Great little story my friend. Shows William has a sense of the future - showing 
that a good idea never really dies.

Story also shows the budding romance with Blance

   One thing:

>>>hauntedby spirits and abandoned by men. Nestorius and Sir Edmund explored 
>>>thearea from time to time

you left off Stealth. He is an important part of the exploration of the Haunted 
woods too!


Chris
The Lurking Fox

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: C. Matthias <[email protected]>
To: Metamor Keep <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, Aug 28, 2016 6:10 am
Subject: [Mkguild] Designing a New Valley


Here's a new tale for Metamor Keep.  If you do not recall thesecharacters, I 
recommend reading "Landing in a New Age","New Home, New Beginnings", and 
"InvigoratingFaith".

Part 1 of 1

Designing a New Valley
By Charles Matthias

June 7, 708 CR

Summer was on the way but mornings in Eagle Tower were still cold. Anoccasional 
breeze brought warm southern air, but mostly the winddescended the mountain 
slopes on which the northernmost watchtower ofMetamor perched bringing the bite 
of Winter even on the hottest days. SirWilliam Dupré could not see his breath 
but he was grateful for the thickwool he now grew. 

The Eyrie cupola at the top of Eagle Tower was warmed by the cast ironfurnace 
in the center. Alexander, the soldier who’d brought him fromMallow Horn and 
become a dog, added another log and then retreated tohuddle beneath a blanket 
on the other side. Samantha, the raven hairedsoldier of Hareford who had first 
shown them the tower, was the thirdscout enduring a morning watch; she leaned 
across the eastern belvederewith her cloak about her shoulders, hands clasping 
a cup of once hottea.

It had been over three months since William lost his temper and 
assaultedNestorius. Most of the first two months he’d spent on patrol, 
drillingtroops, surveying the Dike and the rugged trails from Hareford, 
orsequestered within Eagle Tower so their paths did not cross. In the lastmonth 
he’d made an effort to befriend the lion mage and earn his trustanew. Their 
shared past in being exiles helped as the anger and pain theram suffered were 
ones Nestorius knew well.

It would still take many more months to recover the goodwill he’dsquandered.

And so William took every excuse to stay out of Hareford. After a week 
ofrunning drills in the countryside and clearing trees along the main roadsouth 
he needed rest. He’d arrived yesterday with his men and someservants, enjoyed a 
welcome meal and a few hours of sleep, and then begana shift in the Eyrie. 
Already he regretted it; his eyes watched theGiantdowns in the north, but his 
heart turned south to MallowHorn.

The letter his eldest son – the son Verdane had stolen – was treasured inhis 
quarters. He’d read and reread the letter more times than he couldcount. Jory 
loved him and knew he was a Dupré first and a Verdane second.His younger 
children – daughters Sasha and Lydia, and son Timas –remained in Mallow Horn 
with a mother but no father; a mother who soughtan annulment to deny them even 
an exiled father. It had been more than ayear since he’d held Jory in his arms; 
the terrible campaign the thricedamned Marquis enslaved him to had kept him 
from the others for monthsbefore his sentence of exile. Nine months now perhaps?

He ground his flat teeth and flexed his nostrils, angry at himself 
forwoolgathering. He tapped the edge of his curled horn against thebelvedere’s 
wooden supports. He was a Keeper in body but not yet inspirit. The ram was the 
sigil of his house but he never imagined becomingone himself. After six months 
with wool, horns, hooves, and two-fingeredhands he had trouble remembering what 
his human flesh felt like. He’dbeen hairy of chest, arms, and legs, but how did 
they feel beneath fourslender fingers? The thick heaviness of wool was all he 
knew. He hatedthe Marquis and Verdane for stealing those memories too.

But the Marquis was dead and Verdane’s eldest was a prisoner in 
Salinon.Vengeance belonged to Eli, or so the priests always reminded him; 
perhapsit had already been carried out.

The soft clop of hooves on the steps turned both ears and thoughts.William and 
Alexander glanced at the trap door as Blanche climbed throughwith a bundle in 
her arms. The lady ewe had been assigned by Nestorius tocare for his quarters, 
clothes, and meals, and this she did quietly anddependably. Born in Hareford, 
she had never traveled farther than thenearby villages until Sir Dupré began 
bringing her on his patrols tobetter see to his needs and the needs of the men 
under his command.

“Good morning, sirs,” she said as she set the bundle on the ledge.William 
caught the scent of fresh bread, butter, and preserves, as wellas a tamer but 
more interesting scent. It surrounded her and made thedull off-white of her 
wool fuller and appealing. Some days it wasstronger than others and on those 
days his nostrils would flare, hischest swell, and he could not stop the 
scraping of his hooves against theground.

Though many nobles kept mistresses, and lechery was hardly uncommon amongany 
class of men, William had avoided dalliances after marrying AnyaVerdane. He had 
already won the most prized hand in all of the Midlands;what need had he to 
further prove his manhood? And it kept the priestshappier; always wise for this 
life and the next. But the real reason washis children; he loved them too 
dearly to sully their line withbastards.

Alexander began panting and wagging when he smelled the food. Samanthasmiled at 
the ewe before returning her gaze to the still, fog-filledhorizon. William 
shifted against the belvedere and stepped toward hisservant. “Good morning, 
Blanche. What have you for us?”

The ewe carefully unwrapped the bundle as her left eye found the ram. Thepupil 
was slit side-to-side like his making it difficult to know wherethey focused. 
But he knew; doubtless she was enticed both by his scentand by his sturdy and 
handsome build. They were both black-faced sheepand this was Metamor.

There was little chance of muddying the lines of succession for hischildren 
here in Hareford. Perhaps she might consent to being mistress aswell as servant.

Of course, she was probably a spy for Andwyn. He would not trust heruntil he 
knew for sure.

His nostrils swelled and he scraped a hoof. Not that he needed to trusther 
for...

Blanche's unassuming voice felt even quieter in the tower cupola. “Ibaked bread 
for you, sirs, and brought some of the raspberry preservesfrom last Summer's 
harvest. And a block of fresh butter from Truskmore.Oh, would you like more hot 
tea, Lieutenant?”

Samantha smiled and handed her cup to the ewe. “Thank you, Blanche. I'llhave my 
bread with butter and jam.”

Alexander noticed his drool and wiped his jowls with one arm. “The samefor me.”

William deliberately gazed toward the Dike and waved an arm. “I will alsohave 
some, thank you, Blanche. And bring hot tea when you return. Thensee to the 
rest of the men. Let Captain Becket know we'll stay here todayand return to 
Hareford tomorrow; he'll see to the dutyrotation.”

Blanche nodded and offered a shy smile. “Of course, sirs. I will see toit.” She 
divided the loaf of bread into three chunks, lathered each withbutter and 
preserves, then handed one to Samantha, to Alexander, and toWilliam. He waited 
a few seconds while she offered it before turning toher, staring with both 
eyes. The tips of his hoof-like fingers brushedagainst hers as he took the 
bread. Her ears tipped back in a caprineblush. 

He took one bite of the bread and nodded. “Very good, thank you,Blanche.” And 
it was. The jam had more tart than he preferred but thebutter was richer than 
any in his homeland. Together it made a pleasingtaste. He scuffed a hoof and 
forced his eyes toward the remnants of theDike. “Do bring some hot tea. The 
mountain air is especially cold thismorning.”

“I will, sirs.”

Her scent lingered after the ewe disappeared. William chewed each bitefor 
nearly a minute, eyes intent on the horizon. Branches of treesstirred, birds 
flitted about with a morning song in their throats, andhe'd even seen a pair of 
goats capering about the mountainside, butnothing more than they wandered the 
borderlands between a kingdom ofbeasts and the wild, untamed Giantdowns. It 
took all his composure towatch them while his heart thrummed and nostrils 
grasped at Blanche'sfading scent.

He scuffed his cloven hoof on the stone beneath him one last time. Hecould not 
escape what the Curses had done to him, but he would not bemastered by them. A 
moment of pride let the Marquis trick him and destroyhis life. A moment of 
anger broke his friendship with Nestorius. Whatcould a moment of lust cost him?

He'd chewed four bites before Blanche returned with a pot of tea. Sherefilled 
Samantha's cup and poured some for both Alexander and William.Though he held 
the cup still while she poured, he did not touchher.

“Thank you, Blanche,” he said when she had finished. “Tell Captain BecketI want 
him to send two men of the Hareford troop here to the Eyrie. Iwant to take him 
and my men out along the Dike before the day growsold.”

He breath a silent prayer of thanks when the ewe left. 

Samantha turned in surprise. “Do you wish an escort?”

“Thank you, but nae, we'll be fine. You'll probably be able to watch usfrom 
here.” And Andwyn was sure to have a spy or two among the birds inthe trees 
anyway.

----------

It was warmer in the forest than inthe tower and so William and his men only 
wore the leather mail common topatrols. Two freckle-faced boys, Martin and 
Robert, led them amid thetrees and the tumbled, moldering stones they'd shoved 
aside where theGiant's Dike once stood. The boar Becket walked at William's 
side, smalleyes wary and alert, while his snout turned at every new scent. 
Behindthem followed Alexander and the red-haired boy Anthony who still 
rubbedsleep from his eyes.

They were the soldiers who came to Metamor with him from Mallow Horn.Once 
assigned the task of enforcing his exile, they chose to join himinstead. There 
was no others in all of Metamor he could trust withoutreserve.

At least not yet.

For a stretch of thirty paces the ground was more stone than dirt.Centuries of 
neglect allowed tree roots to shatter the Dike's foundationinto a jagged 
landscape of moss-covered points. Some of the ancientstonework remained above 
the soil; lonely sentinels creeping with vinesand filled with cracks in which 
flowers and birds made their home –pitiful reminders of the glory once attained 
by the Suielman. They hadtamed Galendor, but now they were a story to haunt the 
dreams of Dukesand their monuments ruins for beasts.

He turned toward the nearest of these sentinels; his men hastened tofollow him.

The sentinel was a stack of four squat stones each as long and wide as aman was 
tall. They'd been positioned like bricks and now each cavity wasfilled with ivy 
and brush. William traced palm across the old stone butfelt only moss, lichen, 
and vines with broad spade-shaped petals. Heground his cud between his teeth 
and flicked his ears against his horns.He wrapped both hands around the nearest 
vine and yanked.

It had dug deep roots in the old stone but with a little persuasion itcame 
free. The ram followed every curve and fork, tugging and scrapinguntil he'd 
removed all of it. A pile of discarded vegetation littered theground between 
his confused men. With the vine gone they could seepatches of the granite. One 
finger traced gently across it.

William swallowed the cud and snorted. “These walls were proud. Men madethem to 
show his might. He made them to protect his people. But thenlesser men rule to 
satisfy themselves and damn everyone else; folly rulesand empires fall. Walls 
tumble down. Who can we protect,Becket?”

“Sir?” Becket asked, stepping to his side. The boar rested a hand againstthe 
stone, small eyes even smaller as they squinted, trying to seewhatever it was 
his commander saw in the moldy sentinel.

William turned and gestured at the forest with arms outstretched. “Thiswas the 
Giant's Dike. A wall stretching from one end of the valley mouthto the other. 
It kept the Lutin hordes, the giants, and all terrors ofthe north out of the 
Empire. Until fools neglected them and they wereoverrun. You see what remains. 
Nothing.”

Becket and the others glanced about. The boar nodded and scuffed a hoof.“It 
must have been massive. Metamor would never have been Cursed if thiswall stood.”

“Or attacked again last Winter,” William agreed. He kicked the pile ofvines. 
“How long before they... before we are attacked again?”

Becket shrugged. “It could be many years. Nasoj's hold on the Lutintribes was 
broken. Metamor is probably the safest it has been ingenerations.”

“Nasoj's hold was broken. But who else might leash them? No, as long asour 
northern borders look like this,” he gestured at the broken sentineland shook 
his head. “We will not be safe.”

“But who will rebuild the wall? It has taken them a decade to rebuildHareford.”

William snorted. “It will take a generation or more to build a wall likethe 
Suielman's. But stone we have aplenty. And I wager there are manyfrom Bradanes 
who have no place to call home and no work to busy theirhealed hands. The men 
and resource are here, it is only the will welack.”

“And the money,” Anthony interjected.

“And authority,” Martin added.

William waved them both to silence. “Aye, aye. And I'm sure Nestoriuswill bring 
up the Haunted wood again.” He glared to the southeast.Somewhere beyond the 
trees was a huge swath of the valley's north hauntedby spirits and abandoned by 
men. Nestorius and Sir Edmund explored thearea from time to time, but all 
others were forbidden to enter. Theythought it a buffer; one day an enemy of 
Metamor would not be daunted byit and reach their heart. And one day those 
woods would no longer behaunted and there would be nothing but fading memory 
and superstition todeter raiders.

“So what can we do?” Becket asked.

William took a deep breath and snorted. “Continue our patrol. When wereturn I 
will suggest it. And I will work to make it happen. There willbe a wall on this 
spot again one day. There will be.” He felt anotherlump of cud rising in his 
throat and so waved his men along. They walkedbeneath the forest trees where 
his wall would be.

It would be a fight, but it would keep Metamor safe from their northernenemies. 
And all the hard labor would take his mind off a certain ewe andthe southern 
world and family left behind. Grim in thought and intent,Sir William Dupré 
chewed his cud and kept a wary eye on the woods.

----------

May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,

Charles Matthias 

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