunderclap.
Behold my post, in which Cassilda falls down some stairs.
a


Cassilda licked her lips, the familiar taste of blood and the stink of dying men filled the room like an oily fume. She cocked a slender eyebrow at the elf before transferring her gaze to Kayden.

“Something you forgot to mention to us before we started captain?” she asked acidly. Like most mercenaries she didn’t like surprises, they tended to go hand in hand with sudden and violent death.

Further discussion was forestalled by a noise from the top of the stone steps. Silently, she slid her blade from its sheath and climbed the steps. The stairs opened onto a large room, perhaps a guardhouse in former times but an indistinguishable space heaped with refuge and cobwebs now. A half dozen men were coming into the room from another set of stairs. Light streamed down from above, suggesting the surface was not far away.

With a sharp intake of breath she shoved herself back into the shadows created by one of the structural pillars, its granite bulk sheltering her from sight.

“Better hurry s,” she whispered urgently, hoping her companions at the bottom could still hear her.

“Corbin!” one of the bandits called, his tone guileless. He sounded bored and irritated.

“Corbin quit screwing around, Graf wants you up top,” he called again. The men seemed to tense, the lack of response worrying them.

“Probably just drunk,” one of his companions muttered, “like we bloody well should be.”

The bandits were more cautious now, crossing the room to the top of the stairs with nervous glances. Cassilda wished she could sheathe her sword and draw a knife but she dared not move, even to get a better weapon. They came through the archway, close enough to touch. She held her breath but they expected danger from below, not from the side.

The last man stepped through the arch and turned his head slightly, catching her in his peripheral vision, his muscles tensed. Cassilda lunged, driving her sword point into his belly. The boy screamed like a gelded hog and a great gout of blood fountained from his lips. His companions started to turn but rather than try and recover the sword she threw herself at the dying man, knocking him from his feet and sending him careening down the stairway into his cursing companions. Several of them were swept from their feet, but an older warrior in rusted chainmail managed to sidestep the mess.

Cassilda snatched for a knife but the man gave her no time to use it. A heavy boot connected with her knee, sweeping her legs out from under her. She landed hard on her back, the breath exploding from her lungs in a huff. Her assailant lunged at her with a knife of his own but she twisted aside, the steel ringing on the flag stones. Men were shouting now, screaming and cursing. So much for the element of surprise. She snatched her own knife from her belt and drove it at the mans throat. He blocked the slash with his mailed forearm and steel clanging uselessly against steel. He made a clumsy thrust at her but the tight quarters meant he couldn’t get enough force to punch through her leather breastplate. A meaty hand grabbed her throat, thick fingers trying to close her windpipe. She drove her own knife into his exposed wrist, her attacker let go with a curse. He was on top of her, too heavy for her to overpower with brute force. With an inarticulate shriek she twisted her body hard, kicking off the wall with all her strength. Suddenly they were tumbling down the stairs, each cobblestone smashing into her like a hammer.
Well now that I won't be competing with this thread maybe I'll start my own. With blackjack.
Still here just found out I need to move internationally in the next 4 weeks. Fun!
d



Cassilda moved through the dark on careful feet. The moon peeked fitfully through the tree cover, occasionally catching steel or oiled leather in an unpleasant flash of reflected light. The nights animals seemed unenthusiastic about the interlopers, paying them little mind. All the while she whispered quietly to herself, reciting the words of her spell over and over. It wasn’t a powerful glamour, she couldn’t have kept it up for long if it were. There was power in subtlety tough. Just a whisper of power, enough to make the idly curious ignore a glint of armor or a snapped twig.

It was a great relief to reach the castle itself. She was glad Kayden had a way in, it had the look of a place that would chew up men in a siege, taking it would be far more costly than any value it could provide a besieger. That was the point of castles she supposed, to make a few men extremely expensive. Of course, defenders who forced their besiegers to take them by storm could expect no mercy.

The moon was shadowed on the granite stairway as they picked their way higher. She tried not to think about bowman waiting in the dark to spit them, when their only choice was death by arrow or by the long fall to the rocky floor. She remembered the grim satisfaction she had felt in a similar situation when she had been with the bowmen, raining arrows on some doomed unfortunates.

Kayden’s question shocked her from her reverie. The door seemed a formidable obstacle, but appearances could easily deceive.

“I have something,” she whispered, setting her shield down on the stone and stepping to the door itself. Reaching into a pouch she groped blindly in the dark, eventually feeling the smooth glass surface of a small bottle of oil. Drawing the vial out of her pack she carefully smeared the oil on the hinges of the gate. Some of the others were looking at her as though she were conducting some great work.

“Oil,” she explained, “so the hinges don’t squeal.” She doubted it would stop the squealing completely, certainly on the first turn, but it would help.

Now for the real work. She badly wished she could review the spell but she didn’t dare risk the light. Instead she placed a palm on the lockplate of the door and began a low soft chant. The arcane language sounded like a human approximation of ice cracking. Sweat began to gather on her brow and her palm began to pulse with heat. Veins in her pale hand began to blacken and reach up her arm. With a final hissed syllable she finished the spell. There was a surge and the blackness flowed out of her hand and into the lockplate. Rust bloomed out from her hand, like a film of frost on a window pain and she sagged backwards from the effort of the unfamiliar spell.

Breathing hard she drew a dagger from her belt. Taking a deep breath she drove the point into the rusted lockplate. It slid in with a crunching sound as the rusted metal gave way like old bark. The door gave a soft groan as she twisted the blade, shredding the hopelessly corrupted mechanism. The door fell with a slight bang and squealed for a second as it began to turn. Then the oil coated the hinges and it quieted, its weight slowly pushing it open.
Can you make it clear who is in what group?
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