Othroktide
Darkness falls across the land.
The Midnight hour is close at hand.
Creatures crawl in search of blood.
To terrorize your neighborhood.
And whosoever shall be found.
Without the soul of getting down.
Then stand and face the Hounds of Hell.
And rot inside a corpses shell.
The foulest stench is in the air.
The stunk of many long years.
And grisly ghouls from every tomb.
Are closing in to seal your doom.
And though you fight to stay alive.
Your body starts to shiver.
For no common mortal can resist.
The evils of the dead.
3E 253, 16th of Morning's Star
Meir Darguard, High Rock
Othrok patted his mother awkwardly on her shoulder as she sobbed into his shoulder. He knew that he would have been unable to avoid this tearful farewell, and he knew, to, that this could very well be the last time he saw his mother's tears, for earlier that year, his Majesty of Sharnhelm had raised his Black Bear Standard, declaring war upon the neighboring kingdom of Camlorn, and all the towns and cities within the kingdom had been compelled to provide men for Sharnhelm's army. Othrok himself had been exempt from the recruiting, owing to his noble blood and his father paying the scutage tax.
But Othrok wanted fame, and the riches that ransoming knights could give. So, going against his family's wishes, Othrok had joined the Count of Meir Darguard's household, and was expecting to ride to war within the day.
While a farewell with his mother was the forgone event, obtaining a blessing and farewell from his father would be much more difficult. The man hadn't forgiven his son for going against his wishes, and he had yet to make an appearance at the family's modest house, having said that he had had business in town, and though that had occured several hours ago, he had yet to make an appearance. Othrok thought that it was certainly be one of Life's great tragedies if he was to ride of to war and die without seeing his father just one more time.
The clock hanging on the wall of the Drawing Room went off as the hour struck four, piercing the silence of the household, grating on Othrok's frayed nerves. "I'm sure your father will be back in time to bid you farewell, Othrok. He is just busy." Othrok regarded his mother with thinly veiled skepticism. Sniffing, she said hotly, "Do not look at me that way, young man, I know that man better than any that lives, and I know that he will be back in time." He continued to be unconvinced until, fifteen minutes before he was due to depart, his father entered into the Drawing Room. His red hair was matted and his clothes were splattered with blood, but his eyes were holding back tears.
"My son, come with me." Leaving the comfort of the Drawing Room and into the courtyard, Othrok was shocked by what his father had brought back with him. There, being handled by one of his father's trusted grooms, was the finest horse the young man had ever seen. It stood at least fourteen hands high, with a coat of glossy brown. Seeing his son's shock, the man slapped Othrok on the back, "I know that those tales your mother read to you when you were young always told of the knight and his great white steed, but I've learned in my years that it is the quality of a horse that matters, not what color it is."
"Papa....I don't...I don't know what to say. How much did he cost?"
He shook his head, "It doesn't matter. What matters is that you will being going to war on the best horse in the army." Stepping forward, he took the reins of the stallion from the groom and handed them to his son. "He is my gift to you, Othrok, a farewell gift if you will. And once you get back from war, then I can think of no finer steed to take to the tournaments."
As Othrok and his father embraced one last time, the bell ringing five was sounding. "That would be the call to war," Othrok's father said lightly, trying to hide the sadness he felt, "you'd best not keep the Count waiting." Othrok, wiping the tears from his eyes, strode over to the horse, looking it in the eyes. A moment passed between them before he swung up into the saddle. His mother had come out to join them, and Othrok thought that this was a truly fitting sight. His father and mother, standing together, witnessing with tears in their eyes their only son riding off to fight in a war that had nothing to do with him.
*
Somewhere in Greater Bretony
Angharad leaped over a fallen tree, almost crassing down into the underbrush of the forest. She could hear the shrieks and moans of the abominations chasing after her, and the thought passed through her mind that she could very well die, only a few yards from the safety of the Vale of Kynareth. Getting back to her wind, she continued sprinting, refusing to look back and see how close the beasts following her were, but she had the feeling that if she didn't reach her home soon, that she would certainly join her pursuers in their foul undeath.
She could see the Vale, and a grin spread across her face as she finally broke through the last tangle, crashing into the great fur that formed the center of the Circle. She breathed a sigh of relief when, when she turned to look at her foes, the shambling corpses were already turning away, and the poltergiests couldn't pierce through the wards set up around the Vale.
This relief was shortlived however, when she felt a wind brush against her face, and then a clamy hand clamped across her mouth. Another hand came down under her chin, and tilted her head up, so that she could see her tormenter. The ashen skin, milky eyes, sharp teeth, and stench of death denoted that she was being held by one of the Enemy's lieutenants, a vampire.
"So the little girl thinks she can escape me? Ha!" The creature gave a hoarse laugh, "No one escapes me, girl, no one! You should have given yourself up, for I always need a slave, and you would have made a good one. But you had to run, bring me to this unholy place, where my skin burns, even though no light does fall upon me. For that, I cannot forgive you." He leaned in and sniffed her, "You smell good, girl, your blood will fill me well." Twisting her neck, the vampire brough his teeth down onto Angharad's neck. She likely would have been drained right there, but just as the beast began to drain her blood, she felt his hands come flying off, and his teeth being ripped out of her neck. A terrible shriek went up into the night sky as the vampire reeled back.
Turning her head, relief spread through Angharad's body when she saw Fychan, her teacher and Grand Druid of her Circle, had entered into the Vale and had brought pure light to bear against the undead abomination. "Get ye hence out of here, foul creature, we want none of your stains!"
"Foolish man! No one deprives me of a kill! NO ONE!" The vampire had dropped down into a leaping stance, and sprung at Fychan, only to be blasted back when the druid through another bolt of light at the vampire, sending his airborn target flying against a tree.
"I said leave!" Getting shakilily to his feet, the vampire snarled, but instead of attacking again, he back out of the Vale, his form soon dissapearing into a cloud of fog and then fading into the darkness. "Are you alright, child?" Fychan had come over and knelt next to Angharad, casting a minor spell of healing upon the wounds on her neck. "You shouldn't leave the Vale so shortly before nightfall, you know the woods become dangerous then."
Angharad shook her head, then said in a quivering voice, "How did it get through the wards, Fychan? How?"
Fychan smiled sadly at his young student. "As nature weakens, so do I. And as I weaken, so to do the wards. Soon, if the Gods do not aid us, then we will be wiped out, and that creature that rules at his fortress will turn his attentions elsewhere." Silence reigned after that, as Angharad clutched at Fychan, seeking solance in the comfort of his embrace.
"When will aid come?"
"I do not know, child. I do not know."