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YOU WILL SEE THEM
AT NIGHT
Werecat

2004
Galvorn Awards: Winner -Best Evil Character Trying to be Good
2004
Galvorn Awards: Winner -Best Characterisation (Improbable OC)
Mithril Award 2005 - Finalist "Other Races"
Mithril Award 2005 - Runner up "Silmarillion"
He cant be
a son of mine, growled Kruga. With a swift move of her arm, the cleaver she held
severed another piece of soft meat.
Negren eyed her curiously from across the kitchen. What did he do this time?
Her lips pressed into a tight line, Kruga chopped off another piece of meat and threw it
into the boiler. The air was oppressive this far under the dungeons of Angband, but
neither of the female orcs seemed to be disturbed by the heat and the mixed scents of
blood, sweat, and meat. Wiping her forehead with the back of her hand, she placed her
cleaver on the working table and stared at Negren. Golthung caught him scribbling
his nonsense again, she said, her voice trembling slightly.
Negren blinked. Again?
Yes! With a hasty move, she threw another piece of meat into the boiling stew,
spilling a good deal of half-cooked broth all around the stove. Her hand lost something of
its steadiness as she grasped her cleaver again and resumed chopping. The first time
it happened, I said it was the foolishness of youth. Chop. The second
time, I thought that a decent beating would cure him of this nonsense. Chop.
The third time, I had him assigned to patrol duty, hoping that the smell of blood
and fresh meat would clear his head, or at least get him killed and spare me this
humiliation. Chop. But no, somehow he managed to cut down those
accursed elves and return to embarrass me further. Chop. Others of his
age have already gathered their good share of skulls and have sired sons. Chop.
But no, not my son. Not Grundush. Sweat dripped down her
forehead as she ceased chopping, gathered the chunks and threw them in the stew.
Negren finished skinning another elf and tossed the bloody carcass to Kruga. Who was
his father?
Kruga frowned. To this day, I believed him to be Dolgo, the late Patrol
Captain.
Negren nodded. No one could question Dolgos valor, or skill with the axe.
But lately, continued Kruga, I have my doubts. I can see nothing of
Dolgo in my sons worthless hide. She eyed Negren with interest her
friend held a pale elven skin with red hair. Will you be keeping this?
The female orc chuckled and tossed the skin to her friend.
Neither of them ever noticed the crouched form just outside the kitchens door.
***
With his heart heavy, Grundush made his way to the lower caverns. Although he was aware
that his kin considered his behavior unusual, he had never suspected the shame he brought
upon his mother. Stumbling, he reached the dungeons of the old prison that were left
unattended, since the underground waters had caused all equipment to rust. Until a way was
found to waterproof this part of the fortress, hardly anyone came there anymore - apart
from Grundush, that is.
At some point during his younger years, he had strayed from his path to the dragon
hatcheries and had found himself amid these empty corridors and abandoned cells. He had
heard rumors about this place of the shadowy creatures that lurked there, the ghosts
of the dead Noldor stalking the fools who wandered there, taking their vengeance with
ethereal blades and arrows. But although the air felt alive with eerie whispers and
distant sighs, Grundush had never encountered any creature, save rats. What he did come
across, though, would change his life forever.
On the walls of the abandoned cells, he found strange markings and carvings. Small,
worm-like signs danced before his eyes, reciting tales in a strange tongue. He didnt
think much of them at the time. But somehow these markings were engraved on his mind and
every time he closed his eyes he saw them floating around him. It wasnt until later,
after he first saw an elf, when he realized that these markings were writings in their
tongue. For months he lurked near the torture chambers and the prison cells, struggling to
understand the strange words from the curses and cries of pain, but all in vain.
Then one night, when sleep had become impossible, he stole coal from the kitchen and a
soft piece of skin from his mother's stash and copied some of the scribblings in the best
way that his rough fingers allowed. . Hiding the skin under his vest, he took it to the
captive elves in the torture chambers and demanded to know the meaning of the writings.
One elf spat at him; Grundush crushed his face. Another laughed at him; he kicked him
until he drowned in his blood. Some cursed him and he cut them until his hand could no
longer hold a blade. He had almost given up hope that he would ever decipher the writing
when one elf, bleeding badly from his flayed skin and his scorched fingers, neither spat
nor laughed at him. With his broken mouth he mumbled a few words Grundush understood.
You will see them at night, wretched, malformed creatures of pure evil
This
speaks of your accursed kind, orch. With a final jolt through his spine, the
elf died before Grundush had a chance to punish him for his insolence.
Later that night, chewing on the elfs roasted flesh, he made his way to the
abandoned cells, eager to decipher more of the writings.
***
In the months that followed, Grundush read slowly what the captive elves had written with
their blood. He read poems and curses, chants and wishes for those they hated or
treasured. In his mind a new world opened. Among his kin, such activities were frowned
upon. Whatever writing they used served the sole purpose of keeping some kind of archives
of supplies and equipment. But none had ever used writing to put down ones thoughts.
His first attempt in writing resulted in a crude verse for his mother. Your eyes are
burning charcoal, he wrote. You skin your prey with skill. Trembling inside,
Grundush showed her the skin with his scribblings.
She beat him so hard he saw double for a month.
Grundush never made the same mistake again. But somehow, Kruga always found out and became
furious. He had never given much thought as to why this angered his mother so. And
Grundush had never suspected the shame she felt because of him.
Inside the abandoned cells, where he had first found his calling, he decided to quit
writing at least until his mothers heart was at rest. He gathered the skins
with his works and dug a hole to bury them in. He tossed them in one by one until his
fingers felt that very first skin, the one with the elvish phrase on it. For a moment,
something stirred in his chest, something Grundush had no words for. Crouched on the
ground, he kept staring at the skin for a long time.
Then he made his choice.
Yes, he would briefly cease this activity that brought shame to his mother; but not
tonight. Tonight he would write something that could match the elfs lines; something
that did justice to his kin. He reached for a fresh skin and a piece of charcoal and,
after some moments of thought, he began scribbling.
You will see them at night: mighty warriors wielding axes and spears, bearing the
polished teeth of their fallen enemy proudly around their necks. You will see them riding
the wolf, the skin of their enemies on their shoulders, howling their rage to the night
skies.
And when you see them, you will wish that you had not seen them at all.
You will see them at night; they will be the last thing you will ever see.
© Werecat 2004 |