Read Tales of the Old World Online
Authors: Marc Gascoigne,Christian Dunn (ed) - (ebook by Undead)
Tags: #Warhammer
On top of the pyramid, Grimcrag stood up and set his lips in a stern pout.
“Ain’t going in no net. Sharn’t. Ain’t no fish!” The dwarf looked at Johan and
Jiriki, and grinned his familiar grin. “Dunno what came over me, lads!” Setting
his helm to its correct angle, he whispered quietly to himself. “Me old dad
always said ‘It’s not the axe as makes the dwarf’, and ’appen he was right.”
“I hear you, my friend. Now is not the time for carping,” Jiriki agreed.
“Let’s do it!”
“Oh heavens, there are hundreds of them, with magic and nets. We’re bound to
die now, aren’t we?” muttered Johan, more in anger than fear. The deathly
confidence exuded by Grimcrag and Jiriki was strangely infectious, and the two
older Marauders were heartened by the sound of Johan’s sword scraping clear from
its scabbard.
At the base of the pyramid, twenty feet of very steep steps below them, the
lizard things gathered. Looking up, they obviously weren’t too keen to climb the
steps, nets or no, not into the waiting blades of three belligerent warriors who
had such an obvious height advantage over them. They rasped and burped amongst
themselves, and a few launched arrows up to skitter and skip on the flagstones
of the pyramid.
“Come on then, frog spawn!” Johan shouted. “Come and get your legs chopped.”
He turned to Grimcrag. “Shame old Grail-mad Pierre isn’t here, he loves frogs’
legs.”
Grimcrag guffawed. Jiriki smirked.
“LSSSRIKK!” the lizards croaked as one, but they did not advance. The shaman
reached the bottom of the pyramid with bounding steps, and squinted up at the
warriors. “Nrssssssss?” it hissed angrily at them, then rounded on its cowardly
compatriots. After a few minutes of frantic hissing and croaking, the black
lizard threw off its headdress in apparent disgust, and shook its mottled head
resignedly. It shrugged its shoulders and pointed up beyond the pyramid top. The
other lizards followed its’ gaze, and immediately went into a frenzy of
excitement, hopping up and down and hissing enthusiastically.
Atop the pyramid, the Marauders watched, transfixed.
“Now what?” Grimcrag grunted.
“They seem excited about something,” Johan muttered, confused.
Jiriki turned to face the way the lizards were looking. “Sun’s going down.
They’ll wait for the dark.”
The others turned and looked. There was no denying the fact that the sun was
sinking fast. Already its ruddy red globe fondly touched the top most branches
of the trees, and soon it would drop out of sight completely.
“It sinks so fast in these climes,” began Johan.
“No wonder neither, it puts such an effort in all day. It’s prob’ly
’zausted.”
“So what shall we do?” the elf asked.
“Do?” Grimcrag snorted. “What d’ya think we’re going to do?”
“Well,” began Johan, “I, for one do not intend being butchered in the dark.”
“That’s the spirit, young ’un. Let’s go get ’em, eh?”
“Yes, well… oh hell, why not!”
Drawing themselves to their full respective heights, the Marauders prepared
for battle.
At the base of the pyramid, the lizards realised that something was about to
happen, and they began to form formal ranks of shield, spear and bow.
If still undecided in their hearts (and not one of them would ever admit that
such was the case) the Marauders atop the pyramid had their minds made up by a
familiar heavily-muscled figure who appeared in the dusk light around the path
to the village. His voice reached them as a heavily accented bellow.
“Vot you vaitink for—Marauders or Mauses?” The barbarian was already at a
run towards the lizards, the glitter of his sword a deadly sliver of malice in
the dying rays of the sun.
“CHAAARGE!!!!” roared Grimcrag, leaping down towards the waiting lizard
horde. He didn’t even turn to see if the others were following. Battle cries to
the fore and now to their rear threw the lizards into total panic. Despite the
entreaties of their shaman, Anstein saw them turn to flee. Their path was
blocked by a charging barbarian. A barbarian who wielded a two handed sword in
his right hand and a heavily scarred iron shield on his left arm. A barbarian
who howled like a wolf as he charged towards the assembled hordes of reptiledom
with no apparent concern for his own safety.
Tumbling down the pyramid towards the lizards’ backs, Anstein could see that
this was going to get very bloody very fast. They obviously didn’t take very
well to surprises.
Then something very strange happened.
Seeing the charging barbarian, the lizards flung their weapons aside, dropped
to their knees and buried their heads in the sand.
Grimcrag, Jiriki and Johan came to a halt at the bottom of the pyramid. A
carpet of lizard backs stretched away from them.
Grimcrag shrugged and raised his axe. “Hardly seems fair! Still, never look a
gift coin and all that,” he grunted, decapitating three lizards in one blow.
Jiriki stopped the slaughter by adroitly tripping the dwarf over. Black blood
was splattered everywhere, but the remaining lizards sat motionless.
“Oi!” exclaimed the dwarf, dragging himself to his feet. He made for the
security of Old Slaughterer.
“Leave it, Grimcrag,” Johan hissed. “Something’s happening.”
Berserk, Keanu charged onwards, dimly wondering where the enemy had gone and
why the floor was all lumpy. He slowed to a loping trot, then a walk, then
finally stopped. He could see Jiriki, Grimcrag and Anstein all right, but he
could have sworn that there was a whole horde of… Jiriki was gesturing at his
boots.
“Vot?” he bellowed, still partly berserk, peering down. He was standing on
the chest of a large lizard creature, a black-skinned one bedecked in feathers
and bone. He raised his sword to strike.
The lizard’s eyes bulged, but it managed to croak loudly. Keanu dropped his
sword in surprise; the other Marauders did likewise. They all clearly heard the
lizard shaman speak words—understandable words.
“Velkomsss God LosssErikkk. Long haff ve Vaited innit yessssss.”
The living carpet whispered at Keanu with the rustling, hissing squeak of a
hundred lizard voices: “LSSSRIKKK! LSSSSSRIKKK! LSSSS-RIKKK!”
Grimcrag patted Johan on the shoulder. “I’ll be blowed! Maybe this isn’t
going to be so bad after all!”
Six months in paradise was probably enough for anyone. It was certainly
enough for Johan Anstein. Much as he enjoyed lying on a beach being feted as a
god by proxy—just knowing Keanu seemed to be enough to get you in the club—Johan knew that there was a whole world out there over the horizon, just waiting
for the unique influence of Grunsonn’s Marauders.
Still, he had had time to write up their adventures in his journal, the food
was good, the natives friendly (except for the odd hostile glare from the
extended families of those accidentally killed by Grimcrag and Keanu) and the
weather beyond compare. As he curled his toes lazily in the warm sand, Johan
pondered on his companions.
Grimcrag, certainly, was unusually happy, what with his beer and the cave
full of gold which the dwarf was lovingly transferring to their patched-up and
extended rowing boat in his secret cove. Johan sighed contentedly.
Only Jiriki was unhappy with the situation, his wanderlust frustrated by the
confines of the small island. The elf had become quite solitary of late, taking
to long sojourns along the cliff-tops on the lookout for ships. He had even
built some warning beacons out of dead brushwood. He had meticulously timed the
tides, how long it took to get a fire going, run to the boat and get out to sea.
Johan really couldn’t see the point, and hoped that Jiriki would perhaps relax a
little when he realised that they truly were in the lap of the gods regarding
rescue. They had not had so much as a sniff of a sail since their arrival six
months ago.
Still, it was sunny and warm every day of the week… maybe they could stay
awhile longer yet. Actually, it wasn’t as if they had any real choice in the
matter. Jiriki should jolly well wake up and—
His thoughts were interrupted by a familiar rasping voice.
“Ansssstein, ’vake?” The voice was that of Froggo, Johan’s adopted lizardman.
The young creature—apparently they called themselves ‘skinkz’ in their
native tongue—followed Anstein everywhere, eager to learn as much as it could
of the big, wide world beyond its island home.
“Yes, Froggo, me lad, I’m awake. Just musing.” Johan turned to look at the
skink, which as usual sat a respectful distance away from its adopted mentor. On
matters of gender, when pressed, the creatures had been ambiguous to say the
least, and Johan was none too sure if Froggo was in fact a boy or a girl, or
even whether they made such distinctions. Johan had pigeon-holed Froggo (he had
quickly realised that he had no way in this world of being able to pronounce the
creature’s real name, which sounded like a cistern being flushed) as being a
boy, for neatness’ sake more than anything else.
“Musink?” the skink enquired, blinking its toad-like eyes and scratching a
leathery patch of skin under its long chin. “Vot meaninksss?”
“Another word for thinking, sort of… You know, your accent is terrible,
Froggo; abominable, in fact!” Johan turned over and lazily threw a small stick
at the reptile, which dodged nimbly out of the way. In return, it cheekily threw
a small pebble which hit Johan square on the forehead.
“But better zan yoursss in my ssspeaks yessssss?” the lizard creature
quipped, making the loud hissing noise in the back of its throat that Johan had
learned passed for laughter in skink.
Johan jumped to his feet and chased the small scampering creature back to the
village. It was nearly time for lunch.
Behind them, on the furthest visible reach of the ocean, the small black
speck of a sail hove into view over the horizon. On a nearby cliff-top, a thin
plume of black smoke clawed its way upwards into the heavy air.
In his cave, Grimcrag worked tirelessly, piling yet more gold artefacts into
the boat and tying them securely down. As he worked, he endlessly muttered to
himself under his breath: “Can’t last, got to be a catch. Can’t last, got to be
a catch.”
The dwarf’s arms and armour were stacked neatly to one side of the cave,
glittering from the sparkling reflections cast by the clear water. The mouth of
the cave was perhaps a hundred feet distant, a patch of white heat against the
shadowy black of the cave. The slap-slap of water kept a constant rhythm by
which the dwarf worked, stacking the gold items one at a time in a strange
looking boat which was moored beside a natural stone jetty.
The boat was an odd mongrel contraption, new wood gleaming against older,
more battered timbers. Its prow bore a proud dragon head, and there was
provision for a small mast. Four old and rusted shields lined each side of the
vessel, one to protect each of the oars which dipped into the cool waters of the
cave. A bigger, steering oar was mounted at the higher stern, and the boat
looked to be just what it was—a mix between the wreck of their rowing boat and
a much older Norse longboat.
The soft pattering of booted feet disturbed the dwarf, and he instinctively
reached for his trusty axe. A moment later and Jiriki’s sun-tanned face peered
into the cave. The elf had taken the most naturally to the tropical climate, and
now looked healthier than the dwarf had ever seen him. “Grimcrag?” he called,
and from his tone, the dwarf knew that something was of grave concern. He
stepped from the shadows. “Here, Jiriki—what’s up, old friend?”
The elf strode into the cave, grinning at the boat despite himself. He
pointed at Grimcrag’s construction and tapped a foot impatiently. “Will that
thing really float out of there?” The elf nodded towards the cave mouth.
“Weighed down by so much gold?”
Grimcrag spat on the floor, disgusted by the temerity of such a question.
“Course it will! What do you take me for?” The dwarf stomped up to the elf and
prodded him with a stubby callused finger. “While you lot’ve bin living it up
with yer froggy friends,” Grimcrag’s arm swept around the cave as evidence of
his industry, “some of us ’ave bin working blimming hard!”
The elf clapped Grimcrag on the shoulder and smiled. “Splendid, my
industrious friend, splendid. You know that, of all of us, I am least happy with
our predicament, and now, we may have… an opportunity.” Jiriki headed back to
the rear entrance to the cave, before turning once more to face the bemused
dwarf. “Come on, Grimcrag. We’ll be using that boat of yours sooner than you’d
imagine, I’ll wager!”
“What do you mean?” Grimcrag began. “I’m not using it for fishing, nor
joyrides neither—look what happened last time…”
Jiriki winked conspiratorially as he stepped out into the daylight. His
lilting voice drifted back into the cave. “Come on, Grimcrag, grab your axe too—the tide’s rising, the beacon’s lit. By my estimation we have no more than an
hour!”
“It’s the sun, isn’t it?” The dwarf frowned as he grabbed his axe. “That, and
all the time you’ve spent moping around those cliff-tops.”
But Jiriki was off and running. His last words, echoing around the cavern,
persuaded the old dwarf that something important was happening: “I’ve spied a
sail. We have company!”
Keanu sat on his bamboo throne, two skinks fanning him with the feathers of
some particularly large and gaudily-plumaged bird. Swathed in garlands of exotic
flowers, the barbarian drank warm beer from his helmet; his feet rested in a
bowl of cool water, which was replenished regularly by more scurrying minions.
He faced out onto the village square, where the now spotlessly clean pyramid
reared up into the sky.
On top of the pyramid, Keanu’s likeness, or something approaching it, stared
back at the barbarian. If he squinted hard, the entire village had a distinctly
Norse look. Keanu sighed contentedly. If only it were nice and cold.