Personal Notes of Vindor Corion of House Tirannon,
Master Wizard
Set down in the 657th Loa Elenaro
at Padash in Quentari
Not For CatalogIt is somewhat unusual, the position I find myself in. Most
would perform this final act of self-indulgence while still alive, and
at least then an audience might be found. In my current state, however,
I must write my last journal after I am dead, for no one but myself. Perhaps
the act will ease the pain of what I have done, the need that has driven
me to this.
My story begins long ago, as the time of my house of Tirannon
is older by far than the time of my own birth in the eightieth year of
Aran Thloestel. I shall pass over the earliest years as the time of my
training at the great tower of Helevorn is of little consequence. My seeds
of the present belong truly to a time in the 191st year of Aran Thloestel,
when Morathak Calennor led his troops against the elementals. Little did
we know then what was to come, or our choice of allies might have been
very different.
Tarlov Y’Koharitan held much promise in those days, especially
for one of his kind. This is of little matter now, as the result of the
fighting has revealed his true nature to us. We knew nothing at the time,
except that our greatest healers were unable to aid him. We saw what we
desired to see, in that his impatience led him to flee the known lands
in search of what we could not give him. I am ahead of myself, however.
This tale shall make no sense whatever if I jump about like a new student.
To return to the tale at hand, the time of my youth, not
yet ended.
This period still found me in residence at the great tower,
sometimes as a student, and alternately as a teacher. Late in Thloestel’s
third century, I felt that this time was ended, and removed myself to the
estates of Tirannon, to better perform the duties of a Lord Researcher.
This period was one of great satisfaction for me, but as all things end,
the death of Thloestel brought life to a new period.
Galavier had always been a friend, and his ascent to the
throne was expected. I suppose my role in his court was inevitable. The
unexpected was soon to follow. I had never thought that a unicorn would
be seen in civilized lands. The distress of its news was therefore all
the greater. The creature was not the first, but bands of so called adventurers
often strayed beyond the bounds of civilization to become lost in the mists
of time. Still the pattern of disappearance had begun to take on an unusual
shape when the news came of the creature’s depredations.
Fortunately, Morathak was possessed of a long memory,
and was able to bring together the news of the unicorn with his own experience
of centuries before. Even so the power of this new threat was beyond alarming.
To think that anything could destroy an elemental of Life so utterly that
it did not return to the realm!
The report of a creature shaped as a human, but able to
utterly consume the spirits of its victims was of nearly the same concern
to the court as it had been to the creatures of Life. Upon hearing that
the creature’s minions called it Tarlov of the Ghost-hand, Morathak became
quite agitated, causing the unicorn no end of distress before Galavier
asked him to abide.
Even so, Morathak lapsed into silence only briefly before
revealing to us the most amazing tale. We had known of his service in the
Cycle War during the time of Thloestel, but not of the details, as Galavier
and I had been engrossed in our studies at the time. He told us that one
of his erstwhile allies, a sorcerer king, as they were called, had been
called Tarlov Y’Koharitan. The man had served with distinction, being a
powerful wizard and a talented soldier. This Tarlov had lost an arm, or
part of one, so Morathak told us. He had left our lands greatly embittered
when we were unable to help him in restoring his arm.
We immediately thought that if this were the same Tarlov
that he must now be some kind of magical construct, either golem or undead
lord. The unicorn spoke otherwise. It insisted that its folk knew of these
creatures, and whatever this Tarlov might be, he was not one of those.
I wondered aloud at how a wizard of celestial powers, as Morathak named
Tarlov, might obtain these new abilities, especially the glowing hand which
was said to be his main weapon.
Regardless, it was inconceivable that we should not aid
the unicorn and its folk. I set myself therefore, to gathering a force
of my brother wizards. Fully one hundred of them would accompany us in
this venture. Morathak set aside the mantle of statesman to don his armor
once again, and lead a picked force of warriors.
After a month of hard travel, we arrived at the place
where the creature had its lair. By the shore of a lake, the battle began.
Weeks later, we brought Tarlov to bay in a place that we would know only
later. The fighting had spun wildly across the face of the land, the most
powerful magicks moving us vast distances in the blink of an eye. Many
of our number perished in the glare of sorceries flung and reflected. In
the end we were unable to achieve the final victory. Tarlov had foreseen
this day and his magicks were too powerful.
All that remained was for us to forge a prison that would
hold him until time itself was done. I shall not speak of what we have
done. The oaths I have sworn prevent me from mentioning the means used.
Only the unicorns and I know the exact location of the prison. All of the
others came and went by means of my gates, and no one of them even saw
the entire design. In time they all passed into Autmennesiel, and only
I remain, if that is the word for it.
At the end, the final duty fell to me alone. The Amarth-Ma-Nazgul,
it was called the Doom of the Ghost-hand. It was of my making, and it was
left to me to defend it. Even that means was to be a secret, and Galavier
intended that it should die with me. He did not know of my final plan,
and likely he would not have approved it if he had. Little choice was left
to me though. To make the item and then abandon it to the vagaries of Time
was unacceptable. Merely the movement of chance would make me forsworn
in short order.
Perhaps half a year after the final act of construction,
my tower was destroyed in a burst of unusual magical energy. My family
wept as they searched the wreckage of the tower, but there was nothing
to find. The tree of memory was planted, and life went on.
Now we must go back some small bit of time. My current
situation found its roots centuries past in the migration of the Nimeshab
Gorbe, or Sarr into the area to the north of our land of Quentari. The
reports of the telcontari gave us hope that perhaps we might permit them
to stay, even though they permitted the practice of necromantic magicks.
Over the centuries we developed some slight trade relationships with the
Nimeshab, but they disliked our celestial magicks as much as we disliked
necromancy. It seemed that we would be no closer.
Truly, war makes for strange alliances. The horrors of
the Dagorim Gurthrauko made for stranger than most. At first the Nimeshab
fought to defend their own lands, and otherwise made no preference for
the targets of their lightning raids. At last the choice was made for them.
For all that they used necromantic spells, the Nimeshab hated the creation
of the creatures of undeath. When an emissary of Gurthaiya paraded a telcontari
patrol into the village, one that had previously enjoyed the hospitality
of the Nimeshab, there was no turning back. The battle that ensued was
fast, and bloody, and the Nimeshab evacuated their homes after it.
During the ensuing decades of war, the Nimeshab showed
skill and bravery, and the sacrifice of one of the matriarchs led to the
naming of the Nimeshab as full telcontari. This was an honor unheard of
in the time before, but not thought unusual in the chaos of war. The Erinar
had seen the Nimeshab in action. This, perhaps more than anything else,
was behind the honor.
When the war had ended, the Erinar himself, not yet Aran,
since his year had not yet ended, arrived to tell the Nimeshab that they
could have a new homeland within Quentari, if they wished, and if they
would abide by the laws of Quentari. After a long night of bargaining,
it was agreed. The Nimeshab set off to see their new place. The Erinar
walked with them. The place was found to be acceptable. They called their
new village Padash, or Reward, and lived there prosperously from that time.
All of this led us back to my current place. I had spent
a quiet period of several centuries on contemplation of a number of mysteries
that I had never been quite able to puzzle out previously. Perhaps it is
my current state, but I believe that I had found at last an understanding
of the nature of the spirit in relation to the practice of magic. Unfortunately
my studies were interrupted by the Dagorim Gurthrauko. The pain of watching
my countrymen die is with me even now, over five centuries later. My mission,
however, was even more vital. The oaths I swore over a thousand years ago
held me fast, even as I wept for them. I held myself aside, knowing that
my intervention might have saved them. This will haunt me to the end, I
fear, but Tarlov’s fate would allow nothing else.
My energies were therefore divided between observing events
around me, and reinforcing the protective magicks that surrounded my place
of hiding. On numerous occasions, I felt the roving eye of searching wizards,
but none was able to pierce the shroud. Perhaps the end of the war brought
the greatest pain. Gurthaiya was finally put down, at the cost of my friend,
Galavier.
After the war drew to a close, the silence of my resting-place
was once again disturbed. This time a telcontari patrol led a group of
cat beings into the area, apparently in search of a home. The group was
led by an elf whose identity was unclear to me. From further study, his
mannerisms and the deference given him by the telcontari Tirieldor led
me to think that this was no other than the Erinar. This was more than
a shock to me, as Galavier had been childless at the time of my death.
After the departure of the telcontari, I returned to my
writings, thinking that peace had at last returned. The error of my ways
was soon to be seen as a source of noise beyond any battle of the Dagorim
Gurthrauko began. I quickly learned that its source was the cat-people,
who were known as Sarr. I later learned that they had been, “chanting”.
They were dedicating their new home. Fortunately, the chanting was not
to become a permanent fixture, at least with that frequency. It quickly
became bearable.
The greater threat to my peace came from the natural curiosity
and contrariness of children. When the cubs learned of the origins of the
ruins of my tower, they climbed about them as a dare. The Matriarchs of
course ordered this to stop. Equally obviously, the activity now gained
an even greater mystique. Indeed, it gained an aura of taboo. Those who
ventured into the ruins gained stature among the groups of youngsters.
Unfortunately there seemed to be no way to stop this behavior, as these
cubs were born to a life of risk and death.
Long months of this activity started an idea, and soon
I had a plan to use it to my advantage. If the cubs insisted upon treating
the ruins as a testing ground, I would give them a test indeed! Within
a few years, some of the cubs that were to set out on their quest for adulthood
chose my tower as their object. I could not disappoint. Not long after
that they came to regard me as a guardian spirit, perhaps even a manifestation
of their own mystical ancestor.
Over the years, I reinforced in the Sarr the idea that the ruins were
a place of power. In particular, it was their place of power, to be defended
at all cost.
Soon after this the Dagorim Gurthrauko ignited again,
but the bulk of the fighting occurred elsewhere. Padash was never seriously
threatened, but the cost of the war among the Nimeshab was to cause them
great distress.
The disappearance of the new Aran Elenaro, the son of my friend
Galavier, at the end of this part of the Dagorim was an even harder blow
than I had thought was possible. I had never known the boy, but even so,
his apparent passing was a source of great pain to me. Even more shocking
was the identity of the new Cheben-Red, since the Belgeledh Pedai refused
to admit that Elenaro was dead - Arienwen Cyllinith. She had been
a precocious child of less than a hundred-span at the time of my expedition
against Tarlov, but that was seven centuries past. I was quite curious
about what had happened to keep her alive two centuries past the normal
span. I wondered if something connected to the Tarlov expedition was responsible.
As these thoughts occurred, Prophesy, the ancient gift
of my house manifested itself quite strongly. I saw myself meeting Arienwen
again, here in Padash, centuries in the future. At this time, I knew that
whatever the cost, I must act to ensure that the Sarr remained in Padash.
While this may seem a curious thought, it was apparent to me at the time
that Arienwen was attempting to remove the non-elven presence from Quentari.