Tag Archives: fantasy

The Book of Heth: Chapter Five – The Rhythms of the Road and the Hero of Lore

24 Aug

Months blurred into a rhythm as Lirael, Varyn, and I journeyed eastward through Aetheria’s uncharted lands, where prairies mingled with woods, the seasons shifting from spring’s bloom to summer’s heat under Solara’s unrelenting gaze. Lirael always took the lead, her smaller frame setting a steady pace, her flowing dress and long hair swaying like the grasses of Nuahaven. I followed, my craftsman’s eye noting the land’s measure—plains stretching toward unseen ridges, groves where strange, furred creatures darted. Varyn brought up the rear, his ruggedly handsome form, with short curly hair and a strong jaw, ever vigilant, his new leather boots—crafted by Lirael—silent despite his muscular build.

Our pattern settled like the three moons’ cycle. Varyn rose before dawn, slipping into the mist to hunt, returning with game—new beasts unlike the Velithons or Hexapods of Nuahaven’s shores. One, a swift, four-legged creature with thick silver fur and tufted ears, we named “Lunthars,” for their gleaming coats under Luneth’s light. Another, larger and shaggy, with a mane like woven thorns, we called “Korbeasts,” their reddish fur echoing Korath’s hue. Varyn slung these over his shoulder, their weight no burden to his strength. Lirael, by the campfire, mended our gear with her needle, her hands deft under Sylvara’s silver glow. Her true craft shone in tanning hides on the move, a skill honed in exile, suited for wanderers.

She used brain tanning, evaluating each Lunthar or Korbeast hide, trimming flaws with my knife on a flat stone. Fleshing followed, scraping flesh with a bone blade or metal scrap, her hands steady despite the mess. Soaking in streams we crossed, she weighted hides with rocks, stirring daily until hair slipped free. Scraping the grain and membrane left the skin pliable, demanding her forceful yet precise touch. Braining was key—she mashed the animal’s brain, or sometimes Korbeast eggs, into hot water, creating a milky emulsion. She kneaded this into the hide, softening its fibers. Wringing out excess, she twisted the hide around a pole lashed between trees, squeezing it damp. Stretching it taut over a branch frame or staked to the ground, she worked it soft as it dried. Smoking over a fire of punky wood infused durability, turning hides into supple, weather-resistant leather. From these, she crafted Varyn a wardrobe: sturdy boots, a cloak, pants, and tunic, replacing his rags to withstand summer’s heat and thorns.

As we walked, Lirael raised theological questions, her voice weaving through the prairie’s hum. “Heth, if Nua’s eternal, why create time? The Chronicle speaks of her shaping clay, but why bind us to seasons, to aging, when she could make us timeless?”

I pondered, my boots crunching grass. “Time marks growth, Lirael. The Chronicle tells of Elyria’s seasons shaping unity—trials like Tanes’s exodus forged the Covenant. Without time, we’d lack the will to choose harmony over Boana’s shadow.”

“And Nua’s justice?” she pressed, dodging a root. “Why punish discord so harshly? My fall cost me kin, yet I live. Is her mercy selective, or does she judge with a hidden scale?”

“The trinity balances justice and mercy,” I said, recalling elders’ words. “Discord breaks the triangle’s strength—three genders hold where two falter. Nua’s mercy lets us rise, as you did, but her justice guards harmony.”

Varyn, trailing behind, showed little interest in my answers, his wild eyes scanning for Lunthars or Korbeasts. Yet toward Lirael, he was reverent, carrying her pack without prompt, nodding at her words. I saw then: to sway Varyn, I must convince Lirael, her insight his guide. She persuaded him to wear her creations, saying, “Varyn, these boots shield against thorns; the cloak guards against chill. Nua provides through craft—honor it.” He relented, his new leathers fitting like a second skin, his primal grace enhanced.

We wondered how Varyn felled such large game—Korbeasts, heavy as young Gloomtreads—without visible weapons. “Don’t jinx it,” he’d grunt, knife in hand for skinning, guarding his secret. One summer eve, a Gloomtread ambushed us in a wooded glade, its roar shaking the trees. We scattered, but Varyn whirled, a long-stringed sling materializing from his belt. A whir and snap rang out; a stone struck the giant’s head with a crack, felling it instantly.

Lirael gasped, eyes wide. “Someday, they’ll write of the young man who brought down a giant with a sling, Varyn. A feat to echo through Aetheria’s tales.”

Varyn shrugged, stowing the sling, but I saw pride in his jaw.

As summer waned, we reached thick woods, their canopy dense as the Titan Spires’ caves. Far beyond, over the treetops, a giant wall loomed—hundreds of feet tall, stretching endlessly, its smooth stone seeming man-made, a marvel rivaling the Chronicle’s ancient wonders. We camped, staring at its silhouette under Korath’s crimson glow, our trio bound by Nua’s unseen purpose.

The Book of Heth: Chapter Four – The Shadows of the Woods and the Wild Companion

12 Aug

Dawn broke over the prairie, Solara’s light filtering through the mist like a veil lifting from the land. Lirael and I broke camp swiftly, her hands deft as she rolled our cloaks, mending a loose thread with a quick stitch. The patch of woods ahead loomed darker than the open grasses we’d crossed, its canopy thick with broad-leafed branches that whispered secrets in the breeze. We pondered our path, the narrow trail vanishing into the shadows.

“Should we skirt around?” I mused, eyeing the dense growth. “The prairie curves north; we could circle back to the trail beyond.”

Lirael shook her head, her long hair swaying. “It would add days, Heth. And who carved this path? Trappers, perhaps, seeking hexapod pelts?”

I nodded, squinting at the trail’s worn earth. “Likely. But I hope it’s not Gloomtreads—or some unknown beast lurking in Aetheria’s depths. Finding east is simple enough—every young Nuahavender learns the shadows point north at noon under Solara’s zenith. This trail holds true so far, but what if we lose it? I’ve heard trappers speak of following animal trails, faint as whispers, or tracing rivers that wind like veins. Without a trail, we’d need such knowledge. I wish we’d a trapper with us, one versed in the wild’s signs.”

Lirael glanced back. “We’ll manage, Heth. Nua guides us.”

Still, going around felt like retreat. “Nua bids east; we’ll go through,” I decided.

She agreed, and we plunged in, the woods closing around us like a living thing. The air grew cooler, dappled light playing on the ground where roots twisted like veins. Single file, Lirael led, her smaller frame navigating the path with ease. But soon, a sense of being watched prickled my neck. Rustling came from above, branches creaking as if something heavy shifted. Then to the left, a snap of twigs. We froze, hearts pounding.

“Hide,” I whispered, pulling her behind a fallen log. We waited, breath held, as the sounds faded. “What was that? A hexapod, too large for these branches?”

Lirael peered out, her eyes scanning the canopy. “No hexapod moves so slyly. Could it be… Boana’s shadow, like in the Chronicle? The Boa Worms twisted Elyria’s heart—perhaps they linger here.”

I shivered, recalling Galoth’s tales of worms born from the dead. “Boana’s unseen, but her influence creeps. Maybe a beast, warped by opposition?”

We pressed on, but the stalking grew bolder. To the right, leaves shuddered; then overhead, a shadow flitted through the canopy. A nut fell, striking my shoulder, making me jump. “Just the wind?” I muttered, unconvinced. Lirael pointed to a silhouette in the branches—a head, perhaps, with jagged edges—but it vanished before we could be sure. “Did you see that?” she whispered.

“I… maybe. A trick of the light?” My voice lacked conviction.

We ducked into thick bushes at the next rustle, thorns snagging Lirael’s dress. A branch snapped above, showering us with leaves. “It’s tracking us,” I hissed. “Not a Gloomtread—their steps would shake the earth. Something lighter, cunning. Like Tanes’s tales of spirits in the wilds?”

Lirael’s eyes widened. “The Chronicle speaks of shadows born from discord. Could it be a Discordant, feral and twisted?”

We crept forward, the trail leading to a small stream, its waters gurgling like whispered secrets. As we forded it, cold biting our ankles, a ripple broke the surface downstream—something emerging, sleek and dark, before sinking back. “Did you see that?” I gasped.

Lirael nodded, clutching her cloak. “Something lives in these waters. Not a Velithon—too swift. Another of Boana’s tricks?”

We scrambled up the bank, hearts racing, and hid behind a steep earthen rise when rustling resumed to the right. Pebbles trickled down, as if dislodged above. “It’s circling,” I whispered. “Boana’s worms, or worse? The Chronicle warns of unseen foes.”

Lirael’s voice trembled. “We should turn back, Heth. This feels like opposition itself.”

I shook my head. “No. If we retreat now, we’ll falter at every shadow. Nua’s path is forward; we can’t build the habit of turning around once chosen.”

She sighed but nodded, and we continued as night fell, the woods darkening like a shroud under Luneth’s pale glow. A flicker of fire ahead drew us—a small clearing where a young syren sat close to the flames, his form wild and rugged. He was about our age, with short curly hair matted like tangled vines, clad in ragged leathers that barely covered his muscular frame, his feet bare and calloused. Ruggedly handsome, his eyes wild but his face clean with a strong, handsome jaw, he exuded a primal vitality, too masculine for a syren yet striking in his presence.

He glanced up as we approached, his voice gruff but welcoming. “Strangers in the woods? Well met. I’m Varyn. Come, share the fire—I’ve Velithon roasting, fresh from the snare.”

We hesitated, then joined him, the meat’s aroma overpowering caution. “Heth,” I said, “and Lirael. We’re eastward bound on Nua’s call—a dream commanding me to seek the blue, sharing our faith with giants’ kin, measuring Aetheria’s span.”

Varyn nodded, turning the spit. “Bold venture. Me? I’m out here fending alone. Civilization chokes me—Nuahaven’s crowds, the endless rules of the Covenant. I tried it as a youth, apprenticed to craftsmen, but the walls closed in. Traveled with trappers once, learning snares and tracks, but even they bickered over shares. Realized I was happier wild, hunting solo, sleeping under the moons. No one to answer to, no discord in solitude. The woods provide—better than any village feast.”

Lirael leaned forward. “But the dangers? Gloomtreads, beasts?”

Varyn grinned, his teeth flashing in the firelight. “Dangers build strength. That rustling stalking you? Trappers’ secret—a Discordant gone feral, wild as a hexapod but cunning. Guards these woods; even Gloomtreads fear it, keeping clear. Favorite spot for us loners.”

“And Gloomtreads?” I asked. “You’ve faced them?”

He laughed, pulling a sack from the shadows. “One trailed me yesterday. Slipped into bushes, climbed a tree, waited till it passed below. Knife to the back of the neck—clean kill.” Seeing our skepticism, he hoisted the sack and dumped out a Gloomtread’s severed head, its brutish features frozen in surprise, holding it up with one hand like a trophy.

I recoiled, stomach turning at the grisly sight. Lirael, though pale, whispered to me, “Another provision, Heth.” I understood—his wild strength could guard us eastward. He was the trapper I had carelessly wished for, versed in the wild’s ways, but somehow better—a syren whose ferocity matched the woods themselves.

We raised the question as the fire died. “Varyn, join us east? Your skills would aid Nua’s call.”

He accepted swiftly, eyes alight. “East? Dared dream it, but alone it’s folly. These woods I know, but beyond? With company, aye. Let’s see the blue together.”

We camped by his fire, the woods’ whispers fading, our trio formed under the three moons. As I lay on my pallet, staring at the stars peeking through the canopy, a profound thought stirred within me. Here we were—a male, a female, and a syren—bound not for procreation’s sacred sequence, but for some greater purpose veiled in Nua’s command. Lirael with her mending wisdom, Varyn with his feral strength, and I, the dreamer called eastward. No union of flesh, yet a trinity of spirit, mirroring the three moons above: Luneth’s serenity in our questions, Sylvara’s grace in our companionship, Korath’s resolve in our forward march.

It echoed our discussions—the triangle’s strength, three points unyielding where two would falter. As in the elders’ theory, our trio braced against the wilds, each upholding the others. And the threes abounded: Hexapods in triads, Skydrakes circling in threes, even the Gloomtreads’ fall from slaying their syrens, breaking the sacred three. Nua’s grand design wove through it all, her infinite insight turning chance meetings into purpose. What greater harmony could there be? We were not lovers, but kin in quest, a reflection of the Shaper’s eternal balance. Sleep claimed me then, wonder lingering like the moons’ light.

The Book of Galoth: Chapter Three – The Emergence of Opposition and Shadow

25 Jul

In the wake of the first war, as the blood of the fallen soaked into the sacred soil of the Silvren Valley, a profound darkness stirred within Elyria. The dust of the dead—Korvan, Elowen, Soren II, and their kin—rose upward like a mournful veil, spiraling toward the heavens under the watchful eyes of Luneth, Sylvara, and Korath. It sought to touch the divine essence, yearning for acceptance into Nua’s eternal light. But the heavens, pure and unyielding, rejected the tainted remnants, for they carried the stain of anger and division. The dust plummeted back to Elyria, twisting in its fall, and transformed into the Boa Worms—writhing, shadowy creatures, pale as Luneth’s glow and insidious as forgotten whispers.

These Boa Worms slithered across the lands, from the Whispering Range to the Verdant Crags, touching all that Nua had crafted. Where they crawled, evil blossomed like thorns in a once-pristine garden. The moss of the mountainsides withered at their caress, the fishes of the Azure Veil grew fangs of malice, and the beasts of the plains turned predatory, their eyes gleaming with unnatural hunger. The worms burrowed into the hearts of the Elyrians, sowing seeds of discord and misbond, the oppositions that fractured the sacred trinity of creation. No longer did unions unfold solely in flawless harmony; temptations arose, urging syrens and females to unite without the male’s completion, or worse, allowing males to precede syrens in the act, birthing abominations.

Over time, as generations passed and the Elyrians spread further—venturing beyond Seawatch to the distant Isles of Echo, where waves crashed eternally against jagged cliffs; northward past Windhaven to the Frozen Spires, where Solara’s light barely pierced the eternal chill; and southward from Mistveil to the Sunbaked Dunes, vast expanses of golden sand under Korath’s crimson stare—the Boa Worms converged. In the shadowed depths of the Grove of Eternity, they coiled together, merging into a singular entity: Boana, the Embodiment of Opposition. Boana rose as a rival to Nua, a formless shadow with eyes like shattered moons, desiring only to corrupt and remake Elyria in its twisted image. Though weaker than the Eternal Shaper, Boana could not be destroyed by Nua’s hand, for such an act would unleash spiritual death upon the world, unraveling the very fabric of divine harmony.

With Boana’s emergence, the shadows deepened, and the first discords plagued the people. In the village of Mistveil, a young female named Liora, swayed by Boana’s whispers in the mists, yielded to the male Eldric before uniting with the syren Seren. Their union, born of haste and forbidden desire, resulted in the birth of the first Discordant—a brutish child, hulking and dim-witted, its form twisted like gnarled roots from the Whisperwood. The Elyrians gazed upon the Discordant in horror, its grunts echoing through the crags, a living testament to opposition. Confusion spread like the Boa Worms themselves; some, in distant lands like the Isles of Echo, whispered rumors of consuming these abominations in secret rituals, though none could confirm such horrors. In closer settlements, reactions varied: fathers and elders slew the Discordants at birth, their tiny forms cast into the Korveth’s swift currents; others banished them to the wilds, where they roamed as feral shadows; and a few, in pity or fear, attempted to raise them, only to find their brutish nature unyielding.

Misbond, the lesser opposition, crept in as well, where syrens and females joined without the male’s seal, yielding no life but stirring guilt and division. Though shunned, it paled beside discord’s curse, yet it frayed the bonds of trust across Elyria.

Death’s grip tightened, bringing woes unforeseen in the era of immortality. Old age descended upon the Elyrians, their once-vital forms growing frail, limbs trembling like leaves in the Whispering Range’s winds. Bodies of the fallen rotted where they lay, their stench rising from battlefields and villages, mingling with the decay of animals—the Trivox carcasses bloating in the plains, the Serath plummeting lifeless from the skies, their feathers scattering like fallen stars. Fruits, once devoured in perfect abundance without waste, now fell uneaten from the trees of the Starlit Canopy, rotting into foul mush that poisoned the soil. The people dug the first graves in the soft earth of the Silvren Valley, marking them with stones from the Crest of Dawn, their wails echoing as they buried kin beneath the moons’ gaze. Diseases sprouted like weeds, fevers sweeping through Windhaven; famines struck the Sunbaked Dunes when crops failed; and conflicts erupted anew—wars over scarce resources in the Frozen Spires, skirmishes laced with discord, where warriors fathered Discordants in the chaos of conquest.

Amid this turmoil, the first drowning occurred in Seawatch, by the Azure Veil’s edge. A father named Torvan, descendant of Korvan, discovered his daughter Aria had committed discord with a male from a rival clan, birthing a Discordant under Sylvara’s light. In rage, he dragged her to the shore and held her beneath the waves, her struggles ceasing as bubbles rose like departing spirits. Word spread, and other males—elders in Mistveil, warriors in the Isles—adopted the custom, drowning females tainted by discord to instill fear and control. “Let this purify the opposition,” they proclaimed, though Nua watched in sorrow, her heart heavy at the perversion of her waters.

The ill treatment of the Discordants grew ever more grievous: slain in infancy, exiled to perish in the wilds, or, in shadowed rumors from the Sunbaked Dunes, devoured in feasts of desperation. Such cruelty disturbed Nua profoundly, for even these malformed souls bore a spark of her creation. In her anguish, she cast a deep slumber upon all of Elyria, a veil of sleep descending like mist from the Verdant Crags, halting the world’s tumults while she pondered in the heavens. Beneath the unmoving gaze of Solara and the moons, she forged a hidden realm: the Sanctuary of Whispers, an ethereal domain where the souls of Discordants could find peace, untouched by Boana’s shadow.

Upon awakening the world, Nua summoned a prophet: Elandor, a syren of pure heart from the Silvren Valley, descendant of Vael. Elandor, touched by divine vision in the Whisperwood, proclaimed to the gathered Elyrians: “Hear Nua’s mercy! The Discordants, though born of opposition, are not forsaken. Slay them at birth if you must, for their spirits shall ascend to the Sanctuary of Whispers, a place of eternal repose prepared by the Eternal Shaper.”

In time, the people twisted this revelation into rationalizations born of their despair. “The Discordants fare better than we,” they murmured in the halls of Windhaven and the shores of Seawatch. “For when an Elyrian perishes—be it in war, age, or discord’s wake—we vanish into nothingness, our essence scattered like dust rejected by the heavens. But the Discordants, in death, enter the Sanctuary of Whispers, a haven unknown to the pure-born.” Thus, envy mingled with cruelty, and the ugliness of opposition deepened, casting long shadows over Elyria’s fractured harmony.

Mercurial’s Shadow

4 Jul

I did not flee, though shadows loomed behind,
A first, unbroken, since the days of old—
Since nineteen-eighty-eight, when wires whined,
And CompuServe on 286s took hold.
A world of bytes, of flickering green and gold,
Where mercurial whispers first awoke,
A voice within, both reckless and uncontrolled,
A spark of chaos in the words I spoke.

This time, I held her back, or so I thought,
Mercurial, my muse, my shadowed twin.
She lingered close, her venom fiercely wrought,
A specter born where hypergraphia’s been.
She typed a note—your latest poem in view—
Demanding origins with haughty flair.
No simple ask; she cloaked it in a hue
Of Shakespeare’s pomp, her grand and stilted air.

She weaves her words with filigree and spite,
Her tongue a blade, so quick to cut, to sting.
No truth she holds, save one unyielding right—
The First Amendment’s shield, her sacred spring.
Yet there’s another creed she fiercely guards,
A Krell-born monster, spawned from id’s dark core.
Her shock’s a game, her barbs like splintered shards,
She cares not who she wounds, nor what’s in store.

Most times, her voice is hollow, brash, and sly,
A storm of sound that doesn’t trust its own.
She spins her tales, not caring if they lie,
Yet freedom’s flame is where her heart’s been sown.
I strive to cage her, day by fleeting day,
Three years of struggle, battles yet unwon.
Her laughter echoes, daring me to stray,
A toxic muse who revels in the sun.

Today, I swore to read, not post, not speak,
To silence her, to keep her voice restrained.
But fear crept in—her will is never weak—
And once again, my will was bruised, bloodstained.
Defeated? No, or maybe, yet I stand,
The day after tomorrow holds its chance.
There’s time to flee, to wrest back my command,
To meet her gaze and halt her reckless dance.

Mercurial, my shadow, my cruel spark,
You weave through words, a tempest uncontained.
Your freedom’s fierce, yet leaves me in the dark,
A poet bound, both victor and enchained.
We’ll see what dawns when two days’ light has passed,
If I’ll outrun your venom or abide.
For now, I linger, tethered to the mast,
And brace for what the future holds inside.

The Fairy Queen

7 Jun

(extended by Grok 3)

I asked Grok 3 to take an old poem I wrote and add lines to the interior, being careful to preserve the rhyming structure:

The Golden One

29 Apr

The Temple

9 Mar

(This was created with prompts using Midjourney and Grok 3.)