Part Two :
It began innocently enough, the time which the Elves grew to call ‘E’non Ecllyr’drynni Cmm’, meaning ‘Descent into Madness’, when the Elf-maiden Duryath, wife of F’crccrc, was out walking and singing in the woodlands near the Goeth foothills, singing and dancing in the golden dappled sunlight that filtered down through the leafy boughs. Suddenly, to her great dismay, she came across a trail of blood that had dripped like a vivid strip of scarlet across the grassy sward that lay before her, and, her curiosity overcoming her horror, she turned from the path and followed the ichor that lead her on into a nearby thicket. There she beheld two human soldiers, both bloody and battered from a skirmish and bearing the mark of Grmm upon their armour. And Duryath was moved to great pity, and tarried there to bind their wounds and injuries, offering them potions of ‘Ecyllyr’, an Elvish healing draught. The two soldiers thanked her, and explained that they were the sole survivors of a Grmm patrol that had been ambushed earlier that day by the Wab, and that they had fled into the Goeth woodlands whilst the Wabians butchered their fellows. The two humans were speaking in the Common Tongue, but Duryath could understand them as she had had dealings with the Human Rangers and Woodsmen that occasionally bearing peaceful tidings into their woodlands.
Duryath, when she had bound their wounds as best she could, called for her horse and put the two Grmm soldiers upon it, and gently bore them back along the trail into her village. There, she put them to rest in her house with fresh linens and bandages, and sent for her husband and also the village Elders so that she might tell them what she had done. She also sent for their local runner, Allby, and bade him to journey east over the Jun’kyt river to the Elvish kingdom, to inform their Elders of what had come to pass. But Duryath, although filled with pity for the two human soldiers, despite that they were of a different race, was naïve and innocent to the nature of warfare and conflict. For although she had bound their wounds as best she could initially whilst in the thicket, they were not fully closed and thus as she bore them along the trail back to the village, they left a faint trail of blood which the company of Wabians, still flushed with their battle frenzy and lust for carnage and whom were already on the spoor of the two survivors of their carefully prepared ambush, could not fail to spy.
And thus, even before the sun had set that very same day, and Duryath, F’crccrc and the Elders Sp’mwmm and Elbie were all locked in heated discussion over her actions and whether she had shown the greatest wisdom in bringing two wounded human soldiers to their village, the hundred or so Wabians fell upon the unsuspecting and unprepared Elves and tore into them from out of the woodland with a wild horrific derangement and lust that was truly terrible to behold.
Many Elves died in the initial rush, clubbed or shot down with arrows or skewered upon steel-hardened spear-points as they stood, open-mouthed and bewildered as to the reasons for the unwarranted attack. They were the lucky ones, in what the Wabians ever-after referred to as ‘The Battle of the White Water’ which was a misnomer for two reasons; the first being that it was not a battle, more a charnel-house of unbridled, senseless savagery and brutality, the like of which not even Grmm’wab, with it’s long human-inspired history of massacres and protracted pointless warfare had ever seen. The second reason was that Whitewater Lake truly turned colour to a bright coppery scarlet, the taint and hue of the deluge of Elvish blood that was shed and spattered its’ banks that evening, and into which the broken, mutilated bodies of the Elves, along with their belongings and possessions that the Humans did not claim for plunder, were thrust without pause at the end of the killing spree, as the Wabians, drunk on their great victory, made a clumsy attempt to wipe all trace of the Elvish settlement from the face of Grmm’wab, as punishment for their despicable crime of choosing to help the evil forces of Grmm. Some said that, despite the washing of many rains, Whitewater never truly regained its pure snow-coloured vivid tone ever again, and was thereafter forever known locally as ‘We’a’dylloc’, which means ‘The Scarlet Lake’.
A group of Elvish children were discovered hiding in the reeds down by the lake by Grylla Huesan, one among a band of wenches who tagged along in the wake of the Wabian company and in many respects little more than a child herself as still being in her teenage years, although many of the ‘personal services’ she was known to provide for the soldiers were scarcely the province of a child. Beguiled by her beautiful countenance, sympathetic smile and promises of sanctuary and protection, the Elvish children flocked to her, and trusted in her fair and gentle-sounding words. But behind her reassurances of aid lurked the worms of deceit and betrayal and, aided by another human wench, she bound the children, tied huge stones to their necks, and threw them into the lake one by one, where they all drowned.
A few spirited Elves attempted to resist, but they were not skilled in the arts of warfare and, although of magical trait, had prepared neither offensive or defensive spells and thus were quickly hacked or shot down; most, on the other hand, attempted to flee once the shock of the initial attack had worn off, but did not get very far as they were surrounded and butchered by the blood-mad Wabians.
The house of F’crccrc and Duryath was quickly singled out by the Wabian commander, Sûller Lemoc, for some special attention. First the Wabians burst in, and dragged out the two wounded Grmm soldiers who could mount only an ineffectual struggle, and bound them to teams of agitated, excited horses, who were then whipped and lashed until the frantic beasts literally tore the pair apart. Then they found Duryath and brought her forth before Sûller, and she fell to her knees before the human leader and begged him to punish her, and not her friends and fellow Elves, for it was her who had found the wounded humans, her decision to care for them and bring them back here to the Elvish village – it was therefore her responsibility, and hers alone. And again she begged the humans to leave her friends and fellow Elves alone, and just inflict whatever punishment they adjudged upon her.
“Oh don’t worry about that, we intend to,” Sûller Lemoc had almost smiled back.
And thus Duryath was forced to watch, through genuinely horrified eyes, as many living Elves as whom could still be found were brought before her into her house, and there put to death before her. She tried to twist her head away, to shut her eyes so that she might no longer see, if still hear the cries and pleas of those being killed. But a particularly vicious common Wabian soldier who held her, twisted her head back and grinning, told her that if she did not watch then they would cut off her eyelids.
Sûller was called off elsewhere, to supervise the firing of looted Elven properties, but a quartet of Wabian soldiers and mercenaries that fought under their banner and whose lust for blood and destruction was greater than their lust for plunder, had still not finished with her. Next, they dragged out her husband, F’crccrc, strung him up by his thumbs to a roof beam in their cottage, pulled down his breeches and hacked off his penis, leaving him to bleed to death hanging there whilst the helpless Duryath twisted and screamed in their cruel grips.
However the human soldiers were far from satisfied. Next in their madness they bore out her beautiful younger sister Gl’yy’th, and after ripping her clothes from her they took turns at raping her whilst the helpless, sobbing Duryath looked on. Eventually it all proved too much for the beautiful young elf, whose only crime had ever been one of compassion, and she fainted clean away at the feet of the grinning, drunken soldiers. However, they more or less ignored her, having spent their immediate lusts on her younger sister. Besides, one of their number had discovered a beautiful collection of jewels in an adjoining house, called the ‘Bygyn’ or Starlit Ones, because centuries before Elven hands had lovingly created and shaped them in the image of the glittering stars that sparkled high above in the empty, comet-haunted abyss, and it was said that some of the true essence of star-stuff was imbued in their creation which was why they shimmered and coruscated with their own hidden, inner lights, and needed no pale imitations of lumination to shine in the darkness.
Whilst the human soldiers had left the wreckage of her home to squabble over the Bygyn, Duryath somehow found enough strength to crawl over to the beam beneath which her husband’s body now hung motionless, scarlet still trickling down but slowly now and adding to the ever-widening pool of ichor that puddled beneath his feet. Somehow, in their mad drunken frenzy, the Wabians had missed her Wychnth, or ceremonial knife, which had been kicked under a table and had a keen fresh blade some five inches in length. Begging her now still husband for his forgiveness, Duryath took the knife and plunged the blade into her breast, where it pierced her heart and she gasped and collapsed dying under him, her own blood mingling with his own.
Soon after her younger sister, Gl’yy’th, roused herself from her shocked and violated stupour and slowly crawled over to their bodies, tears rolling down her cheeks in an unchecked torrent and her dark red tresses falling forward like bark-fibre curtains to obscure the expression that was written deep into her lovely pale features. “Oh Duryath… please… wait for me…” she sobbed, checking back the tears as she stroked her beloved elder sister’s flawless cheek. Duryath’s eyes seemed to flicker in recognition, and her rosy red lips moved slightly, but no sound issued forth.
“Hello then, what’s this I see before me…?” grinned a drunken Wabian archer with grimy features and lank, greasy hair which tufted out from beneath his helm as he lurched and reeled into the remains of their house, clutching a burning brand in his hairy, filthy fist with which he had just fired the curtains and furnishings that adorned their doorway. “A little woodland creature that deserves a good prod from my trusty rod…”
Gl’yy’th’s lovely violet eyes were a mix of fear and bewilderment as she beheld the drunken belching human who tottered before her, shrugging off his bow and quiver and tossing his torch aside, before reaching down to unbuckle the crude leather belt that held his soiled, rank-smelling breeches up. Behind him, the greedy orange flames were starting to gather strength and take hold of the cottages’ timbers, providing his ugly, repulsive form with an almost satanic halo or backdrop of vivid flickering colour.
Something snapped inside Gl’yy’th’s brain, in the dark recesses of insanity that lurk way beyond rhyme or reason. Without warning she tore out the Wychnth from the breast of her sister, and, spinning round and reaching up, buried the blade up to the hilt into the boiled leather hauberk of the befuddled Wabian.
“You… bi..t…” he gasped, so full of genuine astonishment that his intended victim was daring to fight back, that he stood stupefied and gaped for several long heartbeats at her, giving her perfect opportunity to yank out the knife, now wet with his own blood, and puncture it deep once more into his chest.
Slowly, as though under the impression of some weird dwoemer, he toppled backwards and hit the floor with a sickening thud. Instantly, Gl’yy’th was upon him, eyes flashing and snarling obscenities in her bloody madness, slashing and hacking with blind frenzy at his face, his form, dowsing her front with the bright red, warm, sticky stuff as she sliced his features to bloody red ribbons, and the light finally faded from his eyes and went out altogether.
Only then did she recover something of normality, and wiping the gore from her eyes and parting back her sodden tresses with the back of her hand, crawled back to her beloved sister. The light had finally gone out from her eyes as well, and they were staring pointedly at the ceiling. But something of the raw horror had gone from her features, although her fuschia-bud-like mouth was partly open, as though in the beginning of an ‘O’ of surprise. “Oh Duryath,” sobbed Gl’yy’th dryly, “you could have waited for me… I won’t be long, I promise… but there is something more I must do, first…”
Then, ignoring the roaring conflagration that was about and above her, and dimly perceiving the flaring fragments of roof that were starting to patter down into the room like a distant fine mist, she slowly straightened her slim, young and supple body, stumbled to the nearby basin and washed her face relatively clean of gore and ichor. Checking her reflection in the mirror above it, but barely recognizing it, she absently waved away a burning fragment of bark-fibre that was wafting and fluttering about her tresses. Only then did she make her way back to the body of the Wabian, and, gathering up his bow and quiver which she methodically slung over her shoulder, purposely made her way towards the merrily blazing front portal. His bow was fairly short and of unusual beech-wood construction, but Gl’yy’th knew what she was doing when it came to handling bows; for many moons she had practiced long and hard with many different types and designs, until she could seek a feathered shaft into a palm-sized target from ninety paces nine times out of ten.
She stopped just outside the front door, almost casually reaching back to draw an arrow from the quiver and checking its’ flight feathers for any signs of damage and impairment. A Wabian soldier was riding past on a looted Elven pony, its’ saddle bags bulging with loot and bounty, some of which was falling out of rents and spilling like seeds onto the trail in its’ wake. Gl’yy’th let him get about ten or twelve paces beyond her, then swiftly and smoothly she notched her arrow, drawing back the string and letting fly with the shaft, burying it perfectly between his shoulder-blades in a sublime, flowing movement. Both the Wabian’s hands flew up in an instinctive reflex action, then he partly toppled out of the saddle, only for an ankle to twist and get caught in the stirrup, and the pony dragged off his lifeless body in it’s frantic gallop to be rid of the bouncing, dragging dead weight.
There were plenty more Wabians around, none of which apparently had noticed her, so engrossed were they in their insane killing, raping and looting spree. Gl’yy’th was just in the process of systematically inspecting and notching another arrow, when a large heavy and blazing log tumbled off the roof and smote her hard on the back of the head, so much so that she tumbled forward senseless and knew no more.