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Prologue:
The Tolarian peninsula. Home to the last one thousand eight hundred and fifty three living beings on the planet Yergus. Packed on to this small plot of land lay hundreds of shoddily constructed hovels, surrounded by hastily erected earthworks, primitive ballista and catapult dotting their ramparts. All were abandoned, not a man, woman or child was to be found. All one thousand eight hundred and fifty three of them were currently occupying the last grassy field their world would ever know. There they stood, brandishing weapons of all sorts, halberds, axes, pitchforks, even the children stood knives in hand, ready to fight, ready to defend the last vestige of life on their world.
Many were hungry; countless others thirsty, the once bountiful freshwater ocean that gently caressed their peninsula had long ago disappeared, replaced with a cracked and blighted ocean floor, turning the peninsula into a cliff face. Ahead of them lay countless miles of desecrated, blackened deadlands where nothing whatsoever remained. Not even a single blade of grass could be found over the thousands of miles of ravaged land. Countless masses lay dead, their skeletal remains spread across the vast wasteland that was Yergus. The entire planet had been transformed into a graveyard. All by the God of Death himself. No one was sure how they incurred the great one’s wrath, all attempts at repentance meeting with miserable failure. The elders thought that perhaps he was a servant of the Unknown Ones, sent as a harbinger to reclaim what was rightfully theirs. None of this mattered though. The God of Death was upon them, and would not stop until his bloodlust was sated. This much Warlord Devidius was certain of, and it weighed heavily on his mind as he paced the battle line of his hastily erected army. If it could be called that at all. Hundreds of so called troops were in reality little more than peasants with wooden spears and hatchets.
“What I wouldn’t give to have the Royal Legion...” He mused quietly as he stared out across the last grassy plain on the world, a row of green hills on the horizon obscuring the view of the destruction that lay past them, letting him for the last time believe that all was as it should be, if only for a moment.
Devidius found his daydream soon shattered by his adjutant, who had only just worked up the courage to respond to his earlier comment. “Sir, the Royal Legion was eradicated, what good would they do?”
He was, of course right. The Dark One had snuffed the men of the Legion out without so much as swinging a battle axe. The finest army the world had ever known, dispatched like they were children.
“I don’t know. At least I could die commanding with some dignity, rather than at the head of this festering mob.”
“Noble sentiments, sir.” The adjutant replied callously
Normally Devidius would have killed the man in an instant for taking such a tone with a Warlord, but he no longer had the luxury to let a man go to waste. It hardly mattered, they would all be dead soon enough anyway. His scouts had already confirmed his presence.
Solemnly the Warlord bent down, picking his brilliant gold helm from off the ground, gently sliding the jewel encrusted object into place over his head, fastening its leather strap to secure it into place. Next he pulled his sword free from the ground it was lodged in, sliding it expertly into its scabbard. A futile gesture perhaps, but a gesture nonetheless.
Shifting his weight uneasily between his two feet, Devidius stared out over the meadow and towards the hills, awaiting his demise.
A mangy farmer garbed in rags was the first to notice. Letting forth a shrill scream of terror, the old farmer shot a twisted finger skyward. It had started. Towering masses of black clouds billowed over the horizon, rushing over the peninsula with a speed wholly unnatural, engulfing every last shred of the once gentle blue sky. Within a minute, the Sun was gone, blocked from view, an unholy darkness descending over the last sons of Yergus.
“DRAW ARMS!” Devidius bellowed, the Captains of the various ragtag regiments following suite, a clanking uproar ensuing as sword grinded scabbard for the last time.
“For Honor! For Family! For Yergus!” The millennia old battle cry rang out through the ranks, men and boys alike thudding their chests in a last show of defiance, hoisting their weapons high and roaring the chant at the top of their lungs.
The sight heartened Devidius. Today, live or die, he was among his countrymen. Yet the little joy such a spectacle could muster in him, soon found itself dashed against the rocks of hopelessness as an eerie stillness befell the ranks, the only audible sound suddenly becoming the wisping of hundreds of torches hastily lit to try and counteract the sudden darkness.
The God of Death had arrived. From over the crest of the hill his shrouded figure emerged, gliding slowly, purposefully across the grassy meadow, the flowers beneath his feet withering into dust. He left a trail of ash and cinders across the meadow, his very presence causing a scar in the land. All remained silent as the Dark One strode into the middle of the once lush meadow which by this point was little more than a blackened smudge on the ground. Finally, the God of Death came to a halt, seemingly content with his location, a good three hundred yards from the Tolarian battle line.
Raising his cowled head slightly, The Dark One surveyed the force assembled against him, his eyes slowly sweeping over the battle line, his piercing gaze boring deep into the heart of every man he laid eyes upon. Even Warlord Devidius, at the head of the army found himself holding his breath, arms quivering as Death incarnate stared him down. Its gaze seemed to hang on him for a century, loosing panic and turmoil amongst his normally logical mind. He tried to fight it, to look away, to turn and run, anything. But he was paralyzed, he had to know, he had to see, he had to listen. The God seemed to be speaking to him. Condemning him.
I’ll save you for last.
And then it was over, the sensation gone. Wiping the sweat from his brow, Devidius sighed in relief, no matter how temporary it was.
By this time the Dark One seemed to have finished what could only be assumed to be his appraisal of Devidius’ army, lowering his shrouded face down once more. Remaining motionless for another heartbeat, he seemed to emanate the essence of pure power. Shuffling in his robes, as if searching for a quill, the Dark One withdrew his hands from its depths, letting them rest easily at the sides of his tattered, jet black garments.
An instant later, without warning, The God of Death shot his hands skyward like a lightning bolt, a tremendous boom echoing out through the dark masses of clouds blotting out the light.
“DARK HAIL!” A Captain cried out in horror, dropping his broadsword and tearing his helm off, throwing it to the ground and fleeing in utter terror, only to be crushed seconds later by a massive chunk of black ice the size of a boulder that came crashing down from the heavens.
Seconds later the entire sky opened up in fury, sending massive chunks of hail screaming down into Devidius’ lines, the unholy ice crushing entire units beneath it, separating limb from body. The unceasing torrent of death continued to pour down upon the hapless warriors as they charged forth into the maw of death that was now closing in upon them, spurred on in a last ditch effort by their commanders towards The God of Death himself.
And there he stood, catapulting shards of shattered dark ice across the landscape with nothing but the sheer power of his mind, the jagged black shards reaving through both steel and flesh, littering the battlefield with bloodied limbs and dying men as they careened forward in all directions, slamming into the ground, tossing up massive plumes of ash and blood in the process. The God of Death did all this, standing perfectly still as men lunged forward, trying uselessly to dodge the icy shrapnel only to be crushed by one of the numberless boulders of dark ice that ceaselessly plummeted through the clouds.
Warlord Devidius stood by in horror, watching helplessly as the dark hail consumed his army, men died by the hundreds as the lethal meteors rained down like hellfire upon their regiments. There was no escaping the devastation, as far as the eye could see the sky thundered down upon the broken meadow, across the entire length of the peninsula. All hope was lost, chaos was running rampant in the ranks, men fleeing for their lives only to be cut to ribbons by black daggers of ice, their last gurgling cries of pain drowned out by the thundering impact of hundreds of the lethal ice boulders.
Then, as abruptly as the hellish storm started, it abated, the last of the massive hailstones crashing to a rest at the back of the Dark One himself, whose hands now rested leisurely at his side once more. Men scurried to gather themselves together in the sudden calm, rushing towards the malefic entity with all the speed their exhausted bodies could muster.
The God of Death merely watched, and waited as the men stampeded forward, slivers of Dark Ice shattering beneath their boots as they rushed upon him screaming curses of vengeance all the way. Arrows and spears narrowly passed by him as the men closed the distance by the second, and soon they found themselves only a stones throw away from avenging their countrymen. With brimstone in their eyes they all charged on to fulfill their vision of revenge. It was payback time. Simultaneously they all hefted their weapons, as they stood at the Dark One’s feet, thrusting them forward to come within inches of him, when each and every one of the hundreds of warriors came to a cold stop, a vision of utter horror etched into their eyes, their instruments of war clattering uselessly to the ground.
Hear. Hear the voice of Death calling to you.
With freakish speed, the Dark One’s head snapped to attention, his mouth wide open like a black hole, sucking in all light to the point where you could not even make out what was behind the darkness. The God of death inhaled briefly, sheer power radiating off his form as he did so, and then let forth the most wretched sound ever heard on the planet. An ear piercing howl shot forth with such rippling force that every man on the battlefield collapsed in pain, hands clutching their ears, their screams of torment drowned out by the indomitable power of the Dark One. The howl reverberated across the land, shooting forth a shockwave which crashed across the land with the ferocity of a tsunami, instantly shattering the thousands of chunks of Dark Ice littering the landscape, sending razor sharp fragments in every direction, turning writhing men into human pin cushions, millions of needle thin pieces of the unholy ice piercing the bodies of every soldier who just moments ago stood a chance of putting an end to the terror and saving their ruined world. Blood seeped from the hundreds of soldiers turned instantly to corpses, cascading down the newly formed mound of bodies amassed at the feet of the God of Death who once more stood motionless.
Warlord Devidius’ eyes frantically swept the battlefield, stepping over the shrapnel riddled body of his adjutant to gain a better vantage point. Everywhere it was the same. Death ash and ice were all that remained. One Thousand Eight Hundred and Fifty-two bodies were scattered across the once fertile valley, the God of Death standing contently in the center of it all. Or at least he was, Devidius realized in horror as he stared at the sickly pile of corpses. The Dark One was gone.
Devidius’s heart pounded in his chest, sweat pouring down his forehead as he remembered the voice he had heard in his head only minutes ago.
I’ll save you for last
So he had. Panicking, Devidius tore his helm from his head, throwing it frantically on the body of his lifeless adjutant, doing likewise with his breastplate. Giving one final look to the carnage of the meadow, he turned, and ran. Feet crunching noisily against the glassy ice littering the ground, he fled across the peninsula, not daring to look behind him in fear of the horrors he might behold. The jagged drop off of the Tolarian peninsula soon came into view, the dried sandy slope that had once been a beach leaving him with no place to run, yet Devidius continued forth blindly, knowing that to stop was to die.
Soon the black ice gave way to wisping puffs of sand as the exhausted warlord trudged on to the ends of the peninsula. There was no place left to run. He would either stand and fight, or plummet to his death. Clutching his broadsword with one sweat drenched gauntlet, Devidius gritted his teeth, and turned around to fight his last battle. Yet, no one was there. Taking a step forward, sword extended, Devidius searched for his enemy, yet the sandy expanse held not a soul.
“Coward.” Devidius grunted in delusion, thrusting his sword victoriously into the sand.
The sand...
He realized staring at the mound he had tossed his blade into. It was trembling. “NO!” The Warlord shouted in blind fear, digging his sword out of the coarse sand that was now billowing across the cliff face, whipping up a miniature sandstorm around Devidius, the last living being on Yergus.
“Come! Face me coward!” Devidious yelled into the raging sandy plumes, the coarse sediment whipping across his face, biting into his skin.
“Taste the fury of my blade! You will beg for death!” Devidious bellowed into the sandstorm, trying his best to sound confident.
Very well.
The God of Death echoed in his mind, fear once more clutching Devidius’ soul as he froze in terror, the sand at his feet rumbling and shifting, an ominous figure emerging from it, sand cascading from his midnight robes. The Dark One had come for him.
Devidius screamed out in terror and rage, blindly thrusting his gilded sword into the gut of his tormenter, twisting the blade deeper and deeper until he could see its bloodless tip emerging from the back of the Dark One. A triumphant smirk crossed his face. He had won; no one could live a blow like that. Grasping his sword, he went to dislodge it from the bestial entity, only to find a withered, almost skeletal hand clutching the broadsword, refusing to release it.
Fool. You cannot kill what is already dead.
“No! NO!” Devidius howled, tugging frantically at his weapon, fighting the seemingly indomitable grasp of his foe. “You can’t! You’re dead!”
I can.
Raising his free hand, God of Death planted it upon Devidius’ chest, running an icy chill up the man’s spine. Then, with a single twitch of the bony appendage he ushered forth a massive shockwave, catapulting Devidius, sword and all in the air, arcing over the sandy cliff face and towards blighted ocean floor miles below. Seconds later Devidius’ frenzied shrieking finally was silenced by a barely audible thud in the distance. With Warlord Devidius’ death, every last being on Yergus was now dead.
Dead as they should be. The Dark One thought silently as he overlooked the carnage he had loosed. Not that he really cared. Reaching one ghastly hand into his robes, he procured a tarnished, ancient hydrospanner, with which he slowly and diligently carved yet another notch in his equally ancient utility belt.
_________________ Audi famam illius Aftershock.

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