The Edge of the Greenwood, SA 1000
Liver and Onions
(Private with Tara)
The sun would not rise for another three hours. The night had closed around the little cottage that
Fjörn thought he was going have an anxiety attack. The mists were heavy, he was almost afraid to breath as he stepped into the obscuring cloud. The farmstead was strangely quiet, an insect here and there buzzing and chirping was the only thing that broke through the blanket of suffocating silence. It had been quieter and quitter these past few weeks. His farm was never quiet. Between chickens, goats, rabbits, and pigs there was always a hum of sound coming from some direction. He’d gone to check on his chickens one morning and found a half dozen of them had been ripped apart and partially devoured. At first, the farmer had no idea what to think, a predator would have eaten the whole thing, but the whole scene looked foul and ritualistic. However, the natural logic and reason of common folk won out. Mere coincidence. It was probably just a fox, hardly a new occurrence.
Fjörn had been living on his own for nearly fifteen years now and had his share of run ins with the predatory faunae that haunted the lands between the marshes and the forest. Foxes, badgers, wolves, serpents, crows, and rats, he’d dealt with them all at least once, he’d even had to scare a bear once in naught but he bedclothes. He expected to find the culprit and deal with the beast accordingly within a few days, but luck had not been on his side. All but two of his goats had succumb to the predator, his chickens had been annihilated, and his rabbits had all escaped to their fate a few days before. He’d spent the night with the pigs, assuming they would be the next to suffer from the ongoing predations.
He’d slept fitfully, if at all. His dreams were troubled by a single fox that flitted about, just on the edge of his vision. No matter how he chased it, the fox eluded again and again until finally he was forced to give up the hunt. It was always once he gave up that the fox attacked. He woke covered in sweat despite the cool air. He tracked through his farmstead, walking on quiet feet. The mists obscured his vision and the silence was heavy enough to cause a ringing in his ear. He didn’t like this. There was something unnatural at work here. Something strange and sinister. He felt the hair stand up the back of his neck and couldn’t shake the sensation of being watched. He strained his ears as much as he could, but the further he tracked along, the less he could hear. Even his own footsteps had been dampened by the heavy silence. Armed with naught but a torch and a short sword,
Fjörn made his way out further and further, doing his best to follow the plough lines of his fields. The onions would be sprouting soon, wild ones that he was determined to cultivate and domesticate. Even in the gloom and the mists, he could see tiny green shots jutting up from the ground. Somehow, that little bit of normalcy was enough to ground him. He’d had a run of bad luck, that was it; it could have, and often did, happen to farmers all the time. Adversity was second nature to those that chose to live alone, farm from the jingle and light of cities and towns. The Northman preferred the company of animals over humans, they were better listeners and mind their manners better than his fellows. He stomached them enough to take the fruits of his labor into the nameless trading post once a month, but even that small amount of time away from his home was tortuous. This land had been his father’s who, like
Fjörn was a recluse who preferred animals to people. They’d worked the land and husbanded the animals together until the old man finally died of a bad cough.
Fjörn heard stories of the world outside, of elven strongholds in the trees and dwarven fortresses deep in the mountains, but that’s all they were, stories. The only place in all the world he knew was real was his farm, the marshlands, and the great mountainous trees of the Greenwood.
A blue light appeared somewhere in the distance. He froze, a hard chill ran up his spine. A will-o’-the-wisp. He’d lived near the marshes long enough to know one of those on sight. When he was younger, and foolhardier, he’d followed one out into the middle of the marshes and nearly drowned in a bog. Had it not been for the timely arrival of his father and a pig, he would have been stayed down there for a thousand years and no one would be the wiser. He’d seen them more than a dozen times now, each time he wanted to follow them, to see if he could finally catch one. According to some of the rumors he’d heard at the trading post, if he caught one he could force it to reveal where a trove of elven gold was hid. But he never gave in to the impulse. Each time he tried to take a step near them, his legs began to lock up and freeze, the same as they had the first time when he trampled into a sludge of nigh frozen water. He shivered involuntarily. Another light appeared, maybe a hundred paces beyond the first. His heart skipped a beat. He’d never seen two will-o’-the-wisps at the same time. Something supernatural was happening here, that fact settled like a stone in the Northman’s stomach. His limbs felt leaden. Every impulse screamed at him to turn and go back, to wait until the mists cleared, to wait until the sun was high enough in the sky to vanquish all the shadows. But he couldn’t bring himself to do it. He wanted to follow the lights. A run of bad luck could always be turned around with a trove or two of elven gold. He slapped himself hard in the face. He’d never been so greedy before! What had gotten a hold of him? His empty stomach growled as if to answer. He’d not eaten in two days, saving what he could for his animals. If this continued, he’d have to butcher one of the pigs or goats to make it to trading season. A reserve of elven gold though… he cursed violently. The mists drank up the sound and seemed to move closer in around him.
Turn back, this isn’t a safe time to be out and about. The hour of the wolf isn’t safe for a lone man to be wandering out in the cold mists with naught but a torch and a bit o’ steel. The voice of reason was the voice of his father, cold but sage. He tried to turn to go, but his will couldn’t seem to connect to his feet. He remained rivetted to the spot, staked to the ground like a misbehaving goat. Not for the hundredth time, he wished he’d bought a hound to help him keep the farm safe. But his father had never had one, so he had always surmised that he didn’t need one either.
But his father had never dealt with two will-o’-the-wisps before. Or if he had, he never told his son about it, never prepared him for the lights that took hold of his soul and refused to let go. Every impulse screamed at him, but he couldn’t help himself. The lure of the lights, of the prospect of gold, of ending this nightmare, it was too great. No matter how much he wanted to turn back, he couldn’t. He took a step forward, closer to the pale blue lights. Each of the lights moved back a pace. He took another step, moving with less difficulty despite his mind screaming at him. The lights moved back as well. This continued on and on for a dozen paces. He stopped and shivered. Why was it so cold here? He stepped into a hidden puddle and his boots sank to the brim. Icy bog water filled his boot and he yelped in pain. Something just beyond the edge of visibility moved, a poorly formed shape, amorphous and incorporeal. It laughed, it giggled, it tittered. He barely had time to register though, as a bolts of ice cold energy shot up his leg until he could barely feel his foot. He tried to pull the boot out but only succeeding in pulling his foot out. There was a wet
SHLOMP and the boot vanished under the murky green liquid. He cursed, stumbled, and fell backwards. He landed hard on his backside. For a moment it seemed like there were more blue lights, a hundred or more. His heart seized. He grabbed at his chest and closed his eye as tightly as he could. All sense of self preservation, all thought of logic and reason fled and all he could do was think of hiding.
When he opened his eyes though, after what felt like an hour, the lights had disappeared. All except those first two. They almost looked like eyes as they peered at him through the gloom. Yet if they were eyes, the creature beholding him would be as big as the dragons that the traders would talk about, beasts the size of mountains whose breath was hotter than the fires of the earth.
Fjörn didn’t believe anything so large could exist. But those two lights almost gave him pause. He watched them, sitting motionless and silent. They remained just a still, flickering here and there, consuming some unknown fuel to keep their eerie glow. No one knew what the will-o’-the-wisps really were. Some stories said they were faeries, something akin to the elves or something darker and more treacherous like the Black Enemy.
Fjörn wasn’t sure about either of those, he preferred to believe they were something different altogether, aligning neither with the elves or the enemy. Like him, they were focused solely on their own world.
A beetle crawled over his hand and the trance ended. He awoke from the daydream with a start. He was cold. His foot was numb, as he tried to stand, he couldn’t feel it there. He tried to move but he tumbled over, quickly losing his balance. He whimpered, more out of frustration and anxiety than out and out fear. That thing, that shape just beyond the mist laughed again. He couldn’t see it, but the sound came from all around it. It wasn’t muted the way all the other sounds were, it carried and echoed. He started walking, moving away from the will-o’-the-wisps. Their spell had been broken and he knew he was in dire trouble if he tried to follow them, elf gold or no. He looked behind him once more, the lights were still there, hovering. There was an itch in the air, like something was about to break. He could feel the tension in the air. He wanted to scream. They were hypnotizing him again, he realized. He tried to tear his gaze away, but he kept getting drawn back to those eerie silent balls of blue flame. Like a moth to a flame. He squeezed his eyes shut and began muttering to himself, trying to break the spell. Step by slow step, he finally broke free and began moving. His stride was uneven; he struggled as the muck and mire seemed to grow and expand. What was going on? This wasn’t the way his farm was laid out. The closer he came to his home the more solid the ground should be. He should be able to see the tops of the trees over the mist by now, their silhouettes at least. But there was nothing there.
Something formed out of the mist. A long, slender shadow apparated out of the mist and formed something solid. He squinted in the darkness, thrusting his torch forward. It looked like a small tree, a sapling. But there were no trees within this distance of his farmhouse. He crept closer, his nerves beginning to fray. It wasn’t a tree, he could see after a few more steps. It was a post, with a crossbeam and a horse skull sitting in the middle. He stopped, flabbergasted. It was his own marker, announcing the boundaries of his farmland. But it should be in this direction. He had turned, he was moving away from the boundaries now. He was going back home. He wasn’t going out!
Fjörn began to hyperventilate, in his confusion he gasped for air but found his lungs could only take in so much. Faster and faster he breathed until he toppled over, landing face first in muck. He yelped and pulled himself out. There was nothing but darkness around him. He’d dropped his torch when he fell and it landed in the same liquid muck that he had. He was blind.
Then a blue light appeared behind him. Gooseflesh prickled over his arms and the hair on the back of his neck stood on end. He turned, crouching to make himself as small and defensible as possible. The will-o’-the-wisp hovered not five twenty feet away. Then another, and another and another and another. They were surrounding him. He began to shake uncontrollably. His legs and arms were nearly frozen, he could have pissed himself and never known it. The lights moved closer to him. Closer and closer until they were almost within reach. He shrank back, squeezed his eyes shut. It had worked the first time, he prayed it would work again. He opened them and let out a sad wail. They were all still there.
Then he saw a shape move from behind him. He heard it laugh.