Imagine this, if you can: A land that time has twisted and
warped; A land of spiked mountains and deep valleys; trees gnarled and bent; A
medieval land of sorcery and myth, legend and prophecy; A land that seems to be
stuck in the autumn of the year, waiting for winter to come. Darkness has replaced the day as the
creatures of the night emerge from their hiding places until the sun pushes
them back into the shadows. A cold wind
is blowing, not a normal wind that you feel on an October night that foretells
of the coming winter and snow, but a cruel wind that blows into your bones and
that a coat can’t stop. There is a
strange fog that seems almost unaffected by the wind. It hovers around trees and rocks, and hides in holes that you
could trip in. The moon gives off just
enough light to shadow the land with evil shapes that you hope are trees and
rocks, not animals waiting for their evening meal. The only sound is that of the wind. It sounds like a thousand banshees screaming as it echoes off the
mountains and the crooked trees. There
is a pervasive smell of rot that bleeds and oozes from the ground. Death is just behind the next rock or beyond
that fallen tree, in a land like this you just never know!
He should have been here two days ago to prepare to meet
them. It wouldn’t give him much
time. With that strange fog building,
it would be harder to find the exact spot he was looking for.
He was a man with dark thoughts, dressed in dirty rags and
an old dirty coat that had been passed down from generation to generation. Now he was searching the shadows of this
valley between the tall mountains of this accursed land. He would find the place in time; he had to. His now dead master had told him that he
would.
When he first began his training as a sorcerer, he was a
nobody, and still would be had his master not taken the time to teach him true
magic. He missed him now as he looked
back. His master had been a true
friend; and it was his fault that he had died.
He was born and raised in the Town of Hillshire, just
outside of the kingdom walls of Ravenfall.
It was a nice little town full of farmers, tailors, and craftsmen of all
kinds. It was quite a wealthy town
because of the closeness to the king and the fact that they supplied most of
what the kingdom needed. He was seven
years old when his mother died during the Black Plague that killed most of the
people of the town. His father had been
killed in a war for the King three years earlier. His sister was two when the town paid their respects and laid his
father down for his final rest. He had
been a great warrior, but in a war, even the best men die when they are
outnumbered.
Rathsmus didn’t remember his father much. His name was Victor. He had been a big man, large of bone and
stature, with dark brown hair and a full beard and mustache that had just a
tinge of gray around the edges. He had
a great sense of humor and a laugh that could bring down a mountain. Victor could best any man in the kingdom
with a sword and he could hold his own with the best from any kingdom within a
month’s march. One of Rathsmus’ best
memories was when his father won the king’s greatest warrior contest. The winner had to be the best with five
different types of weapons, both on horse and afoot; sword, bow and arrow, crossbow,
lance, and a whip, all with full armor.
The celebration lasted several days.
That took place about six months before the war began with
the local kingdom of Damonwood. It was
a foolish war over a mistress belonging to the King of Damonwood who was now
with the King of Ravenfall. A month
into the war Rathsmus’ father was dead; within two weeks the Kingdoms were
friends again and the war was forgotten, along with his father and the other
men that had died. Rathsmus hated the
King for his stupidity and the Town for putting up with him. His mother instructed him never to tell
anyone how he felt for fear they might not be allowed to remain in the house. A
few words of advice as a child, memories of the family picnics, and the memory
of a man dressed in metal armor with the blue and red markings of the King,
were all Rathsmus had left. His mother
had saved the armor and shield and kept it in the attic. Rathsmus went there to look at and fondle
them often. He even tried them on and
pretended to fight off the King’s enemies.
He wished that he could remember more, but the memories just weren’t
there.
The memories of his mother were clearer. She had been a pretty woman, kind and sweet,
tall for a woman, but when she had trouble with a neighbor or other townsman
she needed the height and they usually backed down when she gave them the
eye. She held herself with the pride of
a queen and never said a mean word of anyone.
She would laugh a shy little titter that endeared her to anyone she
met. Rathsmus’ mother would help
anyone, even if it meant a hardship for her; she always told Rathsmus that God
knew who was good by how much you would give up for your fellow man. Deep down his mother had a profound impact
on his life. How he felt about other
people and how much he did to help his neighbors that were having trouble with
their health or other problems. Since
his mother’s death, God had become nonexistent in his life. He felt that most people only wanted to use
him and gave him nothing in return for his help, and he hated people in
general.