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  • Rose and The Khägan Account of the Skar

    April 30th, 2025

    A small carriage creaked across the dark landscape, its wooden wheels crunching softly over the packed earth. Moonlight cast pale silver across the road, while countless stars glittered in the clear night sky. Brindle mares pulled the carriage at a slow, steady trot, their hooves muffled by the soft ground. Inside, a dim light glowed behind a shuttered window, where the lone passenger shifted, preparing for the long ride ahead. The route to the Elven lands was a significant one—long, often quiet, and lined with the weight of history.

    Beyond the gently rolling hills, dark silhouettes of distant mountains rose against the night sky, their jagged peaks outlined by the moonlight. They loomed like ancient sentinels, watching over the land in silent vigilance. Wisps of cloud clung to the upper ridges, barely distinguishable from the snow that still dusted the highest points. Even from this distance, the sheer size of the range was humbling—a vast, brooding barrier that marked the edge of the known world for many travelers.

    From inside the carriage, the world passed as a blur to Rose. The countryside, still damp from an earlier rain, shimmered with scattered patches of luminescence. Bioluminescent plants dotted the landscape—delicate blooms and creeping vines that pulsed with a faint, otherworldly glow. Moisture clung to every surface, catching the light and refracting it in strange, beautiful ways. Leaves glistened, stones gleamed, and even the bark of certain trees seemed to flicker faintly under the moonlight.

    It was an enchanting sight, surreal in its quiet intensity. Had Rose been in need of alchemical ingredients, she could have easily gathered a small fortune from the glowing flora alone. The illusion created by the moisture and moonlight made the fields appear as though scattered with stardust—tiny sparks dancing across the earth in the twilight. She leaned closer to the window, intrigued. How strange this place was, and yet, how beautiful. It was almost as if the world was asking to be gathered.

    Rose eased back into her seat, the gentle sway of the carriage a steady rhythm beneath her. With a quiet breath, she raised a hand and summoned a focused orb of light, which hovered just above her head—soft and steady, casting a warm glow across the small cabin. Shadows pulled back as the magic settled, revealing the worn parchment she withdrew from her satchel. 

    Unfolding the scroll with care, she let her eyes trace the inked lines until they found the place she had last left off. The script was Elvish, and gave Rose pause as she read.

    “They spoke of a planet called ‘D’shoth’, but without a shred of longing. Their one deity had a name very similar, ‘D’shath’, which we learned means ‘The Nine God’. Towards it they held something much closer to hate.”

    Rose paused, her eyes lingering on the words inked before her, thoughts drifting to the one who had first spoken them. The Elves had liberated the information from Skargol—those bleak, broken lands. From among the chaos, they had pulled a single voice: Baq-Noi, a young Khägan slave.

    The Skar were the very antithesis of harmony—an affront to every noble ideal held by the other races. Where others built, the Skar destroyed. Where others sought reason, the Skar embraced frenzy. Suicidally aggressive and dangerously myopic, they feared nothing but their enigmatic “Nine God,” a deity worshipped only through hatred and ruin.

    Their bodies were lean and wiry, built for speed and sudden violence, not endurance. They struck with the single-mindedness of starving beasts—fast, brutal, and without pause. Even among their own, conflict brewed without end. In Skargol, war was not a means but a constant state, and it spilled beyond their borders like fire through dry grass. Their place on the wider stage of Terminus remained a question mark—unpredictable, unstable, and always perilous.

    “There was something about that name — ‘Skar’. Their hatred of it was unmistakable, yet still they spoke it to each other. It was as if they were forced to use it, as we were forced to use skel. The ‘Nine God’, who they honored with dead hearts… must be the one thing they respect, perhaps even fear.”

    The scroll was known as The Khägan Account—the only firsthand account of the Skar ever uncovered. Its pages wove a grim tale, one steeped in betrayal and the crumbling of a revolution that had once threatened to reshape the Skar from within. At its center stood a nameless priestess of the Nine God, her identity lost to time, erased by those who survived her legacy.

    She had dared to challenge the order of her kind, igniting a movement that fractured the Skar from within. But the rebellion failed, crushed beneath the weight of its own chaos. Her punishment was as brutal as it was unending—condemned to an eternity of suffering, she was transformed into the sole means by which the Skar could reproduce. Her agony became their cycle of life, and thus, she remained—an eternal fixture in a race defined by pain. The Nine God gave her the name “Averish”, calling out the black hearted lust for consuming that had led to her ruin.

    “She is kept in a large chamber, far below the Dead Shear. Some skel — slaves, I mean — said that the Skar kept her body preserved even then, though I never looked upon her, mercifully. But I know one who did. He couldn’t… couldn’t say what he saw, for months. Then only, ‘May she never live.’ That was strange to me, but so much was horrible and strange in Skargol. And while I long to see the last of my people freed, there is much I pray to forget.”

    Rose lowered the scroll, the weight of its words settling heavy in her chest. A quiet dread coiled in her stomach. The Skar were not simply a violent people—they were destruction given form, a manifestation of the void itself. They did not belong to Terminus, not truly, yet they had carved a place here in blood and ruin. Few in number, but born of something ancient and ravenous—their origins traced back to Averish, and the shadows of something older still.

    A shiver ran through her as she turned to the window. A storm gathered on the horizon, its low growl rolling across the plains. With each burst of thunder, lightning split the sky and revealed a terrible silhouette—towering, jagged, and unnatural. The Dead Shear. A vast, monolithic shard of D’Shoth, half-lost in cloud and mist, reaching upward like a broken tooth toward the heavens. It was through this sundered relic the Skar had come—ripped into the world when their queen fell.

    At the base of the Dead Shear, where fog mingled with shadow and the land itself seemed to recoil, the remnants endured. Survivors—castoffs from a dying world, flung into Terminus at the moment of their queen’s death. She was no longer bound in body, no longer the mother to their kind. And yet, something still lingered beneath the surface. Watching. Waiting. 

    Rose returned the scroll to her satchel. She pulled out her notepad, and started to write. Dobish had gone through great links to obtain this for her. The halfling thief, turned scholar who always found himself right in the middle of adventure. The adventure it seemed had found her. She wasn’t sure what he wanted with the Skar, but answers would be had once they reached the Elves. Dobish would be waiting for her, and clarity would refocus them. For now she would note her opinions, and findings.

    How far she had come from the wide-eyed girl with tangled red hair, the one who once clung to the corners of crowded rooms, frightened of her own shadow. That timid child, who had once hidden behind books to avoid the world, was now a memory—faded, but not forgotten. In her place stood a woman shaped by hard-won experience, honed by trial and curiosity.

    Rose was no longer the observer. She was the seeker. Brave, sharp-minded, and unshakably driven by the pursuit of knowledge, she had crossed wilds and ruins, deciphered dead languages, and faced things most would never dare name aloud. She smiled softly to herself, the glow from her conjured light flickering across her features.

    Outside, the landscape rolled onward beneath the wheels of the carriage. The mountains loomed ever closer, wrapped in stormlight and mist, the path ahead uncertain and full of promise. As the carriage crested a low ridge and dipped toward the horizon, Rose leaned back in her seat, heart steady.

    Adventure awaited—and she smiled.

    Special thanks to Pantheon for providing inspiration for this work.
    Source: The Skar

  • Ice and Stone

    April 15th, 2025

    From frost and granite, cold and true,  

    The dwarves arose with skin of blue.  

    No fire forged their ancient line  

    But winter’s breath and rock divine.  

    Their bones were shaped in glacier’s womb,  

    Their hearts did beat in crystal tomb.  

    The first were chiseled, not from flame,  

    But from the depths whence no man came.  

    They woke beneath the frozen skies,  

    With mountain dreams behind their eyes.  

    No sun to warm, no stars to guide  

    Just earth and echo, deep and wide.  

    They sought not gold for pride or throne,  

    But gems that whispered in the stone.  

    Each ruby sang a tale untold,  

    Each sapphire held a fire cold.  

    Their hands were rough, but art was kind  

    Each hammer fall a sculptor’s mind.  

    They built with love, they carved with grace, 

    And left their mark in every place.  

    They are the dwarves with skin of blue,  

    Born of ice, of stone, and dew.  

    Their forges blaze where none have known  

    The mighty dwarves of ice and stone. 

    Special thanks to Pantheon for inspiring this work.
    Source: The Dwarves

  • Elos Beckons 

    April 14th, 2025

    We lift our eyes, the stars ignite, 

    Their distant warmth, a guiding light. 

    Yet life rebels, our focus shifts, 

    To shadows’ pull, where silence drifts. 

    Rays ascend, a cosmic tide, 

    Burning worlds where truths collide. 

    Elos, nearstar, fiery call, 

    We rise and fall beneath it all. 

    Through endless night, through ash and flame, 

    We seek the heart that speaks your name. 

    The heavens dance, their secrets told, 

    Yet it’s the abyss we long to hold. 

    A paradox, this life we know, 

    Where light above meets fire below. 

    Elos whispers, dreams unfold, 

    Tempting hearts with truths untold. 

    Elos, nearstar, eternal flame, 

    From ash and shadow we rise again. 

    Rays of light, our souls transform, 

    Ascending high, reborn, reformed.

    Special thanks to Pantheon for providing inspiration for this work.
    Source: The Gnomes

  • The Idol

    April 13th, 2025

    Dobish padded down worn stone steps, his boots barely making a sound. The torch in his hand sputtered against the encroaching darkness, casting flickering shadows across the uneven walls. He shivered, pulling his hood tighter against the icy chill, though he suspected the cold that gripped his heart had less to do with the crypt itself and more to do with what he sought within. 

    The halfling was a scavenger, an explorer, and—some whispered—a thief. But Dobish liked to think of himself as a finder of things lost to the world. And the thing he sought now was whispered of in hushed tones by scholars and traders alike: an idol said to hold the power of forgotten gods, and for Dobish, a chance at redemption. 

    As he descended deeper, the silence seemed to press harder against his ears, broken only by the faint, ghostly echoes of the monastery above. Then, from the shadows ahead, a sound emerged—a muffled voice, faint and distant. “Dobish…” 

    He froze. The voice was familiar yet distorted, as if carried by the breeze itself. His torchlight trembled as he raised it higher, searching the shadows for movement. 

    “Did you find it? Did you find the idol? Dobish…” 

    The voice faded, pulled into the silence like a pebble sinking into the depths. Dobish’s heart pounded, and for the first time, he wondered if this search would unearth more than just an ancient relic. Would this delve be the final straw toward insanity? It felt as though the crypt itself was alive, a living memory, echoing voices from his past. 

    The silence returned, heavier than before. Only Dobish’s breathing broke the stillness as he stood there, the faint flicker of his torch the sole defiance against the darkness. He adjusted his pack, tightened his grip on the torch, and took another step forward. Whatever lay ahead—idol or otherwise he had already come too far to turn back. The ghosts from his past may haunt him, but they couldn’t hurt him. Could they? 

    With a renewed sense of vigor, Dobish pressed onward, determined to uncover a sign any sign that might reveal his bounty. His uncanny knack for achieving the impossible had always set him apart and today would be no different. Failure was not an option. 

    “Why did you leave me?” The voice returned, more commanding than before. Was it real? Or was it a figment of Dobish’s imagination? Was it further proof that his grip on reality was slipping? 

    “What is wrong with me?” Dobish wondered, raising a hand to his forehead. The stress of the moment weighed heavily on him. “Ghosts couldn’t be real… could they?” Shaking off the doubt, he picked up his pace, urgency fueling each step. At last, the path led him to its conclusion a hallway, barren and lifeless, ending in an empty wall. 

    “Drat!” Dobish hissed, frustration seeping into every fiber of his being. He scanned the area, his breath coming quick and his heart beating strong. “Did I miss something?” Was his looming insanity turning his efforts into fruitless circles? No matter—he resolved to backtrack and begin again. He wouldn’t leave without the idol. 

    “DON’T LEAVE ME AGAIN!” The voice sliced through the air, piercing Dobish like icy shards. It was behind him. Whipping around, he froze, terror gripping him. His past, the nightmare he thought he had outrun, had found him. 


    “Barlyn…” Dobish gasped, barely able to form the words. His brother—his long-dead brother—stood before him, impossibly alive. “How? You… you died…” Dobish’s chest tightened, his breath shallow, his thoughts an incoherent jumble. This couldn’t be real. How was his brother here, now? He had been murdered, years ago. 

    “Dobish!” Barlyn hissed, gliding forward as though carried by the wind itself. His feet hovered just above the ground; each step ethereal. His movement was unnatural, haunting, his presence suffused with rage and sorrow. “Murderer! You left me to die, Dobish! You chose the idol over me!” 

    “No! Barlyn, that’s not what happened!” Dobish screamed, stumbling backward as if trying to escape the nightmare in front of him. His voice cracked with desperation, his body trembling. “I didn’t leave you! We were betrayed…ambushed. You pushed me away, and…”   

    Dobish had carried the weight of the guilt, the pain, the terror for so many years. Every night brought him back to the same place, the same memory. And now, it wasn’t just a dream. It was here, staring him down, demanding answers to questions he couldn’t comprehend. How could he atone for this? How could face his brother? 
     
    “I’m sorry… please… forgive…” Dobish’s voice broke as the words tumbled out. Overwhelmed with grief, he collapsed to his knees, hands trembling, his face etched with anguish. His gaze lifted to meet Barlyn’s—a silent plea for redemption. He had survived but now came the cost of his survival. 

    “The idol… your bag… hand me the idol… give me the idol!” Barlyn’s voice was hypnotic, trailing into an unsettling whisper. His ethereal form floated closer to Dobish, moving with an eerie elegance as though gravity itself had been forgotten. 

    “I don’t have the idol! I never found it!” Dobish stammered. His teary eyes darted frantically as confusion overwhelmed him. He wiped his face, the sting of tears adding to the whirlwind of emotion. Staggering to his feet, he fought to regain composure, but the weight of the moment blurred both his vision and his mind. 

    “The idol… give it… GIVE IT… YOU LIE!” Barlyn roared, his fury igniting his spectral body in a radiant shimmer. “The idol is MINE! Give me the idol, Dobish!” His voice shattered the air like thunder. Each word seemed to tear a fragment of light from his translucent form, leaving trails of brilliance behind him. Dobish winced, shielding his face against the blistering luminescence. He stood against the chaos, his mind spiraling back into the depths of a child’s memory—his memory—into that night so long ago.

    A boy, perhaps ten or eleven years old—and his older brother, a man in his early twenties, faced hooded figures. Their faces concealed, but their intent clear. In the glow of torchlight, their weapons gleamed, threateningly motioning for the brothers to surrender a bag. The boy clung to it, defiant, his hands trembling as he held on to its tattered strap.

    “No!” Dobish cried; his voice small but unyielding as he held on to the strap. The hooded men surged forward. One grabbed him, his rough hands forcing Dobish down. They ripped the bag from his grasp. Dust and dirt clung to his clothes as he was sprawled to the ground, helpless. 

    Barlyn looked at the men; fear painted across his face. “Hand it over!” barked one of the men as they surrounded him. “The idol or the boy. Give it to us, and we’ll let you go.” Their cruel laughter broke through the tension like splintered glass, growing louder as they edged closer to Dobish. 

    Barlyn faltered, his mind torn between the temptation of survival and his brotherly duty. His breaths came shallow and quick. Greed flickered in his eyes, blending with the shadow of fear. Finally, his gaze settled on his younger brother, who lay trembling on the ground. 

    “I’m sorry, Dobby,” he mouthed soundlessly. Gripping the remnants of the bag, Barlyn turned—his decision made—and ran, his feet pounding against the dirt as he darted past the hooded men, leaving his brother behind, abandoned to fate. Left to die. 
     
    “You left me!” screamed Dobish, his voice echoing desperately through the crypt. He leapt to his feet, his world snapping painfully into focus, and back to the present. “You sacrificed me, Barlyn! Your own brother. You left me to die!” His torchlight flickered wildly, casting long, trembling shadows across the ancient stone walls. “They made me a slave, Barlyn! They beat me for what you stole from them! It was worse than death!” 

    Fueled by anger, Dobish swung his torch toward Barlyn. The flickering flames illuminated a harrowing truth—this was not his brother. It was a vile deception. The crypt itself seemed alive, pulsating with corruption, its oppressive air thick with malevolent whispers. Demonic forces were at play, weaving treacherous illusions to torment his mind, dredging up his darkest memories, and preying on his deepest fears. 

    Steeling himself, Dobish felt the weight of an object pressing against his chest—an idol suspended from a simple chain. This was the very idol his brother had betrayed him for, the one Dobish had hidden in desperation just before the ambush so many years ago. The idol only he could see! He had forgotten its existence, but now it all came rushing back. He had found it; he had carried it all along. The idol pulsed with energy, fueling his resolve. 

    The shade before him roared and exploded into a violent tempest, its wrath filling the room with an unnatural howl. Shards of ancient stone whipped through the air, stinging Dobish’s skin. Barlyn was gone. All that remained was this chaotic storm a manifestation of the true evil lurking deep within the crypt. 

    “The idol, boy! Give us the idol!” The tempest spoke, its voice layered, commanding, and cruel. Tendrils of wind tore at Dobish, threatening to rip him apart. He gritted his teeth and tightened his grip on the torch. With a desperate burst of energy, he bolted toward the steps, his feet pounding against the shifting ground. 

    The crypt groaned, its ancient walls beginning to collapse. The carvings on the stone were swallowed by crumbling debris as the room fell into ruin. Dobish dodged falling rubble, his heart racing as he fought to escape the impending destruction. He dashed towards daylight, and away from the nightmares within. Dobish sat up, sweat streaming down his face. He was alone in his bedchamber, surrounded by the lingering remnants of the nightmare. The weight of the idol rested heavily upon his chest. Painful clarity washed over him. He had been dreaming. 

    “I’m sorry, Dobby.” Barlyn’s voice echoed in the recesses of Dobish’s mind, a storm cloud looming heavy over him. That name—Dobby—was one his brother had always called him, a name filled with the weight of a fractured past. The words struck him like a torrent, unleashing a flood of emotions he had long tried to suppress. Betrayed. Abandoned. Alone. For years, Dobish had hidden the pain beneath layers of self-deception. He had swapped identities in his mind, traded blame, all to make sense of the chaos that haunted him. 

    Now the truth pierced through. His carefully constructed world crumbled, leaving him raw and exposed. He was not the man he had convinced himself he was. He was still that abandoned child, the one his brother had discarded, left to fend for himself. A finder of lost things? No. He was a liar. A fraud. Yet, for all his failings, he was something else too: a survivor. Not the man named Dobish, but the boy who had crawled from the depths of despair, who had escaped the chains of slavery, and paid his debts. 

    That boy, that abandoned soul, had endured. And now, he knew what he must do. He had to find his brother not for revenge, but for redemption. The crypt had claimed Dobish, but Dobby was reborn.

    The End

© Woodson Harmon 2025
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