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Shadowborne: The Silent King

🇬🇧Uttophian
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Synopsis
Never before had I, a sovereign of vast realms, tasted the bitter draught of death. My life, a tapestry of minor scrapes and swift recoveries, had known no true peril until this dire moment. A void, cold and unyielding, crept within my royal flesh, whispering the grim truth of my mortality. How had such realization dawn upon me? It was not through understanding, for knowledge eluded me; it was a feeling—a premonition of an end that wrested from me all semblance of dominion. I stood alone, as I had in life, now in the shadow of death's embrace. My power, once unassailable, held no sway over this fate. My strength, a mere memory; my cunning, rendered futile; and my magic, a dormant force that stirred not in my need. There, before the gaping maw of oblivion, I knelt, my sword—a steadfast companion—my sole comfort as the eternal slumber beckoned. My limbs were betraying me, their vigor lost to the encroaching frost. My grip faltered, the hilt of my blade slipping from weakening hands. Darkness veiled my sight, its inexorable tide engulfing me, offering no quarter, no hope of retreat. My last thought were only how quaint the instruments of my undoing were—a youth, an enfeebled sorcerer, and the cursed relic of my lineage. Such a trifling coalition, I would have scorned in days of yore, yet it was they who heralded my fall. And what about the legacy I was leaving behind that moment? Might it all collapse? This last ponderance lingered as I crossed the threshold into the unknown. Holy Shadows, it seemed that I might be reborn with already deep-seated regret and disgrace. I wished to end it quick.
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Chapter 1 - The Hunter’s Bane.

"Why dost ya tarry so? What befalls?" The sting of a slap upon my head jolted me from reverie.

"What did you expect, leavin' me stranded with this mess?" I whirled to face Dougal, and gestured towards the untouched carcasses blanketed in autumn's foliage.

"By the Shadows packs," he muttered low, "should we not make haste ere twilight's fall, our fate is sealed. 'Tis prudent we abandon these woods with swift feet."

He rummaged through his knapsack, drawing forth a blade fit for the task, and settled beside me with a nudge of his boot against my shoulder.

"What say ye, to Ale or the crone's brew after?" he mused.

"Hold your tongue and lend a hand!" I snapped back. His incessant prattle grated on me, yet I knew it was his shield against the dread of lurking Shadows. So he prattled on, and I, begrudgingly, bore it.

How I came to such a state, I cannot fathom, but my patience seemed as boundless as the moors. As I mulled over trivialities, Dougal had already set to work, stuffing the spoils into sacks and heaving them onto the cart.

"Fetch ya arse so we be off!" he barked. "I shall linger not in this accursed place a breath more!"

With a weary sigh, I rose, checked the reins, and mounted the cart.

"Aye, gather me, the old rogue, and let us make haste from this place!" I retorted, outpacing him, only to be met with a thwack to my back by a sack of venison. "Seems we'll forgo the ale tonight! Yer antics earn ye no favors!"

"Shadow on ya!" His curse was but a distant echo as I seized the reins, halting his tirade of oat. "Hark, comrade, abandon me not!"

That plea was all it took to stay my hand.

"Aye, ye're a right scoundrel, but such is the way of men." With those words, he vaulted into the cart.

"Ya knowest," he pressed on, and I rued my prior mercy, "ya bearest the mien of those lofty lords ensconced behind ramparts, snout aloft, as though thou art loftier than common folk such as I!"

For once, I found common ground with his words. He was right, not just in part, but wholly. And indeed, I was superior to him in every measure.