Majutsu-shi no Chikara
loosely translates to "Sorcerer's Power"
*** THIS VERSION IS TRUNCATED. Approximately 35% has been redacted from the original. I'm sure there are those who will find this more agreeable.***
CHAPTER ELEVEN: Fireflies and Lightning Bugs
Two-score orks, hunched in the dark and moving under the shadow of clouds blocking the waning crescent, followed a newly-beaten trail from a picked-clean campsite to a much smaller camp. There, orks they did not know stood sentry over a larger gathering. They bore no tribal markings, wore little clothing against the night's chill, and no armor to speak of. These orks at watch were larger and more lean than the shaggy hide-and-steel clad marauders sneaking into their perimeter.
Leading the raiding party, Orenda's scout -- the she-ork called Tebri -- licked her tusks in anticipation of the bloodshed she was about to unleash. She signaled her warriors to fan wide, approaching with a wider face against the sleeping or unaware foreigners. Her archers nocked arrows, leveling their bows at two sentries who would soon be sprouting black-feathered shafts from their stupidly unarmored flesh.
Favorable wind brought the camp's scent to Tebri's broad nostrils, and she inhaled slowly to gather the smell of these foreigners. An odd sameness wafted from them, but it was not the sameness of litter-mates nor seed-mates. It was a sameness Tebri could not place, though she could place the things she knew it
not
to be. Then, another smell rose from the nearby wood -- the heady scent of orks rutting (or recently so). She considered following this new trail toward the woods, perhaps to slit a few throats in silence before setting upon the smooth-skinned outsiders taking residence in the north-most reaches of Orenda's territory.
A break in the clouds, and a stray shaft of thin moonlight glanced off the barbed broad-head of a single arrow. Tebri was not ready -- they were not close enough for the arrows to strike sure, killing blows. The sentry howled, eyes seeming to gather the sparse moonlight as the he-ork focused attention on the one archer he could see.
"SIDERO!" his voice split the relative quiet, and Tebri cursed and signaled her attack.
Howling. The answering cry of wolves -- orks mimicking the call of wolves. As if springing from the darkness itself, a dozen howling orks erupted from the nearby grass as smoke over a campfire. The sentry vanished below the grass, and Tebri's archers loosed too soon; arrows finding no visible target.
"Withdraw!" Tebri snapped, sparking a wick with the striker at her belt and hurling a clay flask just ahead of the oncoming orks at her flank. "Fire and steel!"
The apple-sized pot cracked against the ground and the oily contents scattered. The wick flashed from smoldering sparks to flame and firelight surged outward between Tebri and the rushing Sidero. A handful of similar devices spread their burning contents in the grass, lighting the night and casting smoke about. Arrows sang from bowstrings into the naked, howling orks.
Inkar's wolves, the orks most seasoned in fighting and having a constant hunger for bloodshed, descended through the smoke and wave of arrows with terrifying speed. Arrows bit into flesh, but the wolves crashed through the smoke and into Tebri's raiding party. Using their axes, swords, and spears, Tebri's troop felled the first of Inkar's wolves as they pulled back the way they came... but the Sidero were already driving at them from the camp, and the remaining wolves of Inkar were tearing through Tebri's comrades like straw dolls.
One hulking she-ork managed to grip Tebri about the neck and proceeded to wield her as a club against the Orenda. The crunching, tearing pain of being slammed against another ork, weapons and all, was dulled only when Tebri's neck snapped in the monstrous hand of the ork using her as a flail. With nothing left but suffocation and death, Tebri dizzily witnessed the horrible carnage of Uduak hewing through Orenda's scouts before the greenish-brown she-ork discarded one improvised weapon for another.
"Prisoners!" Tebri heard, as her mind faded into oblivion. "Bring me prisoners!"
...
"Inkar-Chief." Muna and Uduak flanked her as they watched the remainder of Orenda's raiding party lope south into the grasslands -- many carrying wounded or bracing each other upright. "Letting them live is dangerous."
"Better to carve-up their scouts and raiding parties as they come." Uduak added.
"No." Inkar shook her head, grimly satisfied with the mewling weeping from the victim of her anger. "We are two fewer. Orenda's scouts have seen our numbers, and will report them back. Orenda is not a name the Betrayer spoke of -- theirs is a newer bloodline. Orenda will be cautious of this mercy, for is tastes of weakness and speaks with fangs."
"And the scouts that follow?" Muna grumbled, planting her fists to her hips. "They will see we do not have the numbers to overwhelm or drive-off their entire horde."
"Why does Orenda keep seed-mates in different camps?" Inkar tilted an eyebrow at Muna, then glanced over to Uduak. "Is his tribe so disloyal?"
"Is your tribe so loyal, Inkar-Chief?" Uduak nudged Inkar with an elbow, upsetting Inkar's balance slightly.
"We all suffered the same chains." Inkar snarled. "Let them ask for this tribe, and I shall let them cut their teeth as chieftain."
"No, Inkar-Chief." Muna shook her head vigorously. "Your mind is strongest."
"What about their shaman?" Uduak frowned thoughtfully. "Or if they have trolls... we don't have a troll."
"I'm thinking on that." Inkar shrugged. "We arrived here only a few moons ago -- and they were not raiding until South-wold burned. No, they are not so strong as they want us to see. Many, yes... not strong. I think we have many weapons they cannot see."
Damn you, human.
Inkar frowned again in thought, turning her gaze to the sunrise over the mountains as light spilled over the camp at last.
With a sigh, Inkar turned her attention to the Orenda she had kept in retaliation for the deaths of her own tribe-mates. Already, Nahia had carved their new names into their chests and was packing the wounds with hot ash.
"Ten'Ibo, and Ten'Small-Hands." Inkar scowled over them where they lay, their wounds crudely bound and seeping. "You understand why I have kept you?"
"Yes, Sidero-Chief." the newly named Ten'Ibo answered, though it was plain to Inkar that he did not clearly grasp this change. "We are Sidero's slaves."
"Stupid Orenda thinking." Inkar snorted, turning her chin up in scorn. "We will burn away your weakness, Ten'Ibo, until you earn Ibo's place among us. And you, Ten'Small-Hands. Two of ours have fallen. You will take their place, or you will die on the road to it."
Both of the former Orenda's jaws sagged open at this, unable to fathom such position as captives of an enemy tribe. The spark of awe in their eyes was proof enough to Inkar that she would win them over. And if they betrayed her? Her wolves would tear out their necks and all of Sidero would feast on their flesh, as was proper. Inkar smiled her toothy triumph at them, glad that the lessons of northern tribes had not reached so far south.
"When your flesh is mended, you will learn to fight." Inkar scoffed again, her teeth clacking together angrily as she growled. "You fight no better than pups."
"Yes, Sidero-Chief." they answered in stumbling unison.
"Inkar-Chief?" now was Thato interjecting on her thoughts.
"Speak." Inkar nodded, turning her attention to the slightly larger, and brownest of her sisters.
"Chief, I will need half our tribe to do as you say." Thato snarled and barked, explaining the reason for such a feat.
"Take them... and these two." Inkar pointed at the two wounded shadows of her slain kin. "See their healing is not sick with waiting."
"Yes, Chief." Thato tilted her head and spun on the wounded orks below her. "Up, you dogs!"
...
"Ser Wizard Saran, as I live and breathe!" Jachmina bowed low before the obsidian-skinned, white-haired sorceress. "It's truly an honor."
Jachmina was a rounded woman, with vigorous blush in her olive cheeks that could have been pigment or illusion. Her frame was sturdy and wide, though not so wide as most dwarf-kind whose blood she seemed to share as she stood more than a head shorter than Esmeray. Tights curls of black hair were forced into neat plaits over her jewel-laden ears, and the rest fell wild down her back. The beaded corset binding her middle and aiding a slimming illusion was fashioned of fine ivory or bone that Saran did not bother to give further study. Jachmina's fashionable dress was, as with many Wizards (in and outside the Guild) "tastefully garish". Gold accents, gemstones, and vivid colours gave the impression of mystery coupled with opulence -- a trend that Esmeray had eschewed more than a decade before entering the ranks of the Guild.
The gold-laden merchant, Remfry, stood just behind and to the left of his wife, bristling with trinkets and festooned with ornaments to puff-up his position as an accomplished man of the bazaar. Near a head shorter than Jachmina, he was at least as round. His bright-colored cap of slouching material bunched over his left ear, and the many jewels and piercings hanging from his ears, lip, and nose contrasted dazzlingly with the oiled red walnut tones of his skin and the black pigment accentuating his lips and eyes. It seemed Jachmina's esteem of Saran had impressed her husband, as well.
Esmeray Saran's traditional white robes were heavily stained from her travel, and conspicuously absent any adornment or valuable trinkets. Her skin was unusual enough, and her mastery of such enchantment marked her as a great Wizard in a land of aspiring conjurers. She gave only a curt nod, then dispensed with much formality to cut directly to what she needed. Already, the unquenchable thirst of the nymph's poison was building within her.
"I seek essence infernum. All you have." She stated flatly, letting the barest haze of sweat rise on her brow and allude a secret fear. "In exchange, I have adequate coin... and information."
"Not for an homunculus army... why wouldst you consort with a daemon?" Jachmina fidgeted her fingers absently, but was careful to make no motion with actual intent -- lest Saran should feel the need to retaliate in self-defense.
"How much? Then, I shall slake your appetite." Esmeray drooped the lids of her eyes just enough that the younger sorceress took enough meaning to stop wasting time.
"Three hundred." Jachmina could not withhold a petulant pout of her lips, but confident that she could at least secure half that, which was still more than half again what the volume was worth. "We've just 12 grain, which should be suited to what you need."