Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 16

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Some branches grow toward light.

Others first reach into shadow.

The work that first led me toward the Cloakwood did not sound like the sort of thing a man remembers years later. It was mining work, or near enough to it. Not swinging a pick in the dark, but the sort of task given to men willing to carry a blade where hired laborers had begun refusing to go. Ore was wanted. Tools had been left behind. A foreman claimed delays. A merchant claimed losses. Each man blamed the other, as men often do when coin is vanishing faster than patience.

The truth, as usual, lay somewhere under mud.

By then, I had taken enough small work around the Gate to know that simple jobs rarely remained simple once the road began. A wolf was not always only a wolf. A missing shipment was not always stolen by bandits. A frightened farmer could be wrong and still have reason to be afraid. So when I heard that men near the Cloakwood had seen shapes among the trees and heard voices where no voice should have been, I did not dismiss it.

I did wonder why they were still sending men there.

Coin answered that, of course. Coin answers many foolish questions.

Leon came with me. I do not remember whether I asked him, or whether he learned of the work and decided I would need better company than a merchant’s complaints. Memory does not keep all its small doors labeled. I remember only that when I left the city by the southern road, he was there before long, walking beside me with his bow across his back and his eyes already watching the verge.

We had not known each other long. Long enough to walk without filling the silence. Long enough that I trusted him not to step on a track before seeing it. Long enough that, when he said the road felt wrong, I did not ask whether he meant the stones or the air.

The Coast Way was busy at first, as it always was near the Gate. Wagons groaned beneath sacks and crates. Drovers cursed animals that had more sense than they did. Pilgrims, peddlers, sellswords, farmers, messengers, and fools all shared the road in varying measure. The farther south we went, the more the road thinned.

That was when I began to understand what folk meant when they called the Cloakwood the nearest forest. It was true enough, but nearness is a poor measure of a place. A forest may be a day’s walk from a city and still belong to older things than stone walls and trade charters.

The Cloakwood did not rise all at once. It gathered.

First there were scattered trees beyond the fields, then thicker copses in the low places where mist clung late into the morning. The road bent between roots and damp hollows. Birdsong changed. The air smelled less of dung and smoke and more of wet leaves, old bark, and earth that had not been turned by a plow in a long while.

I had known forests all my life. That does not mean every forest knows you.

The Cloakwood had its own manner. It did not feel like a place waiting to be crossed, harvested, or named for the comfort of men. It watched from beneath leaf and shadow, and if it let the road enter, I had the sense it did so because the road was too small to matter.

Calling it a camp may be generous. It was a scatter of wagons, canvas, stacked timber, muddy boots, and men trying not to look afraid. The foreman was a broad man with a red face and a voice trained to blame others at a distance. He spoke of delays, losses, cowardice, and a load of ore abandoned near the mine mouth. The digging had already been done, he told us. The trouble came when the men tried to bring it out.

There had been signs before that. Tools gone missing. Laughter between the trees. A mule found torn open. One worker swore he had seen small lights dancing in the brush. Another claimed a woman had watched him from the trees and vanished when he called out.

Leon and I listened. The men were not cowards. I had seen cowards before. These men looked like danger had already stood close enough for them to smell its breath.

The foreman wanted noise, guards, and enough iron to prove civilization had not lost its nerve. Leon and I wanted fewer feet, fewer voices, and no fool swinging at every sound in the brush. In the end, we took two laborers, one mule, and a guard who spent the first half mile explaining how little he feared forests.

He was the first to stop speaking.

The Cloakwood swallowed sound strangely. Moss thickened over fallen logs. Ferns crowded the path. Brambles caught at sleeves and packs. More than once, I saw old marks on trees where men had tried to make a way easier to find, only for bark to swell and time to fold the cuts almost shut.

There were signs of movement all around us. Some ordinary. Deer. Fox. Boar. The quick scratch of smaller things in the leaves. Others less so. Near a pool of dark water, I found scales caught on a broken reed. Lizardfolk, likely, though none showed themselves. On another trunk, half-hidden by moss, someone had cut a mark into the bark and then tried to gouge it away. Not a hunter’s sign. Not a forester’s. Leon saw it too and said nothing.

Once, a flicker of color moved between the trunks, quick as a thought. Pixies, perhaps. I had heard enough tales to know better than to treat small things as harmless things. A little farther on, we passed a tree whose lower branches had been braided with flowers that had no reason to be fresh. No one touched them.

Then, near a narrow clearing, I saw her.

A woman stood where shadow and green met, too still to be one of the laborers and too much a part of the tree beside her to be any woman of the road. Her eyes were on us. Not frightened. Not friendly.

A dryad, I thought, though I did not say it.

The guard reached for his spear. I caught his wrist before he could raise it and shook my head once. The dryad remained a while longer, then turned, or seemed to turn, and was gone into bark and shadow.

The guard did not boast again after that.

We found the abandoned load shortly after, not at a fresh wound in the hillside, but near the mouth of the mine itself. The cave opened beneath a stony rise, half-screened by brush and damp roots, with old cart ruts leading from its dark throat toward the path. Several sacks of ore had been left beside a broken handcart. One had torn open, spilling dark stone across the mud like black teeth. Picks, rope, and a lantern lay nearby, all dropped in haste.

The mule refused to go nearer.

Leon circled the cave mouth while I knelt near the torn sack. Men had run from here. That much was plain. They had not merely walked away after deciding the day was done. One set of prints showed a man falling, scrambling up, and staggering toward the path. Another had lost a boot in the mud and kept running without it.

There were other marks too. Lizardfolk had passed near the water, but not toward the cave. That was worth noting. Something had made the laborers flee, but even the scaled folk had kept their distance from the mine. Pixie mischief might frighten men, but it did not tear a mule open. Dryads might warn and vanish, but this place did not feel like their work.

Then I heard something move within the mine. Not loudly. Not at first. A soft shifting beneath stone. A drag of something heavy in the dark beyond the lantern’s reach. The sort of sound a man feels in his knees before his ears admit to hearing it.

Leon heard it too.

Neither the guard nor the laborers did. They were busy arguing about how quickly sacks could be loaded and whether the mule could be beaten into sense. I raised a hand for silence. One of the laborers stopped. The other cursed. The mule rolled its eyes and pulled back hard enough to nearly break its lead.

Something scraped stone in the dark.

Then it came out of the mine.

I saw only a limb at first, thick and chitin-dark, clawing from the cave mouth as if the stone itself had grown talons. Then another. Then the head, broad and terrible, with mandibles working and eyes that seemed to catch too much of the dim light. I did not know its name then. Later I would hear men speak of umber hulks, things of deep places and hard stone, and I would remember the way that creature came from the mine as if the dark had given birth to a nightmare.

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The thing turned its head, and for a heartbeat I felt my thoughts slip sideways. The world bent strangely. Trees leaned where they should not. Leon seemed farther away than he was. My own hand looked unfamiliar on the grip of my bow.

Then Leon’s arrow struck near the creature’s eye.

That brought me back enough to move.

We could not kill it cleanly, not there, not with panicked men underfoot and the cave mouth close behind it. So we did what rangers often do when courage would only make corpses. We made the creature pay attention to the wrong things. Leon drew it toward the trees. I cut the mule’s lead when it tangled around a root, and the beast bolted back along the path with more wisdom than any of us. When the hulk lunged, I loosed into its mouth, not because I thought the shot would kill it, but because pain can turn even a deep thing’s head.

Something shifted beneath my left boot. I heard it before I felt it, a small sound nearly lost beneath the creature’s charge, and I moved before thought could catch up. The hulk struck a tree instead of me.

The tree cracked like a split bone.

That was enough.

We ran.

There is no shame in running from the wrong fight. The trick is knowing which fights are wrong before they are also final.

The Cloakwood did not make our retreat easy. Roots caught at boots. Branches slapped faces. Behind us, the creature tore through brush and earth with a rage that seemed too large for the path. We did not stop until the sounds behind us faded.

Even then, Leon and I stood listening while the others bent double, gasping. My heart hammered hard enough that I could feel it in my teeth. Mud streaked my sleeves. My hands shook. I would have denied that at the time, but they did.

Leon looked at me, breathing hard.

“That was no wolf,” he said.

I laughed once. Not because it was funny, but because sometimes a man laughs when the world has become unreasonable and he has no better answer ready.

“No,” I said. “No, it was not.”

That is one of the few things from that day I know I remember correctly.

We returned to the camp without ore, without tools, without the mule at first, and without any desire to hear the foreman speak of losses. The mule wandered in not long after us, looking pleased with itself and entirely unashamed. I respected that animal more than I respected several men present.

The foreman raged, of course. Men often shout loudest when they were safest during the danger. He called us careless, then cowardly, then expensive. I told him that if he wanted the ore so badly, he was welcome to go ask the thing in the mine for it.

That did not improve his temper. It did improve mine a little.

In the end, we were paid less than promised. The laborers refused to return to the mine. The guard drank until his hands stopped shaking. Leon and I left before dusk.

We did not speak much on the road back. There are silences after danger that are not empty. A man listens to them to learn whether fear is still following. The Cloakwood remained behind us, darkening as evening settled through its branches. Once, near the edge of the trees, I looked back and thought I saw movement by the old path. Not the hulk. Not lizardfolk. Something smaller, bright for half a breath, gone before I could name it. Pixie light, perhaps. Or only my tired eyes.

I have learned not to dismiss tired eyes too quickly.

That was my first true lesson in the Cloakwood. Not that it was dangerous. Any fool could learn that, and some did not live long enough to benefit from the knowledge. The lesson was that the place did not answer to the needs of men merely because men had drawn lines on parchment or opened tunnels beneath old roots. There were lives there already. Old ones, small ones, hidden ones, hungry ones. Some could be reasoned with. Some could be avoided. Some came from below with claws enough to make argument pointless.

It was on that road back that Leon spoke more of the wild places of the Coast, and of those who watched them. Not much. He was not a man to spill another’s trust into the dirt for the sake of conversation. But he mentioned circles, old duties, and names that moved quietly beneath the louder affairs of cities and lords. Druids. Rangers. Wardens of groves and roads and deep places. Folk who did not always agree with one another, but who understood that the land was not merely something to be used until it broke.

I listened more closely than I let on.

Perhaps he knew that. Leon was good at noticing when men pretended not to care.

The Enclave of the Green Triad was only a name to me then. One more name among many on a road that had begun giving me more names than I knew what to do with. I did not yet know how that name would take root in my life, or that the trials ahead would ask more of me than any merchant’s errand.

At the time, I only knew the Cloakwood had made an impression.

So had Leon.

The Gate was lit by the time we returned, a hard glow against the darkening sky. Inside the walls, the city went on as if the wilds beyond it were only stories carried in by tired men.

Perhaps that is how cities survive. They forget what stands outside them.

I could not.

That night, after I had washed the mud from my hands and found that some of it had settled beneath the nails too deep to easily remove, I thought of the mine mouth under the stony rise. I thought of the dryad watching from shadow, the scales near dark water, the flowers braided into branches no laborer had touched, and the thing that came from beneath the earth when men dug too greedily or too carelessly.

I had thought roots only held a thing in place.

The Cloakwood taught me otherwise.

Roots also remember where the wounds are.
Last edited by Lambe on Tue May 19, 2026 10:05 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

Unread post by Lambe »

2 - 17

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Some branches break from winter's weight.

I had seen that happen to trees, and later learned it was true of men as well. Cold does not need to kill all at once. It can lean on a thing slowly, day after day, until what seemed strong enough in autumn splits beneath a burden it had carried too long. Not every branch survives to see leaves again. Not every man reaches the thaw.

Winter came quietly to the Coast, or perhaps it only seemed quiet because I had been expecting something harsher. I had known winters that ruled the land outright, winters that closed roads, bit through wool, froze breath to beard, and made every errand feel like a bargain with death. The winter near the Gate was not so absolute, but it had its own cruelty. Rain became sleet when it pleased. Mud hardened at dawn and softened by midday. The wind off the river found every seam in a cloak, and the roads grew meaner without ever becoming impassable.

Work did not stop. It only changed its shape. Farmers still needed help, though their worries turned from wolves to stores, fences, sick animals, and tracks found too close to barns after dark. Caravans still moved when coin was worth the risk. Men still vanished. Bandits still ate. Merchants still complained, because no season has yet been invented that can silence complaint.

I had turned twenty-six by then, though I do not remember marking the day with anything more than cold hands and a quiet meal. Birthdays mean less on the road. They do not stop rain, mend boots, or answer old questions. Still, the year had turned with me in it, and I was no closer to the answers that had brought me north.

So I walked.

Not as far as in warmer months, perhaps, and not always for as much pay as the work deserved. But I walked the roads south and east of the city, took watch where watch was needed, followed tracks when tracks remained, and learned more of the Coast by freezing in its ditches than I had learned from any tavern tale. I was not helpless in the wilds. A man raised as I had been could find food, shelter, and dry wood when the land allowed it and the law did not forbid it. But surviving is not the same as living settled. Arrows, oil, salves, repairs, lodging, and goodwill all cost something sooner or later.

A man comes to know a road differently when he has slipped on it, bled on it, slept near it, and cursed it under his breath while rain works down the back of his neck.

I was not alone in those years, though memory may make it seem so.

The Coast was full of adventurers then, as it is now: sellswords, priests, hedge-mages, scouts, pilgrims, hunters, thieves pretending to be hunters, and young fools with blades too clean for the roads they meant to walk. Some used the word proudly. Some wore it because no better word would take them. I suppose I did too, depending on the work and the company. I shared fires with some, fought beside others, drank with a few, and forgot more names than I care to admit. That is not cruelty. A life lived on roads gathers more faces than any honest memory can keep.

Some names remained because the road gave them weight.

Leon Falconclaw was one.

Amalric was another.

Leon crossed my path often that winter, though less often than before. At first I thought that was only the way of such friendships. Men who live by roads cannot expect one another to remain conveniently placed. One day we would share a fire outside the walls or take the same bit of work from a merchant who hoped to pay one wage for two bows. The next, he would be gone west, or south, or into some stretch of wood where I had no business following.

Only later did I understand that his road had begun bending toward others.

He spoke of them carefully at first. Not secretively, exactly. Leon was not a man who made performance out of silence. But neither was he careless with names that were not his alone to spend. There were rangers and druids along the Coast, he said. Folk who kept watch over wild places, old paths, groves, and borders men crossed without understanding. Some called them the Green Triad.


The name sounded strange to me then. Not foolish. Not grand. Just...strange.

I had known woodsmen, hunters, and rangers who served lords, temples, roads, or only their own boots. I had known druids by reputation and by experience, some kind, some difficult, most less interested in settled men than settled men would have liked. But a circle of rangers and druids together, watching the Coast in their own fashion, felt half familiar and half out of reach.

Leon seemed suited to them.

That was plain even before I knew the details. He had the patience for it. The attention. The habit of asking what a place needed before asking what could be taken from it. If there were trials to be passed, and there were, I had little doubt he would pass them. Men like Leon did not always draw attention quickly, but they endured inspection well. Stone notices rain eventually.

I wished him well when he spoke of it. I meant it.

I also kept my distance.

That may sound foolish now. Perhaps it was. More than one road in my life would have been easier had I known when to step onto it without first circling like a wary dog. But I had come to the Gate for reasons of my own, and those reasons had not vanished because winter had put frost on the grass.

I still listened for word of ships.

Less openly than before, perhaps. Grief learns to lower its voice when it realizes the world will not quiet itself to hear. But I listened. In taverns. At the docks. From sailors, merchants, guards, and men who claimed to know every captain between Luskan and Calimport after two cups of ale. I asked after ships lost northward, storms, wreckage, survivors, names remembered poorly, names remembered not at all.

The Silver Tern remained a ghost with no grave.

So when Leon, or perhaps another through him, suggested that I might have a place among the Green Triad if I chose to seek it, I did not answer as I might have in another life. I did not say no. That would be too clean a lie. The name had begun to take root in me, though I would not have called it that then. I only said I had matters still unfinished.

That was true. It was also a shield. Winter is good for such things. It lets a man hide delay beneath weather, silence beneath snow, and fear beneath patience.

I first crossed paths with Amalric during that same season, on a road made worse by sleet and wagons.

There had been trouble near one of the southern approaches, not enough for songs and not so little that men could ignore it. A caravan had stalled where the road narrowed between low trees and a ditch half-filled with frozen water. One wagon wheel had broken. Two guards were arguing with the driver. A merchant was shouting about lost time, as if shouting could mend spokes. A sick laborer sat wrapped in a blanket near the rear wagon, shivering hard enough that even the horses seemed uneasy.

Amalric stood apart from the noise, shield ready and helm turned toward the trees.

He was a half-orc, broad of shoulder and hard of face, with the sort of stillness that made men lower their voices before they knew why. He served Helm, and looked as if duty had been hammered into him rather than taught. There was nothing careless in the way he stood, spoke, or watched the road. He did not shout. That was the first thing I noticed.

The merchant shouted. The guards barked at one another. The driver cursed the wheel, the ditch, the weather, and likely every god he could name. Amalric only watched the dark places beyond the wagons. If he had thoughts about the noise behind him, he kept them chained.

I had been hired for the same stretch of road, though not by the same man. That happened often enough. Coin hires a crowd when fear grows large, then complains when the crowd must be paid. I came upon the stalled caravan expecting bandits, wolves, or another argument pretending to be danger.

I found a lesson instead.

The merchant wanted to leave the broken wagon and the sick laborer behind until help could be fetched. He said the man would slow them. He said the goods were worth more than the wagon. He said the road would be safer if they moved quickly.

Amalric listened until the man had spent himself.

Then he told him no.

Not angrily. Not loudly. Only no, spoken with the weight of a closed gate. The wagon would not be abandoned while it could be repaired. The laborer would not be left in a ditch to freeze. The guards would stop arguing and hold watch. The merchant would either help or be silent. Helm, he said, did not turn His eye from duty because the weather had made duty inconvenient.

I remember the merchant’s face reddening and Amalric not caring one bit. It would be easy to make him sound cruel. He was not. Hard, yes. Severe. Unbending in ways that could make a man feel judged simply by standing near him. But there was a kind of mercy in that hardness, though not a gentle one. The sick laborer lived because Amalric refused to measure his worth against crates and profit. The guards remembered their work because he made cowardice more shameful than fear. The caravan moved again because one man treated duty as something heavier than complaint.

I respected him before I liked him.

I am not certain I ever truly learned to do the second.

Some men are like that. They stand where they believe they must stand, and whether you warm to them matters less than whether the line holds.

I helped mend the wheel because my hands were useful and because standing idle beside Amalric felt somehow worse than work. Another traveler found dry cloth for the sick man. Leon was not there that day, though I remember thinking he would have read the whole thing differently than Amalric did. Leon would have watched the trees first, the people second, and the broken wheel as part of the land’s inconvenience. Amalric watched duty itself, as if it were a road that must not be allowed to bend.

Both ways had strength and neither felt wholly mine.

That was the truth winter kept pressing into me. The Coast was full of paths a man could take if he had the courage, or the stubbornness, to choose. Leon’s road bent toward the Green Triad, toward grove and trail and the old patience of growing things. Amalric’s stood like a wall beneath Helm’s unblinking eye. Others followed coin, gods, vengeance, hunger, curiosity, pride, or nothing more than the next fire.

And I?

I was still pretending I had not begun to choose.

The signs were there, if I had wished to read them plainly. I listened more closely when Leon spoke of the wild places and those who watched them. I remembered the doe near the Coast Way, the Cloakwood’s shadows, the dryad’s eyes, the mark half-gouged from the tree, and the sound beneath my boot that I had heard before I felt it. I remembered the umber hulk’s blow splitting the place where I had stood a breath before.

A man can gather many such memories and still call them nothing. I was very good at calling things nothing in those days.

But winter has patience. It does not demand that branches show themselves before their time. It covers the ground and waits while roots keep working where no eye can see them.

By the time the worst of the cold began to loosen, Leon’s place among the Green Triad seemed all but certain to me. Perhaps it was already certain. Memory is poor at marking the exact day a thing becomes true. I remember only that he carried himself with the quiet burden of someone being measured, and then with the quieter steadiness of someone who had not been found wanting.

I was glad for him.

More than that, I was proud, though I do not think I told him so in those words. Men like us often speak around such things. We say the trail was well followed, or the shot well placed, or that we expected no less. We trust the meaning to find its way through.

Leon had found a branch worth following.

Mine was still hidden beneath frost.

For a time, that had to be enough.
Last edited by Lambe on Wed May 20, 2026 12:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

Unread post by Lambe »

2 - 18

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Blood spilled on soil does not always nourish what grows from it.

Any farmer knows blood can feed the earth in its way. Any hunter knows the wild wastes little. A clean kill returns more than meat to the world. Foxes eat. Crows gather. Beetles come. Roots drink what is left when time and rain have finished their work. There is no evil in that. The land has always known how to take death and turn it back toward life.

But there is a difference between blood returned to the land and blood offered to cruelty.

I began to understand that as winter loosened its grip and the Coast Way softened under thawing mud. The roads grew busier again, though not lighter. Wagons moved south with more guards than they had carried before. Priests rode or walked in small groups, their cloaks pulled close against rain, their eyes turned toward the old temple lands. Adventurers gathered where coin and danger gathered, as they always do, and even men who laughed at rumors did not laugh long when Bhaal’s name entered the telling. Missing travelers, blood found where no beast had fed, marks cut into bark and stone, animals gone quiet in places that should have been loud with spring. Such things reached us first as whispers, then as warnings, then as work.

I was one more bow along that road. No more than that.

Greater names moved in those days, though I did not know all of them then and would not presume to set myself among them now. I took the work that came to men like me: watch the outer paths, walk with frightened travelers, follow tracks when someone had vanished, stand near a campfire with other hired blades and pretend the dark beyond it was only dark. The trouble lay south of the Gate, along the Coast Way, near the old place where the Bhaalist temple stood in those years. Men now speak of that stretch differently, and places change their faces with time, but I remember the road as it was to me then: long, wet, and increasingly crowded with fear.

Shrines marked parts of that road, as shrines often do. North of Wyrm’s Crossing, near the farms, there was a small place kept for Chauntea. It was not grand. Such places rarely are. A few stones, simple offerings from field hands, a weathered sign of the Grain Goddess, and the smell of worked earth when the fields were open. I noticed it more than I might have because my mother had always kept Chauntea’s name close. By then she was growing older, and Lydia’s letters had begun to carry the careful wording families use when they do not wish to frighten a man who is far away. Mother needed more rest. Mother had taken a chill badly. Mother was stubborn as ever.

I did not like being far from that.

A man can cross many miles and still feel the pull of a room he is not in. I could walk the roads, mend a fence, track a bandit, loose an arrow, or sleep under a hedge if I had to, but none of that helped Mother sit easier by the hearth. None of it made Lydia’s burden lighter, except perhaps the little coin I could send when there was coin enough to spare. So I noticed Chauntea’s shrine when I passed it. I noticed the offerings left for health, harvest, birth, and bread. I noticed the way folk asked the earth for life while the road south carried stories of blood.

Farther down the Coast Way, off the road and not so near as city folk use the word, there was a shrine to Silvanus. Miles matter when a man walks them, especially when the mud is deep and the sky has not yet decided whether it means to rain. That shrine stood between the Gate and the old temple lands, a reminder that the wild had its own law. Old laws. I respected Silvanus, though I had never belonged to His keeping. A woodsman learns early that the wild is not gentle merely because it is alive.

Farther south still, beyond the old temple lands and the road that bent west toward Candlekeep, there was a shrine to Mielikki along the way toward Beregost. I knew of it, though I had not yet made it a place of my own. The Forest Queen was not a stranger’s name to me. She had been my father’s patron in his ranger days, and Kolandir had spoken of that part of him when he taught me what my father had once been. Yet knowing a name is not the same as knowing when it has begun to follow your steps.

Looking back, it seems strange that blood and fear stood on the road between me and a shrine I would one day know well.

The hawk was found between such thoughts, though I did not know it then.

I had left the main road after finding signs that something had been dragged through the wet grass near a shallow ditch. Not a man, I thought. Too light for that. Too much disturbance for a fox or hare. There was blood on a stone, and more on a thorn stem where the branch had been bent and released. The birds had gone quiet nearby. That was what troubled me most. Woods and fields are rarely silent unless something has taught them to be.

I followed the signs into a patch of low trees and bramble where the ground dipped away from the road. The place smelled of wet leaves, old smoke, and something sharper beneath it. I found scraps of cord first. Then feathers. Brown and red, muddied and torn. A few steps more brought me to the hawk itself.

It lay beneath a thornbush with one wing caught open, proud even in pain. A red-tailed thing, though mud and blood had darkened the feathers. One leg was tangled in cord, and something barbed had torn the flesh beneath the wing. It should have torn at me when I reached for it. Instead it only watched, bright-eyed and furious, too weak to do more than hate me properly.

I remember thinking that was fair.

I do not know what purpose the men who hurt it imagined they served. I have no wish to know. Some evils grow larger when men give too much attention to their reasoning. It was enough that the bird had been left there, bound and bleeding, while the road beyond carried men toward a temple where blood was becoming a language.

So I cut the cord.

That was the easy part. The harder part was keeping the hawk from breaking itself further while I worked. A wounded wild thing does not understand help. It understands hands, and hands have brought enough grief into the world that I do not blame any creature for distrusting them. I wrapped part of my cloak around its body to still the wing, kept my fingers clear of the beak as best I could, and pressed cloth beneath the wound where the barb had torn deepest. I had mended hunting birds before, though never one so badly hurt. Hollow bones make a man careful. Blood makes him quick. Fear makes him clumsy if he lets it.

The wound was ugly. Too much blood. Too much heat in the flesh. I told myself pressure would do what pressure could, and that if the hawk died, at least it would not die tied to a thornbush for someone’s amusement, warning, or worship.

I held my hand there and waited.

There are moments when a man knows he is not enough. I had known them before. I knew them beside my father’s body, though I was young then and understood less than I felt. I knew them in Waterdeep when letters failed to bring better news. I knew them at the docks when the Silver Tern did not come. Knowing you are not enough becomes a familiar ache after a while. Familiar does not mean easier.

The hawk shuddered beneath my hand.

Then the bleeding slowed.

Not stopped. Not healed whole as in some temple tale told to impress children. It slowed. The heat beneath my palm changed, or I thought it did. The bird’s breath, which had been quick and failing, found a steadier rhythm. One talon tightened in the cloth of my sleeve with sudden strength, and the bright anger in its eye sharpened as if the world had returned enough for it to hate me properly again.

I laughed under my breath then. Quietly. Foolishly, perhaps.

A living hawk’s hatred is better than a dead one’s peace.

I did what men do when the world offers them something they are not ready to name. I called it good pressure. I called it luck. I called it the bird’s own stubborn life fighting back. All of those things may have been true. None felt like the whole truth.

There was no light around my hand. No voice in the trees. No mark burned into my palm. Nothing that would have satisfied a priest, a skeptic, or a younger version of myself looking for proof enough to be undeniable. Only blood slowing where I had expected more blood, breath steadying where I had expected it to fail, and a wounded thing deciding, against sense, that it would not die in the mud that day.

I told myself I had done good fieldwork. Good cleaning. Good pressure. Good binding. There was truth in that, enough truth for a stubborn man to hide behind. Yet I sat there longer than needed, with the hawk bundled against my chest and the sound of road traffic beyond the trees, and I knew my hands had not acted alone.

Not fully.

That frightened me more than the temple, in its own way. Evil is easier to understand when it comes with blood and knives and men whispering murder in ruined places. Grace is harder. Grace asks what you have been given, and why, and what will be expected when the giving is done.

I thought of my father then. Not as I had last seen him, older and worn by the shape life had taken, but as Kolandir had described him: Brego in his ranger days, moving under green shade with Mielikki’s name carried not as ornament, but as duty. I wondered whether he had felt such things. Whether he had known when a wound closed beneath his hand that it was not only skill. Whether he had been afraid the first time. I never asked him. By then there were many questions I could only carry.

I bound the hawk as best I could and carried it back toward the road wrapped against my chest, careful of its wing and more careful of its pride. More than once it shifted as if considering whether I deserved to keep all my fingers. By then the Coast Way had grown louder. Men were passing south in small numbers and larger ones. Hard men, hardier folk, and the curious who had not yet learned that curiosity can be a short road to a shallow grave. I saw packs stacked near wagons, spears being checked, arrows counted, prayers muttered, bargains struck.

The world was still turning around me. It had not stopped for one wounded bird.

That is the way of things. A man may kneel in the grass with blood on his hands while, a hundred paces away, another man argues over pay, another sharpens a blade, another asks a god for courage he is not sure he possesses. The road carries all of it. Mercy, fear, greed, duty, hunger, faith. Sometimes in the same cart.

I found a quiet place near a stand of brush and set the hawk down where it could see the sky. It did not fly. Not then. I had not expected it to. But it stood, unsteady and furious, and that was more than I had hoped for when I first saw it beneath the thorns. After a time, it folded its injured wing closer to its body and looked toward the south, where men were beginning to gather around the old wound in the land.

I looked that way too.

The trouble near the temple was no longer only rumor by then. Barricades were being discussed, camps were forming, and those who had thought the matter would pass like bad weather were beginning to understand that some storms need more than patience. I would find myself near those outer lines soon enough, one bow among many, watching the dark and wondering how much blood men could pour into the ground before the ground itself seemed sick from it.

The hawk lived.

That should have been enough for the day.

But I had lived long enough to know that not all wounds close because blood stops flowing. Some fester under the skin. Some fester under roads, under temples, under old stones men should have left buried. The bird had been one wound I could hold beneath my hand.

South of us, another was opening.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 19

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Some wounds are too wide for one hand.

I remember my shoulder against a ballista wheel, boots sliding in churned mud while men shouted for the frame to be turned. The thing was heavier than sense and less willing than a mule. Rain had soaked the ropes, the ground had become a brown mess beneath us, and every man pushing swore the weapon was choosing to fight us harder than whatever waited beyond the barricade.

Perhaps it was.

That is how I remember the siege first. Not banners. Not speeches. Not the names that would later be carved or repeated with proper reverence. Mud, timber, wet rope, a shouted order half-lost in rain, and my hands on a weapon too large for one man to move.

Others have written better accounts of that siege than I could. They knew the names, the commands, and the shape of the battle from above. I knew it from the mud.

By then, the trouble near the old temple was no longer rumor. The road south had carried fear for some time before it carried armies, though armies may be too fine a word for what gathered there at first. There were soldiers, yes, and guardsmen, and men with proper oaths laid upon them. There were clerics and healers, riders, messengers, adventurers, sell-swords, laborers, teamsters, camp followers, and more hired blades than any one quartermaster could have been happy to count. Some came for coin. Some for faith. Some for duty. Some because evil had shown its face close enough to their homes that staying away had begun to feel like cowardice.

I was one more bow among them.

That should be said plainly. I did not stand at the heart of the matter. I did not sit in a command tent. I did not know every name that passed from officer to priest to messenger and back again. Names reached men like me the way rain reached us through canvas: broken, late, and never quite enough to make us dry. I heard some of them, of course. Jonas. Merielle. Maximus. Duke Eltan himself, or so men said when word moved through camp that he had come to see the lines. There were others too, and I will not pretend memory kept them all in proper order.

What I remember better are the sounds.

The thud of mallets driving stakes into wet ground. The creak of carts carrying timber and stones. The curse of a man whose boot had been claimed by mud. Horses stamping and blowing steam into the cold air. Clerics murmuring over the wounded. Bowstrings checked by firelight. Someone laughing too loudly because the alternative was listening to his own fear. Somewhere farther in, beyond where I had been placed, the old temple waited like a bad thought no one could quite put from mind.

Most days were not battle.

That is another thing songs forget. Most days were waiting, taking orders, moving timber, carrying bolts, keeping fires low, and standing where someone with more knowledge than you had decided a man with a bow might be useful. Some days, nothing came out of the dark. Those were not easy days. Quiet can wear on a camp worse than noise, because every man begins filling it with what he fears will come next.

When battle did come, it did not always announce itself as battle. Sometimes it was shouting near one of the outer paths, and men running with shields before anyone knew what had been seen. Sometimes it was arrows from the dark, or a shape moving wrong between broken stones and trees. We fought cultists, certainly. Men and women with murder dressed up as faith. But not every shape that moved beyond the barricades was so easily named, at least not by me. Some things came at us through smoke and rain, too quick or too twisted for a tired bowman at the outer line to remember cleanly. I will not give names to creatures I could not name then.

I remember one evening when part of the barricade gave under a strike I never properly saw. It may have been stone. It may have been spellwork. It may only have been timber poorly set in ground too soft to hold it. Men shouted all the same. A gap is a gap, whether made by a demon, a hammer, or bad carpentry. Those nearest were ordered to brace it, and so we did. Not because any of us had come to the Coast dreaming of holding wet planks upright while unseen things screamed beyond torchlight, but because the order had been given and the gap was there.

That was soldiering, or near enough to it.

I had known hardship before. I had known fear. I had known the discipline of the hunt and the patience of tracking. Soldiering was different. It took a man’s fear and gave it a place to stand. It told him where to put his feet, when to move, when to wait, and what part of the line was his to hold even if he did not understand the rest. There was honor in that. More than once during those days, I saw men do small, necessary things with no promise of songs, and I respected them for it.

But I did not love it.

Perhaps love is too soft a word for soldiering. Men do not need to love a thing to be good at it. Still, I knew the difference between work that tired me and work that hollowed me. The barricades taught me that difference. A ranger may hold a line when he must, and I did, but I was not made to live by lines drawn for me by other men.

The ballista was part of that lesson.

It had been set to command one approach, or so I was told, but the ground shifted and the need shifted with it. That is war, I think. Men spend hours placing a thing just so, and then danger comes from a direction no one has had the courtesy to prepare for. Orders came down to turn it before the next push from the dark. By then the rain had made everything heavier. The ropes were slick. The wheels sank. The frame groaned as if it had opinions. We put shoulders to it anyway.

I do not know how many of us pushed. Six, perhaps. Eight. More came and went as orders dragged them elsewhere. I remember one man slipping and vanishing almost to the knee in mud. I remember another laughing at him until the wheel lurched and nearly took his fingers. I remember my own breath burning in my chest, though the air was cold. Somewhere beyond the barricade, men were shouting. Somewhere behind us, someone called for more bolts. I remember thinking, absurdly, that the wolves along the Coast Way had been easier to reason with.

The ballista turned at last.

Not gracefully. Not quickly. But enough.

A great weapon is a strange thing to stand beside when it finally does what men built it to do. There is a pause before release, a held breath shared by wood, rope, iron, and every fool near enough to feel his bones listen. Then the arm snapped forward, the bolt vanished into rain and smoke, and whatever it struck beyond the line made a sound I have never cared to remember clearly.

Men cheered, briefly, then bent back to the work before them.

That was how the days passed at the outer camp. Mud, orders, repairs, watch, sleep taken badly and in pieces, food eaten because the body demanded it and not because anyone had made it worth tasting. The field hospital filled and emptied and filled again. I thought of the hawk more than once when the wounded were carried back. One bird, one wound, one trembling life beneath my hand. That had been something I could hold. This was not. Here, the whole road seemed to bleed, and no single hand could press hard enough to slow it.

I saw brave men in those days. I saw fools too, and sometimes the only difference was whether the gods had allowed them to survive long enough for someone to call the act courage. I saw clerics work until their voices roughened from prayer. I saw hired blades share water with guards they had mocked the day before. I saw men who had come for coin stand firm when coin had become a poor reason to remain. I saw others break. Winter had not been finished with us, it seemed. Some branches had carried its weight into the thaw and split when the first hard wind struck.

I do not write that to judge them.

Fear is a heavier thing than men admit when they are warm, fed, and far from the line. My own fear did not leave me. I only learned where to put it. In my hands when I checked my bowstring. In my feet when I stood watch. In my shoulder when the ballista wheel needed moving. In my mouth when I kept from saying what would help no one. Perhaps that was the useful part of soldiering: it gave fear work to do.

For a few days, that was enough.

I cannot tell you the siege as those nearer the heart of it could. I did not see the final breach clearly, if breach is even the proper word for the end I heard about afterward. I did not stand where the great threat was met. I did not watch the last blow fall, nor hear whatever prayers or curses were spoken in the place where the old evil had rooted itself. While the greater names moved toward the heart of the temple, men like me remained in the encampments and along the outer lines, hands near bowstrings, eyes on the dark, waiting for the order that meant hold, run, or die.

In the end, the order was none of those.

We were told to pack.

It came strangely, as such things often do. Not with trumpets, at least not where I stood. Not with some grand cry that rolled through every tent and barricade at once. A man came through the mud with word that the danger had passed, or been broken, or been driven back beyond our need to stand there. Men asked questions he could not answer. Others laughed because they were too tired not to. Some sat down where they stood. Some looked toward the temple as if expecting the dark to disagree.

I remember feeling less triumph than emptiness.

That may sound ungrateful. It was not. I was glad to live. Glad the line had held. Glad the old place had been answered by those strong enough, faithful enough, or fated enough to answer it. But a man who spends days braced for death does not always know what to do when told he may lower his hands.

So we packed the ropes. We gathered what bolts could be found. We pulled stakes where they would come free and left others for stronger arms or later need. We counted tools, wagons, living men, and the dead whose names someone near them still remembered. The field hospital did not vanish because the siege was lifted. Wounds do not obey announcements.

I walked the edge of the camp once before leaving.

The ground was ruined. Mud churned with ash, blood, straw, broken wood, and the prints of hundreds of passing feet. Places where fires had burned were black circles in the wet. A torn strip of cloth hung from a stake and moved a little in the wind. Beyond the outer line, the road south waited, quieter than it had any right to be.

I thought then of the paths that had opened before me since coming to the Gate. There had been the road of coin and small work, useful enough but rootless if followed alone. There had been Leon’s road, bending toward the Green Triad and the patient keeping of wild places. There had been Amalric’s road, hard and straight beneath Helm’s watchful eye. At the siege I saw another: the road of soldiering, of orders and lines and standing where placed because the line needed a man there.

I could walk that road. I had proved as much, if only for a handful of muddy days.

But I did not want it.

That was worth knowing.

A man does not only learn himself by what calls to him. Sometimes he learns by what does not. The siege taught me that I could stand in a line, but it did not make me belong to one. My place, if I had one, was still somewhere between road and root, between the wild that watched and the folk who needed watching over.

I did not know yet how near that place had come.

When I left the camp, I carried little worth naming. A few coins. A sore shoulder. Mud that seemed determined to remain part of me. The smell of smoke in my cloak. The memory of wet ropes under my hands, wounded men under canvas, and a ballista wheel that did not care how badly we needed it to move.

The old wound south of us had been closed by others.

I had only helped hold the ground around it.

Some days, that is all a man can claim.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 20

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Some things burn so others may live.

A woodsman learns to fear fire first. Loose flame in dry grass or pine can run faster than a man, and no creature with breath in it thanks the fool who lets it loose carelessly. Yet fire has its place. Old brush burns. Rot clears. Ash feeds the soil. Some seeds wait for fire before they wake. A wound may be cauterized when no gentler healing will close it.

I thought of that in the months after the siege, as summer began loosening its hold and the first hints of autumn touched the road south. The old temple lands had been a wound in the Coast. I would not have spoken of it so cleanly then, but that is how I remember it now. Whatever was done there by greater hands than mine, something had been closed. Not healed whole. Wounds rarely are. But closed enough that the road began to breathe again.

Wagons came through more often. Farmers looked farther from their doors. Pilgrims, merchants, and adventurers tested the road with caution, as men do when told the ice will hold. Grass grew through churned mud near old camps. Rain softened ash. Birds returned to trees that had stood silent too long. Men still spoke of the siege, of course, but they spoke of it as something behind them rather than something waiting at their throats.

That alone changed the road.

It changed me as well, though I did not notice it all at once. I ranged farther in those days than I had before. Past the old temple lands, toward the road that bent west for Candlekeep, and beyond it toward rougher ground where Lion’s Way met cliff, shore, and salt wind. Work carried me there, as work often did. A missing pack. A merchant’s lost strongbox. Tracks where no honest traveler should have left them. Beetles large enough to make a man wonder what the Coast fed its insects and why it had not thought better of doing so.

I had seen such beetles before by then. They were not the worst things the Coast could offer, but danger does not need to be grand to kill the unwary. Men later laugh at such creatures when they have grown stronger. That is foolishness. Small dangers teach a man whether he will live long enough to meet greater ones.

There was an old circle of stones off the road in those parts, north of the way toward Candlekeep and west of the Coast Way that led back toward the old temple lands. I did not know its history then. Not properly. I only knew that the place felt older than the road and less abandoned than it looked. Grass grew high around the stones. Birds settled there and then lifted away all at once for no reason I could see. More than once, when passing at a distance, I felt the urge to slow my steps, though I could not have said whether out of respect or caution.

Perhaps there is less difference between the two than young men think.

The missing child had last been seen not far from there.

That was the word given to me, though as always, the telling changed depending on who spoke. Young enough to be called child by all, and old enough to have been trusted with a small errand. I did not know at first whether I was seeking a boy or a girl. Fear rarely gives its reports in orderly fashion. One voice said one thing, another said another, and in the confusion all that mattered was that a child had vanished. The family had been traveling with others, keeping to the road because the road was said to be safer again. Then beetles came up from the grass near a low stretch where the ground fell away toward the west. There was panic, shouting, scattered packs, and the sort of confusion that leaves every witness certain of a different truth.

By the time the beetles were driven off, the girl was gone.

I learned that much after the first panic had spent itself. Her mother said it plainly enough when she caught my sleeve and tried to describe what her daughter had been wearing, though half her words came out broken by fear. A small cloak. Dark hair. A strip of blue cloth at the wrist, or perhaps green. I remember the mother’s hands more clearly than the colors, because they would not stop moving. Pointing west, then south, then clutching at one another as if she could hold herself together by force.

Some thought the girl had run back toward the road. Others thought south. One man insisted he had seen a small figure scrambling toward the cliffs, though he had been busy bleeding from the leg at the time and did not claim certainty. I was hired because I had eyes for tracks and fewer objections than good sense might recommend.

I found the trail near a patch of torn grass.

Small feet, running hard. One print deep where she had slipped. A smear of mud on stone. A piece of cloth caught on thorn, not torn by blade but by haste. Beetle tracks marked the ground nearby in little gouges and scrapes, more than I liked. Fear had done as much work as the beetles. Fear often does.

The trail led west.

The road noise thinned behind me as I followed it. Grass gave way to rougher scrub, then to stone and wind-bent growth that smelled of salt. Gulls cried somewhere below the cliffs. The sea was not yet in sight, but I could hear it breathing against rock. The girl had chosen the way any frightened creature might choose it: away from the thing immediately behind, without knowing what waited ahead.

I found signs of beetles again near a broken slope. Not many. Enough to know they had followed for a time. One lay on its back in the weeds, legs curled, its shell cracked by stone or panic. Another had left a dark smear where something larger had crushed it.

That gave me pause.

By then the light had begun to lower. Not sunset yet, but the hour when shadows stretch and every hollow begins to look like a mouth. The girl’s tracks had become less frantic, then vanished across stone. A few pebbles had been knocked loose near a narrow path dropping toward the shore. Below, the cliffs broke into a rough strand of wet rock, driftwood, tide pools, and cave mouths where the sea had worried at the land for longer than any man had been naming roads. To the west, the Sea of Swords rolled gray beneath the wind. To the east, the cliff face rose behind me, broken by scrub, roots, and the narrow path I would have to trust. Farther south, where the coast shouldered out into the water, Candlekeep stood atop its cliff-bound peninsula, distant but clear in the salt air.

The sea had taken too much from me already. I thought of Flora then, as I often did near salt wind and open water, but only for a breath. Grief had no right to slow my feet while a child’s tracks still led downward.

I did not like it.

That did not matter.

I went down.

There are paths that are not paths until need makes them so. I slid more than climbed in places, one hand on stone, the other keeping my bow from catching where it should not. Twice I found marks small enough to be a child’s fingers in the damp clay. Once I found a print clear as speech near a patch of sand above the tide line. The girl was alive when she reached the shore. That was something.

Not enough.

The cave was not large from the outside. A dark split beneath an overhang, half-hidden by weed, rock, and a curtain of hanging roots from the slope above. A frightened child might see it and think shelter. Dry stone. A place to hide from beetles, wind, and whatever else had turned the day into terror.

A ranger sees other things.

The marks near the entrance were not all small. Something heavy had passed there often enough to smooth the mud and scrape stone. There were bones near the weeds, some old, some not as old as I would have liked. The smell came next: wet hide, old meat, rot, and the thick sour stink of a thing that had made a home where no clean beast would choose to sleep.

I nocked an arrow before I entered.

The cave swallowed light quickly. The sound of the sea followed me in, softer there, as if even the waves disliked coming too close. I heard water dripping from stone. My own breath. A small scrape farther inside.

Then a whisper.

I almost missed it.

The girl was wedged behind a fall of rock near the back wall, knees drawn tight, one hand pressed hard over her own mouth. Wide eyes found me in the dimness. I lifted one finger to my lips and hoped fear had not taken all sense from her. To her credit, she stayed still.

Then something moved between us.

At first, I thought it part of the cave wall shifting, some trick of poor light and fear. Then it unfolded. Long arms. Bent back. Skin the color of old moss and grave water. A head too large and low, with a mouth that seemed made for hunger before speech had ever been invented. It turned toward me with slow interest, and the smell of it filled the cave.

Troll.

I knew the word by then. I knew enough stories to understand what stood before me. Knowing a thing is not the same as being ready for it.

My first arrow struck deep.

The troll roared and came forward.

Some fights return as a clean series of choices. This one returns as motion: cave wall near my shoulder, claws striking stone, chips cutting my face, the girl’s breath catching behind the rocks, my bow becoming useless in the close dark. My hand found my sword because there was no room left for distance.

I cut it. More than once.

The blade opened flesh that closed too quickly. Black blood, if blood is the word, ran down its side and then seemed to lose interest in leaving. I drove the sword into its belly and wrenched free. It struck me hard enough to send me against the wall, and for a moment the cave went white at the edges. I tasted blood and salt.

Still, the troll fell.

Not dead. I know that now, and perhaps some part of me knew it then. But it fell hard, one knee buckling, then the rest of it crashing to the stone with a sound that shook water from the ceiling. I staggered back, sword in hand, breath tearing in and out of me, and saw the girl staring from behind the rocks with the terrible hope of someone who thinks the worst has passed.

Then the troll moved.

Its fingers twitched first.

The wound in its belly drew itself together like a mouth closing. The gash along its neck darkened, narrowed, and became less than it had been. It breathed. Then it pushed one hand beneath itself and began to rise.

Steel had opened it.

Steel had not ended it.

There are moments when understanding comes too late to be useful and arrives anyway. Trolls feared fire. Men had told that tale often enough. Fire or acid, depending on who was speaking and how much ale had helped them remember. I had neither in hand. My torch had been dropped outside when I climbed down the rocks, and even if I had carried one, the damp cave air might have made a poor friend of it. I had a sword, a bruised body, and a child behind me who had no room left to flee.

The troll rose.

I placed myself between it and the girl because there was nowhere else to stand.

I remember the weight of the sword in my hand then. Not the balance of it, not the grip, but the uselessness of it. Steel had done all steel could do, and the thing was still coming. I remember the girl behind me trying not to sob. I remember the stink of the cave, the scrape of claws, the dark closing around the edges of the dying light.

I remember thinking, with a calm that did not belong in that cave, that steel was not enough.

Something answered.

The blade burned.

Not reflected fire. Not oil catching from some hidden spark. Flame ran along the steel from guard to tip as if it had been waiting there beneath the metal all along. Heat washed over my hand but did not take it. The cave filled with orange light, and in that light the troll recoiled. For the first time since I had seen it, hunger left its face and something like fear took its place.

Image

I do not remember praying.

That troubles me less now than it once did.

I struck before the creature could retreat deeper into the cave. The burning blade bit into its arm, then its side, and the stink that rose from it was worse than anything I had smelled in battle or mine. It screamed. I struck again. Not gracefully. Not like a tale. I was hurt, frightened, half-blind from smoke and cave light, and driven by the knowledge that if it passed me, the girl would die. Fire clung where the sword opened it. This time the wounds did not close.

The troll fell again.

This time, it burned.

I stood over it until I was certain. Then longer, because certainty is not a thing men give easily to trolls. The flames guttered low along the blade and faded only after the creature stopped moving altogether. When darkness pressed back into the cave, it felt different. Not safe. A cave with a dead troll in it is not safe. But the hunger had gone out of the air.

Behind me, the girl began to cry.

I cannot tell you how long we stayed there. Long enough for my breathing to steady. Long enough for the girl to crawl from the rocks and cling to my cloak with hands that shook worse than mine. Long enough for me to look at the sword in my grip and find no oil, no burning pitch, no sensible explanation waiting to comfort me.

The blade was only steel again.

Hot, but steel.

Some things burn so others may live.

I had known that as a lesson of the land. Old brush. Hard seed. Ash in the soil. Wounds closed by heat when gentler means failed. In that cave, with the girl alive beside me and the troll blackening at my feet, the lesson became less kind and more certain.

I carried her out when I could trust my legs. The shore air struck cold after the cave, full of salt and evening wind. Above us, the road was still hidden by cliff and scrub. The beetles were gone, or wise enough not to trouble us. Far off, gulls turned against the dimming sky. She did not speak at first. Neither did I. There are silences after terror that should not be hurried.

By the time we climbed back toward Lion’s Way, autumn had settled into the light. The grasses moved in the wind. Somewhere inland, beyond the road and the old stone circle, the Coast went on being itself: wounded, stubborn, alive.

The family thanked me when I brought the girl back. I remember little of it. Gratitude can be harder to stand beneath than rain when a man knows how close the thing came to ending differently. They pressed coin into my hand. Someone called me brave.

I kept looking at my sword.

No flame. No mark. No proof that would satisfy anyone who had not been in the cave.

But the girl had seen it.

So had the troll.

And so had I.

I had called the first signs luck. I had called the healing good pressure and stubborn life. I had called the sound beneath my boot instinct sharpened by danger. A man can hide from many truths if they come softly enough.

Fire on steel left less room for such lies.
Last edited by Lambe on Fri May 15, 2026 9:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 21

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Sometimes the best way to measure a man is to ask him.

I will speak only of the trials as they were given to me in those days. The Grove was rebuilding then, and old customs, like old paths, were not always walked in the same order when branches had fallen across them. Customs change, and some things are not mine to set down for curious eyes. What I remember was not a maze of secrets, nor some grand rite beneath moon and branch. The first measure was simpler than that.

Elohir asked me a question.

He did not ask it like a man seeking cleverness. I have known such men. They smile before the answer, pleased already with the trap they think they have set. Elohir Ara’dhel did not smile. He sat across from me with the stillness of a man who had spent enough of his life listening to woods, wind, and fools to know which of the three deserved patience. His eyes were green, forest green as he called them, and they missed little.

The question was about a tree.

A protected grove, he said, had a tree gone sick near its heart. The rot had entered deep, spreading beneath bark and root toward healthier growth nearby. Birds nested in one hollow. Small creatures sheltered in another. A young dryad had bound herself too near it, not to the sickness perhaps, but near enough that its fate and hers could not be cleanly parted. One druid said the tree must be cut before the rot spread. Another said no axe should touch it while life remained in its branches.

Then Elohir looked at me and asked what I would do.

I remember the air more clearly than I should. The year was wearing thin, and the first edge of winter had begun to show itself in the woods. Leaves lay brown and wet under us. The canopy had opened in places, letting pale late light through where summer would have kept it green and close. The cold had not fully set its teeth into the Coast, but it was near enough that a man noticed the damp in his sleeves when he sat too long.

I would have preferred a trail to follow, or a target set at distance, or even a blade drawn plainly enough to answer. Those things are honest in their way. A question is less kind. A question can sit in the quiet, wearing no armor and carrying no weapon, and still find every weak place a man thought he had hidden.

I did not answer at once. That may have helped me. A quick answer can be useful when an arrow is coming. It is less useful when the trouble has roots.

By then I had stopped pretending the road had brought me near the Green Triad by accident. A man may deny one sign. He may deny two, if he is stubborn and has practice at looking away. But there is a point where denial becomes harder work than honesty. The doe had watched from the treeline after Leon and I spared the wolves. In the Cloakwood, I had heard danger beneath my boot before I felt it, and an umber hulk had struck a tree where I should have stood. A hawk’s blood had slowed beneath my hand when it should have died in the mud. Fire had run along steel in a cave where no fire had any right to be.

After that, even I found fewer names for luck.

Another year had passed on the Coast by then, or near enough. My twenty-seventh winter was drawing close, and I was no longer the man who had first come through Baldur’s Gate with grief at his back and no road worth naming ahead of him. I had learned paths, faces, dangers, and the shape of certain duties, though not yet what they would ask of me.

I did not walk to the Green Triad in a single clean moment of faith. That would make a better tale than truth. I circled the matter, as I had circled many things. I asked questions that were not the questions I meant. I listened when Leon spoke of old paths, groves, duties, and those who watched the wild places of the Coast. I remembered the shrine to Mielikki farther south on the road toward Beregost, a name I had known since learning of my father’s younger ranger days, yet not a name I had made into a place of my own. There is a difference between knowing whose symbol hangs on a shrine and realizing the road beneath your own boots has been leading you toward Her.

I was not wholly untaught. The grovefolk of Tethyr had given me more than I likely understood at the time: names for plants, warnings about pride, old ways of reading sickness in root and leaf, and the knowledge that the wild was not a thing a man owned simply because he loved it. But learning a thing in youth and standing before it as a choice are not the same.

Leon did not push me. That was one of his better kindnesses.

There are those who, after finding a road, become impatient with others still reading the ground. Leon had more sense than that. He let me come to the matter as a man comes to a wary animal: slowly, with open hands, and without pretending that wanting to be trusted is the same as deserving it.

He had already shown me one shape a ranger of that path might take. Quiet, patient, watchful. A man who understood that mercy was not weakness and that restraint could be harder than killing. Perhaps that was why I trusted the road more when he spoke of it. Leon did not make the Green Triad sound like glory, shelter, or certainty. He made it sound like work that mattered.

So I sought the Green Triad at last, though “sought” may sound too clean for the thing. There were questions first. Names passed carefully. Meetings arranged in no great hurry. A man does not simply decide he belongs among rangers and druids because he has survived a few roads and been frightened by a few signs. The wild does not need every man who loves trees, and a circle has little use for men who love only the idea of themselves standing among them.

That was one lesson I learned early: the Green Triad was not merely refuge. I think part of me had hoped it might be. A place to bring the restlessness, the grief, the half-formed faith, the road-weariness, and have them set in order by wiser hands. But circles are made of people, and people carry weather with them. There were duties, disagreements, old bonds, wounds not yet healed, and silences that had roots of their own. Even then, before I understood the name Mauglir, there was unease in the air at times. The woods had a way of holding back sound before a storm.

But that came later.

First, there was Elohir and the question of the sick tree.

He waited while I thought. That was worse than being hurried. A hurried man can blame the pace for a poor answer. A man given time must stand nearer to his own foolishness.

I thought of the wolves along the Coast Way and the farmers who wanted them gone. I thought of the Cloakwood, of the dryad watching from shadow while a guard’s hand moved toward his spear, of the hawk beneath the thornbush, furious enough to live if only its body could be convinced to follow. Last came the troll in the cave, and fire doing what steel could not.

Mercy had not meant the same thing in each of those moments.

That troubled me, as it should.

At last I told Elohir that I would not begin with the axe. A sick tree is not helped by a man eager to prove he has the strength to cut it down. I would first learn the sickness if I could. Rot has causes. Some can be cut away. Some can be starved. Some can be slowed. Some have already gone deeper than hope. I would look to the soil, the roots, the nearby growth, the water, and what creatures still depended on the tree. I would move what could be moved without doing greater harm. Birds, nests if possible, sheltering beasts if they would let themselves be driven clear.

Elohir listened.

I went on because silence had not yet told me to stop.

For the dryad, I said I would speak before acting if speech remained possible. A life bound to a tree is not a branch to be shoved aside because men with axes have reached agreement. But neither would I let one life, however precious, carry rot into a whole grove while I stood by and called hesitation compassion. If the tree could be saved, I would save it. If only part could be saved, I would spare what could be spared. If cutting became necessary, I would cut only what had to be cut, and I would remain after to tend what was left.

There. That was my answer.

Or near enough to it.

I do not claim the words are exact. Years make liars of us all if we pretend otherwise. But I remember the shape of the answer, and more importantly I remember how little peace it gave me. I wanted wisdom to feel cleaner once spoken. It did not. It sat between us like a wet cloak.

Elohir asked what I would do if the dryad refused.

I had known there would be another question. Men like Elohir do not set weight in your hands only to admire that you can hold it for a breath.

I told him I would try to persuade her.

“And if persuasion failed?” he asked.

I looked away then, not from shame exactly, but because the answer had teeth.

“Then I would have to decide whether I was protecting her, or only letting her fear choose for the rest of the grove.”

He was quiet and I hated that.

After a while he asked whether I thought I had the right to make that choice.

No, I said.

Then, because the truth was uglier, I added that lacking the right did not always spare a man from the duty.

That was the first time his expression changed. Not much. A small thing at the eyes, perhaps, or only my memory giving mercy to a hard moment. He did not praise me. I am glad of that now. Praise would have made the answer feel complete, and it was not complete. No answer to such a question should be.

There were other words after. Some about judgment. Some about patience. Some about the difference between acting too soon and waiting too long because waiting lets a man pretend his hands are clean. I remember less of those words than I should. What I remember is the feeling that Elohir was not trying to catch me in wrongness. He was trying to learn whether I knew wrongness could remain even when the choice was necessary.

That, I think, was the true question.

Not the tree.

Not the dryad.

Me.

The first trial did not end with ceremony. At least not as memory keeps it. No branch bent in approval. No stag stepped from the trees. No sudden wind carried a goddess’s answer through the leaves. Elohir simply sat with my answer a while longer, then gave the smallest nod.

It was not warmth, but it was enough.

“Then we will see,” he said, “whether your feet are as careful as your judgment.”

That was how I learned there would be a second trial.

And that, too, was wisdom.
Last edited by Lambe on Wed May 20, 2026 12:07 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 22

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What is unseen is not always absent. What is unheard is not always still.

That was the lesson Elohir gave me for the second trial, though he did not say it so plainly at first. He only brought me into a wet, low stretch of the Cloakwood where the ground softened underfoot and winter had left the air smelling of black water, old leaves, and cold rain. There was no grand speech, no circle of witnesses beneath moonlight, no chanting around an old stone. As with the first trial, I will speak only of how such things were done in those days, and only as much as is mine to tell. The trial was simple in the way a drawn bow is simple: reach the marked place, return unseen, disturb nothing that need not be disturbed, and do not mistake stillness for stealth, or silence for safety.

Lizardfolk moved through that country, not as monsters in a tale but as folk of their own kind, wary and dangerous when crossed. My task was not to hunt them, nor to prove I could creep through their homes like a thief. I was to reach a marked place near the edge of their range, learn what I could from the signs there, and return unseen. If they noticed me, I failed. If I startled them into reaching for spear or claw, I failed worse. A trail so plain that even a merchant with clean boots could follow it would be failure enough, though Elohir did not use those words. He did not need to. His silence had a way of adding the insult for him.

It was late afternoon when he set me to it, though winter made the hour feel nearer evening. The light had already begun to thin beneath the leaves, but it was not so dark that shadows could do all the work for me. Elohir stood with his arms folded, forest-green eyes fixed on the wetland ahead as if he were listening to something I had not yet learned to hear, while somewhere beyond a run of shallow water and reed-choked mud, a strip of pale cloth had been tied low to a cypress root. I was to find it, loose it, and bring it back. That was all.

I had been a woodsman long before I ever sought the Green Triad. I knew how to move through brush without crashing like a drunk ox. My father had taught me that when I was still young enough to think every lesson was only about the next hunt, and Kolandir had sharpened it later with an elf’s patience and an elf’s cruel expectation that I should somehow grow lighter than my own bones. But a trial is not the same as a hunt. In a hunt, the deer does not know your name. In a trial, the man watching you knows every mistake you are likely to make before you make it, and has chosen the ground accordingly.

I remember kneeling before I entered the thicker growth, not in prayer, or not only in prayer, but to touch the soil. It was damp along the shaded edge, leaf-mold dark under the fingers, with root, mud, and stone enough to punish careless feet. The wind came across my left shoulder, and that mattered. A bird called once and then went quiet, and that mattered too. Somewhere deeper in the low ground, water shifted though I could not see what had moved through it. I eased my breathing down, set the bow close against me, and stepped into the Cloakwood as if I had never owned the ground beneath my boots.

Between the first trial and that winter evening, the year had turned, and life had not paused for me to become worthy of anything. That is never how life works, though young men and fools often expect it to. The Coast had its own pace, and it dragged a man along whether he felt ready or not. I took work where it came, walked roads that had begun to know my tread, slept under hedges, in rented corners, and in camps that smelled of wet wool and poor stew. I learned which merchants complained before paying and which farmers understated danger because they feared the price would rise if they told the truth. I listened more closely than I spoke, which was easier for me then than many other virtues.

There were smaller duties for the Green Triad as well, given in the manner of those days, when the Circle was still rebuilding and old customs were not always walked in the same order. Some were meant to test skill, some tested patience, and some, I think, tested whether a man wished to belong only when belonging sounded grand. They were not the sort of things a young ranger boasts about later by a fire, but they mattered. A man can speak well in a trial and still prove useless when the quiet work comes.

I remember being sent to tend the shrine of Mielikki. There was no glory in it. Leaves had gathered where they should not. Mud had been tracked where folk came to kneel. Offerings needed straightening, old candle stubs clearing, and the place itself needed the kind of care that does not announce itself once finished. A shrine neglected by those who claim to honor it speaks poorly of them, so I cleaned what needed cleaning, set what needed setting, and tried not to make holy work feel like a chore simply because no one was likely to sing of it later.

There were other tasks of that sort: small reports carried where they needed to go, signs checked along paths where trouble had been rumored, a fallen branch cleared from a way used by those who came and went under the Green Triad’s eye, tracks looked over and described, not because the tracks themselves were great mysteries, but because accuracy mattered. A man who says “orc” when he means “goblin,” or “two days old” when he means “after the last rain,” can cause more harm than he intends. I learned that the Circle valued a careful answer more than a quick one. That suited me, though I was not always as careful as I thought.

Those duties stayed with me more than I expected. A man who cannot lower his head to sweep leaves from a sacred place has little business raising his chin before a trial. There are duties that sharpen the hand, duties that sharpen the eye, and duties that wear down pride by inches. I needed all three, though I would not have admitted it so easily then.

The old Bhaalist temple lands had begun to fall behind me, not forgotten, but no longer the only wound along the road, and the Coast was not growing quieter so much as changing the shape of its unease. Other rumors had begun to stir along the edges of the Green Triad’s concerns. Some had names. Some were only warnings traded between those who knew the old woods had teeth. Men spoke of Shadow Druids with more certainty than proof, of blacker rites beneath green boughs, of hunters who entered familiar forest and came out pale, if they came out at all. Now and then the name Mauglir passed between mouths in a way that made the air around it tighten. I did not yet understand the weight of that name, not truly. To me it was one more dark thing in a land that had plenty of them, something older members of the Circle and those near them watched with narrowed eyes.

I ranged farther when I could, toward the Cloakwood, the Lion’s Way, Beregost, Nashkel, and the harder country beyond the farms. The wilds did not care that I had passed one trial. Wolves still hunted. Crows still picked at frozen ditches. Bandits still believed a drawn knife made them kings of whatever road they stood in. It was during that stretch, before winter fully took the roads, that I saw Volomirror Aleksys at Nashkel.

I did not know him well enough then to claim more than the memory gives me. A man can be many things and be remembered by another for only one moment. Volo may well have known the quiet ways better than I ever saw. Many rangers do. But the moment I remember was not a hidden one. The giants had come hard, and Nashkel had the look of a place that knew it had little between itself and ruin. It was still a budding mining town then: a tavern, the church of Lathander, a few rough homes and working places, and no proper wall to speak of. That was why the giants troubled them so deeply. They stood too near a young town with too little stone, too few trained arms, and too many folk who had never expected to look up from mine work or morning prayer and see such things looming over their road.

I remember turning and seeing Volo in blue armor, long dark hair loose or near enough to it, standing where anyone could see him. He had a blade in each hand, arms spread as if to tell the giants that if they meant to come farther, they would have to come through him first. There are quieter kinds of courage. There are wiser kinds too, if one counts wisdom by who survives longest. Yet I have never forgotten the sight of him, because it showed me there was more than one way for a ranger to stand between danger and the folk behind him. My father had been a woodsman with a ranger’s heart. Kolandir had been shadow, patience, and silver hair among leaves. Leon had shown me the bridge from lone road to shared duty. Elohir tested me with questions and silence. Volo, in that one remembered moment, showed me the open road version of the same calling: visible, armed, impossible to mistake.

That thought stayed with me longer than I expected. It was still with me, in some corner of the mind, when Elohir sent me into the wet places of the Cloakwood for the second trial. A ranger could stand in the open when the hour demanded it, and a ranger could also pass near watchful eyes and leave them wondering whether the sound they heard had only been wind in the reeds. The trick, I was beginning to understand, was not choosing one face and mistaking it for the whole. The trick was learning which face the moment required.

So I moved slowly, though not dramatically, and not like the tales tell it. There was no slipping between moonbeams, no becoming one with the night, no vanishing into a cloak of leaves while owls bowed in respect. I placed my feet where the ground would forgive them. I let branches move back by inches rather than snapping them aside. When a bramble caught at my sleeve, I stopped and freed it with two fingers instead of pulling through. Once, I held still so long that cold water crept through the seam of my boot and I had to resist the urge to shift my foot. I remember being annoyed by that, which tells you how young I still was, for a man can be in the middle of a trial and still resent being soaked by the ground he is trying so carefully not to disturb.

The pale cloth was not far. That was the cruelty of it. Had Elohir set it deep, I might have trusted distance to excuse difficulty. Instead it hung within reach of any careless fool who walked straight toward it. The challenge lay in what stood between: soft mud ready to take a boot print, shallow water that would carry sound, reeds bent by recent passage, and roots slick enough to throw a man down if he trusted them too quickly. I watched for more than footprints. Lizardfolk do not move through wet ground like men. Their tails mark mud differently. Their weight presses reeds aside at another height. Their stillness is not the stillness of deer or wolf. More than once I stopped because the water ahead seemed too quiet, or because a patch of reeds leaned against the wind.

Perhaps that was why Elohir’s trial did not feel like a game, even in its simplicity. Stealth was not only for hunting deer or slipping past bandits. It was patience given purpose. Every broken twig announced that you believed the world owed you passage. Every startled bird told the forest you had arrived without permission. Every careless step near another creature’s home could turn a test of skill into needless blood. I reached the cloth, loosened it, and folded it into my palm.

That should have been the easy half, but any ranger who has lived long enough to grow a few scars knows that returning is often where pride kills a man. Going in, I had been careful because the trial was ahead of me. Coming out, I had to be careful because relief had already begun whispering that the trial was done. That is a more dangerous voice than fear. Fear at least keeps its eyes open. So I took another way back, not a clever way, since clever often leaves footprints shaped like arrogance, but a patient way, one that bent wider than I liked and cost me time. I crossed over root and stone where I could, avoided the softest mud, and paused when I saw a shape through the reeds that might have been a lizardfolk crouched near the water or might have been only a broken stump made strange by shadow. I did not stare at it. Staring is a kind of noise. I let my eyes pass over it, marked it, and moved as if it had not mattered.

When I came out of the trees, Elohir was not where I had left him, and for a moment I thought I had failed and had somehow walked past him like a fool. Then his voice came from behind me.

“You took too long.”

I closed my hand around the pale cloth and turned. He stood near a cypress with one shoulder almost touching the bark, though I would have sworn no one had been there a breath earlier. His expression told me nothing. Elohir’s face could be generous that way.

“I was not told to be quick,” I said.

“No,” he answered.

There was a silence after that, long enough for me to wonder whether he expected me to say more. I did not. At times in my youth I had sense enough to let my mouth rest. At last I held out the cloth.

Elohir took it, looked at it as if it might confess something about me, and then looked back toward the wet trees. “You frightened one bird,” he said.

My stomach sank.

“Only one,” he added.

I remember that more clearly than any praise he might have given. Perhaps because it was praise, in his fashion, or perhaps because it was the first time I understood that passing a trial did not mean doing a thing perfectly. It meant doing it well enough that the flaw could be named, remembered, and corrected before the flaw became habit.

He handed the cloth back to me. “Again, another night, you would do better.”

I looked down at it in my hand. “Then I passed?”

Elohir glanced at me, and there was the faintest suggestion of humor in his eyes. “Do not make me regret it.”

That was the second trial as I remember it. No song marked it. No crown of leaves was set upon my brow. I did not step from the Cloakwood transformed into some silent legend of the Coast. I was still Lambe Arkolyn: too heavy on damp ground in places, too pleased with myself in others, still learning how much of ranger work was not in the bow hand at all. But I had passed, and in those days, with the road behind me and the Green Triad before me, that was enough to take the next step.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 23

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Some trials ask what remains of a man when the ground beneath him gives way.

By then I knew there would be a final measure, though knowing did not make me eager for it. The first trial had asked what I would do when mercy and necessity stood on the same root and refused to be separated. The second had asked whether I could move through the wild without making the world announce me. I had answered as best I could, first with words, then with quiet feet, and in both cases Elohir had given little away beyond the fact that I was not yet dismissed.

The last trial was simpler to name: combat. I thought that meant the question had finally become simpler as well, which shows what I knew.

Men hear the word combat and think they understand it. I thought I did. I had killed before, hunted, stood behind barricades in rain, faced a thing in a mine and a troll in a cave. But a trial is not a tavern boast, nor is it the same as surviving whatever the road throws at you. A trial has eyes upon it. It asks not only whether you can prevail, but what shape you take while trying.

Elohir led me into the Cloakwood for it, and that should not have surprised me. Much of what had brought me toward the Green Triad had begun there, or near enough. The Cloakwood had been one of my first true teachers on the Coast, though not a kind one. It did not welcome me now any more than it had then. It watched, and that was enough.

We did not travel with ceremony. Elohir was not a man who wasted motion for the sake of appearing important. He walked as if the forest had already agreed to his passing, and perhaps it had. I followed, too aware of every leaf beneath my boot and every small adjustment of his path around root, fern, and fallen branch. He did not tell me where we were going at first. That, too, was part of it. A ranger who only behaves wisely after being told the purpose of a journey is not yet wise.

Some time had passed since the second trial. Not a great span, but enough for the road to keep teaching. I took work where I could, though by then my work had begun to bend around the Green Triad even when I was not standing before Elohir. I listened more carefully to reports from the woods, carried word when asked, watched paths when needed, and learned that duty often arrives as a small thing first: a message delivered, a trail checked, a warning passed before pride turns delay into harm.

There were other warnings in those days as well. Names moved through the trees before I understood their weight, and the name Mauglir passed between mouths in a way that made the air around it tighten. I did not yet know why. Not truly. At the time, those rumors were only pressure in the air, like thunder too far off to hear clearly but near enough to make the birds uneasy.

Elohir heard more than I did. I am certain of that now. He did not wear worry loudly, as some men do when they make their burdens into banners so all may admire the weight. His silences could be sharp, but they were not empty. At times, walking behind him, I had the sense that half his attention was on me and the other half on shadows I had not yet learned how to see.

At last we came to a damp stretch of wood where shallow water gathered between roots and reeds. The air smelled of mud, green rot, and the musk of scaled things. I saw the signs before Elohir spoke: clawed tracks near the water, a broken reed with scales caught on it, a half-eaten fish left where no fox would have left it. Lizardfolk had passed there, and recently. Every step had to be chosen. The ground looked firm until weight proved otherwise, and more than once mud shifted beneath my boot as if the wood itself were testing whether I trusted it too easily.

Elohir stopped beside a moss-dark trunk and looked toward the water.

“There,” he said.

At first I saw only reeds. Then the shape became a crouch, and the crouch became a body. A lizardman watched from the edge of the pool, still enough to have been part of the mud if not for the eyes. It was alone, or seemed so, with a spear in hand and more of itself hidden by the reeds than I liked. Not a monster from some child’s tale, not a beast without thought or place, but a living thing, dangerous and wary, standing in a wood where its kind had walked before I came and would likely walk after I was gone.

I looked at Elohir, but he did not explain much. He did not need to. The trial was combat, yes, but not slaughter. That distinction mattered. The Circle did not teach hatred of every scaled thing that rose from a marsh, nor did the wild divide itself neatly into creatures men had named safe and creatures men had named fit only for killing. Lizardmen could be enemies. So could men, elves, wolves, druids, and anything else with hunger, fear, territory, or anger enough to act. The question was not whether I could hate what stood before me. The question was whether I could survive it without losing judgment.

“Drive it off if you can,” Elohir said. “Kill it if you must.”

I remember being grateful for the last words, and uneasy about the first. A clean command is easier. Kill this. Spare that. Stand here. Go there. But the Green Triad, as I was learning, did not make a man’s choices clean merely because he wished them to be. The world is rarely so kind. The lizardman had seen us by then, or had known of us all along and tired of pretending otherwise. It rose from the reeds with water sliding from its legs and lifted its spear.

I nocked an arrow.

The lizardman hissed and struck the butt of its spear against the mud. Warning, challenge, or both. I did not know its tongue, and if it knew mine, it gave no sign. I took one step aside, then another, widening the angle between myself, Elohir, and the pool. Elohir did not move, and that told me enough. This was mine to answer.

The first cast of the spear came fast. I had expected a charge and nearly paid for the mistake. The weapon left its hand with a snap of scaled arm and shoulder, and I twisted aside more by hard-learned instinct than grace. The spear struck a tree behind me and shivered there. Before I could draw fully, the lizardman came through the reeds with a stone knife in one hand and a second, shorter spear taken from somewhere at its back. I had wanted distance. The marsh gave me none, and wanting it back did not matter.

I loosed anyway. The arrow cut along its shoulder, deep enough to turn its rush but not enough to stop it. It closed the ground in a wet rush of mud, scale, and muscle. I gave way, caught my heel on a root, and turned the stumble into a sideways fall rather than a backward one. The short spear thrust where my ribs had been. I came up with my sword in hand, wet to the knee and angry at myself for nearly losing the fight before it had properly begun.

There is a part of combat that no lesson makes noble. Breath becomes ugly. Mud grabs at boots. Fear narrows the world to edges and openings. I remember the lizardman’s knife flashing near my face, the flat smell of marsh water, the weight of my sword meeting the haft of its spear. It had reach I did not. Scales where I had skin. A tail that shifted its balance through mud that wanted to steal mine. Most living things are dangerous enough when they are fighting not to die. Some are built better for it than men.

I cut its thigh, it cut my arm, and neither wound ended anything.

We circled through reeds and shallow water. My bow was somewhere behind me by then, half-hidden in grass and mud, which did nothing to improve my temper. I became aware, distantly, that Elohir had shifted only enough to keep both of us in sight. He was not there to save me from my poor choices. He was there to see what choices I made when fear had stripped away any answer I might have rehearsed.

The lizardman lunged again. I caught the spear on my blade and let it slide past, stepping inside the reach rather than away from it. I meant to turn clear, but the mud took my foot and the creature’s size did the rest. We went down hard. My sword was still in my hand, but for a few ugly breaths it might as well have been a stick caught between us.

Up close, the lizardman was all wrong for a man to wrestle. Taller, longer limbed, scaled where I was soft, with a tail that shifted its weight when mine had already betrayed me. Its teeth snapped close enough that I felt the wind of them against my cheek. I did not try to overpower it. I only tried to make sure no single part of it settled where it wanted to settle.

Its knife hand came down. I twisted with it, not against it, and the blade tore leather instead of belly. My knee found the wound I had opened in its thigh, and when the creature buckled, I used that moment to tear free rather than hold it down. My sword came up with me. For one heartbeat I had the opening: neck, side, throat, places that end fights quickly when a man has stopped thinking of anything but ending them.

I saw the opening and did not take it.

Instead, I struck the spear haft near its grip, splitting wood and driving the broken length from its hand. Then I put the edge of my sword close enough to its throat that both of us understood what the next choice could be.

The lizardman froze, and so did I.

By then the ground beneath me had given way in more than one sense. The fight had stopped being only a question of whether I could win. It had become a question of what winning required, and I had no neat answer for that while kneeling in the mud with blood running down my arm.

There are long moments that pass in less than a breath. Its eyes fixed on mine, yellow and furious and alive. Mud slid cold beneath my knee. Somewhere behind me, a bird called once and then thought better of it. I do not know whether the lizardman beneath my blade understood mercy as men use the word. I am not always certain men understand it. But it understood advantage. It understood the blade. It understood that death had reached for it and stopped short.

I stepped back, not far and not foolishly, but far enough.

“Go,” I said, though the word meant nothing to it except perhaps tone.

For a moment I thought it would come again. There was pride in it, and pain, and enough anger to make pride stupid. Then it backed toward the reeds, one slow step, then another, never turning its eyes from me. When it reached the water, it snatched up the broken half of its spear and vanished into the green as if the marsh itself had swallowed it.

Only then did I lower my sword. My hands shook a little, and I hated that less than I once would have.

Elohir came forward and looked first to the reeds, then to the blood on my arm, then to my face. If he was pleased, he hid it well. If he was disappointed, he hid that too.

“You had the killing stroke,” he said.

“I did.”

“Why not take it?”

I looked toward the reeds where the lizardman had gone. My answer did not come quickly, but it came clean enough.

“Because I did not need to.”

Elohir waited, which I had begun to understand was one of his favorite ways to make a man continue.

So I did.

“I would have, if it came again. If it reached for you. If it stood between me and someone helpless. If letting it go meant more blood than taking it. But it was beaten. Wounded. Alone. This was a trial, not a hunt for meat or vengeance.”

The words sounded bold after they left my mouth, and I did not feel bold. I felt tired, sore, and aware that the difference between restraint and foolishness can be as thin as a reed stem in mud.

Elohir looked back toward the water. “And if it kills a traveler tomorrow?”

That answer had teeth, as his questions often did.

“Then my mercy will have cost someone dearly,” I said. “But if I kill every dangerous thing because it may do harm later, I am not guarding the wild. I am only obeying fear and calling it duty.”

His eyes returned to me.

“I do not know that I chose rightly,” I added, because the truth required it. “I only know why I chose.”

That was the answer he wanted, or near enough. Not certainty. Not softness. Not blood-hunger dressed as duty. Mercy can make a fool of a man as quickly as bloodlust can. I had seen enough by then to know that, and not nearly enough to be comfortable saying it.

Elohir nodded. It was a small thing, as his nods often were, small enough that another man might have missed it and spent the rest of the day wondering whether he had failed. I did not miss it. By then I had learned to read his silences in the same way one reads weather: not perfectly, but well enough to know when to keep walking.

“The trial is passed,” he said.

I should remember what I felt then as joy. Perhaps some part of me did. Relief, certainly. Pride too, though I tried not to let it show too much. But what I remember most is a strange quiet settling through me, as if something behind me had closed and something ahead had opened. That sounds cleaner than it felt. At the time, I mostly remember mud in my boot, blood drying on my sleeve, and the foolish urge to look back once more to make certain the reeds stayed still.

There was no grand ceremony in that marsh, no circle of cheering voices, no cloak set dramatically upon my shoulders. In those days, acceptance into the Grove was marked more simply: a small crystal token, worked with quiet craft and carrying modest blessings suited to the work expected of those who bore it. The formal cloak of the Forest Queen’s Blessing would come later, when time and hands allowed. Memory keeps the mud better than the formality, but I remember the weight of that small crystal, one I carry to this day.

The walk back was slower. My arm needed binding, and Elohir allowed me the dignity of doing most of it myself before correcting what I had wrapped poorly. He said little. I said less. There are silences after a trial that do not need filling, though mine may also have owed something to the fact that my arm hurt and I was tired of pretending it did not. The Cloakwood watched us go with the same old patience, and if it approved, it kept the opinion to itself.

By the time we returned, I was a member of the Green Triad.

Writing that now, I feel how small the sentence is beside what it meant. I had come to the Coast searching for what had been taken from me. I had found roads, wolves, mines, winter, shrines, siege lines, fire, and more questions than answers. I had found friends, though some would not remain near for long. I had found signs I did not ask for and duties I did not yet understand. Now I had found a place among those who guarded the wild things and the borders where men met them.

It was not refuge, and it was certainly not certainty. It was a place to serve. For that day, that was enough.

There were wounds in the Circle I did not yet know how to see, and soon enough some of them would become mine to share. But that came after. For one day, I let myself stand in the belonging I had been given.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 24

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There were a whole lot of elves.

That was not the first lesson the Green Triad taught me, but it was one of the earliest I noticed. Elves beneath the great tree, elves among the roots, elves speaking softly in corners as if the rest of us might spoil something by standing too close. I had known elves before, of course. Kolandir had shaped much of the man I became. Leon, though human like me and younger by a year, had become one of the first friends I made on the Coast. Still, there is a difference between knowing elves and standing in a hidden Grove where a human begins to understand that most of the people around him have been taking the long view since before his father was born.

I do not say that unkindly.

Mostly.

The Grove in those days lay hidden in the Sharpteeth, gathered around a great old tree whose branches were too high and broad to fit properly in memory. Its trunk was dark, thick, and rough enough that a dozen men could have put their hands to it and still not measured it well. The yellow light came from above, from leaves mostly out of sight, soft enough that the place did not need torches. Elves could see by it well enough. Druids had their ways. Rangers learn early not to complain about poor light unless they mean to fix it themselves. I had imagined, before joining, that a circle of rangers and druids would spend most of its time beneath open sky, walking old paths, tending groves, and answering threats with quiet purpose. Then I attended enough meetings to be cured of romance.

Meetings. Meetings never change.

They may be held beneath rafters, branches, canvas, or open stars. They may concern kings, coin, crops, goblins, trees, or which fool left a gate unlatched near goats. The way of it remains much the same. Someone speaks too long or says too little. Someone who should speak waits until everyone is tired. Another who should have stayed silent discovers a fresh supply of words. All believing that one more careful exchange may finally settle the matter.

The Green Triad was no different, though the matters were often worth the trouble. That was the nuisance of it. If the talk had been foolish, a man could simply resent it. But much of it mattered. Reports from the roads. Signs in the woods. Names of those seeking entry. Names of those no longer seen. Troubles near farms, old paths, groves, shrines, and borders where men and wild things met poorly. There were arguments, yes, but not all disagreement is weakness. A circle without disagreement is either dead, frightened, or lying to itself.

I was new enough then to listen more than speak, which was wise, though I cannot claim wisdom deserves all the credit. A new member learns quickly where his knowledge ends. Mine ended often. There were old bonds in that Circle, old quarrels too, and histories I knew only in pieces. A glance between two elders could tell me a subject was better left alone. A name spoken too carefully told me not to ask after it in front of everyone. I had not joined a tidy company of rangers waiting in a row for duty to be assigned. I had joined people who already knew one another, had already disappointed one another, and were still trying to do the work anyway.

The small crystal token felt heavy at such times. It was not large. It did not need to be. I carried it as proof of acceptance, yes, but also as a reminder that I had been given trust before I had earned much history. The formal cloak would come later, when time, hands, and circumstance allowed. The crystal came first. It sat against me while I listened, while I learned who spoke plainly and who wrapped meaning through courtesy, while I tried to decide whether silence made me look thoughtful or merely lost. Often, I suspect it was the second.

Leon helped while he remained, though he was not always beside me, and by then I understood better than to expect it. Still, there was a short while when I knew what it was to stand near him not only as a friend met through work, but as one who had stepped through the same door he had pointed toward. That mattered to me more than I likely said. We walked a few paths together after my acceptance, checked signs along the road, spoke with folk who trusted his quiet manner faster than my tired face, and shared quiet watches where neither of us felt much need to fill the night with talk.

Leon had a way of making belonging seem less formal. He did not make speeches about the Circle, nor tell me how I ought to feel now that I had joined it. That would not have suited him, and it would not have helped me. Instead he let the work itself teach: a track studied before a conclusion was reached, a warning carried before pride demanded proof, a wounded patch of wood treated as something worth tending rather than clearing. If he was pleased that I had finally sought the Green Triad, he showed it mostly by behaving as if I had always been capable of doing so.

Then, as roads do, his bent away. I will not pretend his leaving was some grand tragedy. Folk leave the Coast. Humans too, and often for reasons too ordinary to be sung about. Some are called by kin, duty, grief, danger, or simply the long restlessness that settles into those who have walked too many paths to believe any one of them owns their feet. Leon remained long enough for me to know what it was like to share the Circle with him. Then he was gone from the daily pattern of my life. That is how some friendships live: briefly beside you, then long in memory.

Volomirror Aleksys was another name that did not stay fixed in one place for long. I had seen him in Nashkel, standing before giants with a blade in each hand, blue armor bright enough to be remembered even through fear and dust. That was the image I kept of him, though it would be foolish to think any ranger is only the one moment another man happens to witness. Volo had his own roads, his own duties, and his own absences, and in those early days I began to understand that a Circle is not made only of those gathered under the same branches.

That was harder to accept than I expected. I had come to the Green Triad thinking, perhaps, that belonging meant stillness. I should have known better. The Circle moved because its people moved. Some came to meetings. Some sent word. Some were known mostly by older stories, old duties, or the work they had left behind. I was learning to belong to something that did not always gather itself neatly before me.

At the same time, Mauglir’s name had begun passing through reports and cautious speech.

Shadow Druids were not new to the Coast, nor were arguments over balance, civilization, wilderness, and the cruelty men sometimes excuse by calling it necessity. But Mauglir was more than another name for distant trouble. The more I heard, the less distant he seemed. Elves had been attacked. Roads and woods carried rumors in broken pieces. Some spoke of a Shadow Master. Some spoke of betrayal. Some spoke as if the matter were already known and only manners kept everyone from saying it plainly.

By then many in the Circle knew, or suspected enough that there was little comfort in the difference.

Faerynn Ara’dhel.

I still do not like writing the name.

I did not know Faerynn as others did. That should be said. My grief over that name was not the grief of a brother, old friend, student, or companion who had shared long roads with him. I knew him more by what his fall had done to others than by the man himself. But sometimes that is how a new member first learns the history of a circle: not through songs or lists of deeds, but through the way people stop talking when a name is spoken.

Faerynn had been one of theirs. Mauglir was what they had to call him after.

The Circle could speak of threats. It could speak of patrols, warnings, caution, and the need to watch certain roads. It could speak, more carefully, of the elves who had suffered under Mauglir’s hand. But speaking of Faerynn was harder. That name reached old trust, old rank, old affection, and old shame. A stranger turned traitor is easy to hate. A brother is not. That was the trouble with Faerynn.

Elohir was not always present when such matters were spoken of. When he was, he often seemed apart from the rest, whether he sat with them or kept back under the roots. Perhaps memory makes too much of that, but I do not think so. He had administered my trials with patience and a hard kind of fairness, and I had respected him for it. Even then, I knew there were things in him that had nothing to do with me. I understood only the edges. I think most of us did.

It was said that Mauglir had been discovered, captured even, though such words sound firmer than events often prove. Whatever hands had held him did not hold him long enough. He escaped. That was the part that mattered. After that, every report seemed to lean toward him. Every troubled road might be his road. Every shadow between trees might hold more than shade.

The meetings grew heavier, though ordinary life kept forcing its way in. Someone would complain about a missed message. Someone would disagree over whether a trail sign meant danger or only careless travelers. Someone would mention supplies, or names, or who had last seen whom. There would be a dry remark, a tired sigh, a look that said plainly enough that everyone wanted the talking done. Bad news does not stop people from being people. If anything, the small foolish things become more necessary. They keep the day from belonging entirely to fear.

After my first trial, I could hardly think of such things without remembering Elohir’s question. A sick tree near the heart of a grove. Life still in its branches. A dryad too close to abandon it cleanly. One voice calling for the axe, another for mercy, and no answer that left a man’s hands clean. I had thought that question belonged to my trial. I did not yet understand how often life asks the same question in different clothing.

The Green Triad had accepted me, and already I was learning what that meant. It did not mean safety. It meant the trouble was no longer only something I heard about from others. It meant I had chosen whose roads I would answer, whose shrines I would guard, and whose losses I would have to learn without having earned the right to grieve them fully.

I watched those who had stood there longer than I had. Some were angry. Some were tired. Some spoke as if action alone could cure what had gone wrong, and others as if the right words might yet call back what had been lost. I do not mock either hope. I have trusted both before. Sometimes they are enough to keep a man moving until he can do something useful.

Still, the Circle was changing. Leon’s absence made the edges of my days quieter. Volo’s name drifted farther down roads I did not walk. Other absences had been there before mine ever mattered: Galen’ael dead, Uriel gone from the place others had expected him to fill, Tarsakh distant, and older names carried more by habit than explanation. Elohir seemed drawn toward a burden that was his more than mine, though the trouble was spreading through all of us. I was new, but not blind. Belonging did not spare a man from seeing the cracks in what he had joined. If anything, it made them harder to ignore.

There were a whole lot of elves, yes. There were also humans, hin, druids, rangers, seekers, friends, old griefs, new worries, and enough opinions to keep any meeting alive long after the hour should have been allowed to die. But under all the talk, reports, and careful manners, there was the thing no meeting could settle.

Faerynn had been known.

Mauglir had escaped.

And whatever sapling I had been when I entered the Circle, I was not going to be allowed to grow there slowly.
Last edited by Lambe on Tue May 19, 2026 9:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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2 - 25

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A sick branch is pruned to save the tree.

That is an easy thing to say when the branch is only wood, and another thing when it has a name.

We were already deep enough in the Sharpteeth for the road to feel like a rumor. Branches crowded close overhead, shutting away much of the sky, while duskwoods stood among them in dark, narrow ranks. Their trunks were smooth, black, and too straight-looking, the sort of trees that made a man feel watched even before anything moved. The ground shifted from root to stone to damp leaf-rot without warning. The wood had its own breath there, not the wet, tangled breath of the Cloakwood, nor the more open wind of the Coast Way, but something older and harder. The Sharpteeth did not need Mauglir to make it dangerous. The outer wood had orcs enough to trouble any careless traveler, warriors and shamans both, and dire beasts that could tear through brush like anger given hide and tusk. There were old werewolf tales too, the sort men laugh at in daylight and remember after dark. Deeper in, the forest belonged to older stories: satyrs in green shadows, hydras in wet places, wisps where no sane man followed lights, and things a ranger learns not to name too confidently unless he has seen them and lived. We did not need to reach those depths for the forest to feel watchful.

Elohir moved ahead of me without looking back often. He did not need to. By then he knew I could follow, and I knew enough not to mistake silence for ease. He walked with the same care he had shown during my trials, placing each step as if the ground had a memory and poor manners might wake it, yet there was strain in him that day, a tightness beneath the craft. Perhaps the forest heard it too. More likely, I only noticed because I had begun to know him better.

We were following signs I would have missed alone: a bent fern, mud pressed wrong near a root, bark scraped by something that had passed too quickly to care what it marked. Once, a strip of blackened cloth caught on thorn, smelling faintly of old smoke and something sourer. Elohir touched it, then let it fall. He did not tell me whose it was. He did not have to.

I had been a member of the Green Triad only a short while, long enough to learn that belonging did not make a man ready, only responsible. I had heard names spoken in meetings and then found myself following one through mud and leaf-rot. Mauglir was no longer only a rumor passing between worried mouths.

It had begun some time after those meetings grew heavy, though not immediately after. That matters. The Circle spoke, listened, argued, warned, and waited, because waiting can feel like caution until the cost of it shows. I will not judge them too harshly for it. I have done the same. But beyond the reach of our meetings, Mauglir remained loose, and the bodies did not wait for us to find better words.

Elohir found me near the edge of a camp, where I had been mending a strap that did not need as much attention as I was giving it. I remember that because I kept working a few breaths after I knew he was there. Not out of rudeness, but from the old habit of letting a man decide whether he truly means to speak.

“Lambe,” he said.

That was all at first.

When I looked up, he seemed older than he had during my trials. Not in face, perhaps, but in bearing. There are burdens that do not bend the back so much as make the spaces around a man quieter. Elohir carried one of those. He had tested me with questions, silence, stealth, and steel. That day he did none of those things.

He asked for help.

Not as a Warden giving command. Not as the one who had measured me and found me passable. Not even only as a ranger calling on another ranger, though there was some of that too. He asked as a man with a hard road before him and too little wish to walk it alone.

“I am going after him,” he said.

There was no need to ask who. I could have given reasons for going. The Circle was mine now, and Mauglir had wounded it. Reports had come through Kald Blake and others by then, enough to make clear that Mauglir was not only hiding in the wilds but leaving bodies behind him, especially after his escape. Faerynn had become a danger to the woods, to Doron Amar, to the Green Triad, perhaps to anything that had once trusted him. Elohir had accepted me into a path, and I owed that path something more than good intentions. All of that was true, but I went because he asked. That was the plainest truth of it.

We left without much gathering of witnesses. I took bow, blade, water, what food I could carry, and the small crystal token that had begun to feel less like proof and more like a question. Elohir told me little at first. I learned the shape of it in pieces as we moved, for Elohir did not give speeches while tracking, and grief makes poor company for clean explanations. A word here. A warning there. A name spoken only after silence had made it heavier.

Mauglir had been seen moving through or near the Sharpteeth. Kald was already hunting him, or close enough to hunting that the difference did not matter. There had been reports from those who feared the Shadow Master’s return more than they feared being wrong. Doron Amar lay somewhere southward, not near enough for me to see, but near enough to change the way Elohir breathed when its name came up. The pursuit drew us southward, toward parts of the Sharpteeth where Doron Amar’s presence could be felt even before its borders were seen. Elohir was not welcome near them. That was one of the cruelties Faerynn had left him: not only a brother twisted into an enemy, but a people’s fear fastened to his name. He said this without asking pity, which made it harder not to feel it.

The forest changed as we went, not all at once, and not in any way a tavern tale would enjoy. The signs were there. Animals had taken strange paths. Birds fell silent too soon. Once, we found the torn remains of a small orcish charm hanging from a branch, bone and sinew twisted together with feathers gone damp from mist. A warning, perhaps, or a prayer, or only something left by hands that understood the forest in a way that was not ours.

We found the hands that left it not long after, or perhaps only others of their kind. Three orcs came out of the brush without warning, low and fast, painted in mud and old ash. One carried a notched axe. Another had a spear with feathers tied beneath the head. The third hung back with a bone charm in one fist and words on his tongue I did not know.

Elohir moved before I had fully drawn. That is not shameful to admit now, though it would have stung me then. His blade caught the spear aside, and my first arrow took the axe-bearer high in the chest. He fell hard, still trying to breathe through it. The one with the charm spat something sharp and foul, and for a moment the air smelled of wet hides and bitter smoke. Elohir cut the words short before they became whatever they meant to become.

It was over quickly, which is not the same as cleanly. One orc fled into the trees, crashing through brush until the forest swallowed him. We did not follow. Mauglir was ahead of us, and the dead at our feet were not the wound we had come to close. Elohir looked once at the charm hanging from the branch, then at the one fallen near the orc’s hand.

“They are afraid too,” he said.

That stayed with me longer than the fight.

Later, we crossed the trail of a dire boar. The ground was churned where it had passed, and the marks were fresh enough that I kept my bow ready for some time after. Elohir barely glanced at them before turning us aside. The boar was not our quarry. In another life, on another day, I might have been grateful for that.

Mauglir’s trail did not move like an animal’s. It broke sense and returned to it. At times the trail was too easy to follow, almost careless. Then it would vanish where even a poor tracker should have found something. Twice I thought we had lost it. Twice Elohir found it again, though each finding seemed to cost him something I could not name. He was not only tracking an enemy. He was reading the remains of a brother in every careless mark.

At last, near dusk, we found blood. Not much. Dark on the underside of leaves. A smear against stone. Not enough to say whose, though the color of blood rarely offers the courtesy of naming itself. Elohir crouched near it for a long while, his fingers hovering above the stain without touching it.

“He is close,” he said.

I did not ask whether he meant Mauglir or Faerynn. Perhaps there was no difference left that could help us.

We pressed on as the light lowered and the Sharpteeth gathered itself around us. In the thickening gloom, every trunk looked like a shoulder, every hollow like a watched place. I thought of the first trial then, or some crooked memory of it. A tree. Rot in the boughs. Someone asking when mercy becomes neglect. I may not have remembered the words rightly. Fear does that. So does time.

Elohir stopped before I saw why. A sound had reached him. Metal, perhaps. A voice cut short. Then another voice, low and hard, carrying through the trees with the weight of command or prayer. Elohir lifted one hand, and I stilled.

We moved forward more carefully.

The trees opened into a small broken space where old stones pushed up through moss and roots. Not a proper clearing, only a place where the forest had failed to close fully over some older wound. There were marks of struggle in the leaves, a split branch, scorched moss, one tree blackened along one side as if shadow itself had burned it.

Kald was there before us.

He stood with sword in hand, armored and steady, carrying the kind of stillness that does not come from peace. A paladin of Mielikki looks different from a ranger in the woods, but the oath in him was no less green for being carried in steel. His dark hair was damp from the air, his armor marked by travel and fight, and his eyes were fixed on the figure across from him.

Mauglir stood near the stones.

I say Mauglir because that is the name the danger wore. Yet when Elohir drew a breath beside me, I knew he saw more than that. The shape before us was not some stranger’s evil dressed in convenient darkness. It was Faerynn’s body, Faerynn’s face, Faerynn’s mouth holding a smile that did not belong to any brother worth remembering.

For a few heartbeats, no one moved. Then Elohir stepped into the clearing, and I followed far enough to give him room and no farther. My bow came up. I remember the feel of the string beneath my fingers and the point of the arrow moving slightly with my breath. Kald’s eyes flicked once toward us, then back to Mauglir. He did not lower his sword.

“Faerynn,” Elohir said.

Mauglir smiled with his brother’s mouth, but it was not a stranger’s smile. That was the worst of it. Had there been nothing of Faerynn left in him, the thing might have been easier to hate.

“You came,” he said.

The words were soft enough that they should not have carried. They did. The clearing seemed to hold them out of cruelty.

Elohir did not flinch, though something in him took the blow. I saw it. Kald saw it too, I think, though his face remained carved from sterner stone than mine.

“I did,” Elohir answered.

I do not remember all that passed between them. Perhaps I never heard all of it clearly. Some words were spoken too low, and others belonged too much to brothers for me to set them down as if they were mine to keep. I remember Elohir saying his name again. I remember Mauglir answering in a voice that was still Faerynn’s, and that made the darkness in it worse, not less. There was bitterness there, and mockery, yes, but also something wounded enough that I could not pretend it was only cruelty.

Kald shifted then, just enough that his sword caught what little light remained.

“Enough,” he said.

There was no anger in the word. Not the hot sort. Kald’s anger, if anger it was, had been hammered into duty. That made it more dangerous, not less.

Elohir lifted a hand, not to command Kald, but to hold a breath of time between judgment and grief.

“Come back from this,” he said.

For a moment, I wanted the words to matter. That is foolish, perhaps, but I will not lie. I wanted the story to change because Elohir deserved at least that much mercy. I wanted the brother to hear the brother. I wanted the sick branch to mend itself before any axe was raised. Men wish for such things even when they know better.

Mauglir looked at him, and for one breath the smile faded.

Then whatever mercy had nearly shown itself passed.

I think Kald moved first, though it may have been Mauglir. Memory keeps the start poorly. One moment words still hung between them; the next, the clearing broke open. Kald crossed the space with shield and sword, Mauglir answered with a motion of his hand that bent the shadows around the stones, Elohir drew steel, and I loosed an arrow.

It struck something. Cloth, perhaps. Flesh, perhaps. The arrow vanished into dark folds and gave me no satisfaction.

Then Mauglir spoke, or perhaps only shaped the air with one hand. I do not know. The darkness moved through the clearing all at once.

Kald did not fall. Elohir did not fall.

I saw darkness.

It was not only darkness. There came fear, then flesh. I saw nothing clearly enough to name, only the certainty that something had stepped out of my own mind and reached for my heart. I tried to nock another arrow and found I no longer knew where my hands were. I was brave enough to step forward, but not strong enough to remain standing.

The world tilted, narrowed, and went out.

I do not know how long I lay there. That is the part of the tale others could tell better if they wished. Kald, perhaps. Elohir, if he ever found the will to put it into words. I cannot say what blow was struck first after I fell, nor who turned what spell, nor whether Faerynn spoke again before the end. Memory does not grant a man scenes he was not awake to witness, no matter how much later grief might wish to fill the gap.

I woke to the smell of scorched leaves and blood.

For a moment I did not know where I was. Trees above me. Black branches. Last light between them. The ground was cold through my cloak and leathers, cold enough that I felt it before I remembered why I was lying there. My mouth tasted of iron, and there was dirt on my tongue. My neck hurt badly enough that I did not want to move it. My bow lay near my hand. I remember that clearly for some reason. Not Kald’s first words, not Elohir’s face, but the bow, lying there as if I had only set it down. I rolled to my side and nearly retched. The clearing was quiet, though not in any way that felt safe.

Kald stood to the side, sword lowered but not sheathed. His armor was marked, his face grim, and he looked like a man keeping watch over a thing he hated needing done. He did not look triumphant. A man of Mielikki does not stand over such a death and call it triumph, not if he understands what has been lost.

Elohir was on his knees before Faerynn’s body.

Mauglir was dead. I knew that before anyone said it. Death has a stillness even exhaustion can recognize. Whatever darkness had worn him, the body before Elohir was only a body now. Smaller somehow. Less terrible. More terrible for being less.

Elohir had one hand near Faerynn’s shoulder, but not quite touching, as if even then he did not know whether he was allowed. His head was bowed. I could not see his face.

Image

I tried to rise and failed.

Kald looked toward me.

“Stay down,” he said.

There are men whose commands are easier to obey because they do not waste them. I stayed down.

For a while no one spoke. The forest did not rush to fill the silence. No birds returned. No wind moved bravely through the leaves. Even the Sharpteeth seemed to understand that what had happened there was not victory in any clean sense. A danger had ended. A wound had not.

After some time, Elohir touched his brother’s body. Only then did he bend fully over him.

I looked away.

Not because I did not care, but because there are griefs a man has no right to watch too closely. I had followed Elohir into that wood. I had loosed my arrow, taken my step, fallen beneath a power greater than I could bear, and woken after the branch had been cut. That was my part. His was the kneeling. Kald’s was the vigil. Faerynn’s was the silence that remained.

When I could sit, I did. When I could stand, Kald watched me do it without offering a hand and without mocking how long it took. That was a mercy of its own. My legs shook. My head rang. The clearing moved slightly whenever I trusted it too much. Elohir did not speak to me then, and I do not hold that against him. What could he have said? Thank you? Forgive me? It is done? None of those words would have been large enough to carry the body on the ground or the brother left beside it.

We gathered what needed gathering. I remember little of the order. There was blood on leaves, broken moss, and a blackened place near one stone where no grass would have thanked us for standing. Kald cleaned his blade with care. Elohir moved as a man who had remembered how to stand only because standing was still required. I found my arrow later, snapped near the shaft.

That seemed right.

We did not leave the Sharpteeth quickly. The dark made certain of that, and so did the dead. Yet at some point, the clearing fell behind us. I looked back once and could not tell whether the forest had already begun to close over the place or whether my eyes had simply tired of holding it.

A sick branch is pruned to save the tree. I had heard such wisdom before in gentler shapes. A woodsman knows it. A ranger learns it. A druid lives with it until the words lose any comfort they once had. But no one tells the sapling what the axe sounds like when it falls near the roots.

I had entered the Green Triad looking for a place to serve, and by then I had found one. I only did not understand yet how much of that service would be standing near grief that was not mine and finding it on my hands all the same.

Faerynn had been known to us. Mauglir had escaped us. By the time we left that clearing, whatever was left of both names lay dead behind us. And Elohir, who had tested me with questions about sick trees and necessary cuts, had been made to learn the answer in blood.

We left the wood quieter than we had found it.

Not healed.

Only spared from worsening.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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3 - 26

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Live by the bow, die by the sword.

That is one of the first hard lessons a ranger learns if he lives long enough to be taught twice. Distance is useful. Wonderful, even, when the land is kind enough to give it. A skilled archer can scatter, vanish, and put half a wood between himself and whatever means to kill him before it can close. But ranger work does not always allow a man to remain distant. Tracks must be read close. Wounds must be inspected. Camps must be approached. Strange marks, broken branches, frightened witnesses, and suspicious fires do not explain themselves from the far side of a field. Nor does the quiver last forever. A man may carry many arrows, but never as many as fear would like. So I kept learning the sword, whether I liked the bruises or not.

Toshiro used wooden swords for that lesson. That may sound gentle to those who have never been struck properly by one. Wood does not cut, true enough, but it has a way of finding bone, pride, and the tender places between both. By the third strike to my ribs, I had begun to suspect that Toshiro knew every tender place a man could own and had made a private study of introducing them to oak. It may have been the fifth strike, in truth. My ribs were keeping their own count.

“Again,” he said.

He said that often enough that I came to understand it as less of a command than a condition of being near him while he was holding practice blades.

We stood in a flat enough patch near the Grove, though flat is a generous word for any place where roots have been allowed their opinions. The ground was dark with damp leaves, and old roots rose through it in places a proper sword-master would have cursed and avoided. The Grove did not seem concerned with proper sword-masters. The air still held the wet smell of morning, and somewhere beyond the trees I could hear water moving below us. Toshiro held one practice blade loosely in his hand, the other angled low at his side. Even with wood in his hands, he looked armed in a way most men do not look armed with steel. I was breathing harder than I wished, and he was not, which was annoying enough without him looking as calm as he did. My left boot had been leaking since the Sharpteeth, and every shift of my weight gave a small wet squelch. Toshiro pretended not to hear it, which somehow made it worse.

I lifted my guard again, and he watched me over the crossed length of his practice blades. Toshiro was not an elf who wasted much expression. His face had the calm, severe patience of a man who had already watched the mistake happen twice and was waiting to see whether the third time would teach what words had failed to do.

“You keep looking for the step backward,” he said.

“I am an archer.”

“Yes,” he replied. “That is why I keep hitting you.”

I would like to say I had no answer because wisdom silenced me. More honestly, my ribs hurt, and any answer I had would have used breath I needed for surviving the next exchange.

Some weeks had passed since the Sharpteeth, though time did not make the memory behave. Mauglir was dead. Faerynn was dead. The Circle still gathered, still argued, still sent feet onto paths that needed watching, because living things continue even after a branch is cut. I spoke little of what had happened in that clearing. Less than little, perhaps. No one pressed me for it, which was its own strange mercy. Some events enter a circle before any witness gives them words, and that was one of them. Elohir had grown quieter in the places I saw him, or perhaps I had simply learned to hear what his silence carried.

Toshiro was taking more of the ranger-side weight by then. Not with proclamation, at least not as I recall it, but in the way such things often happen among people who still need the work done. Someone asks after patrols. Someone knows which roads have gone unwatched. Someone remembers who has not been seen in too long. Someone gives an answer, then another, and after a while men begin looking to him before they realize they have done it. If he minded that kind of weight, he made no habit of showing it.

There were fewer familiar faces than I expected in those weeks, and more names spoken in the manner of people who had gone elsewhere, for a season or forever. That is the way of circles, though I was still learning it. Some leave because roads call. Some because grief does. Some because what happened among the branches made the shade feel less safe than it had before. Yet the Circle did not only lose names. New ones came to us too, carried by rumor, report, roadside meeting, or a ranger’s quiet recommendation. A circle that only mourns what leaves has already forgotten how roots work.

One of those names was Celduil Sellie.

I did not know then how familiar that name would become, nor how often our roads would cross inside the Circle’s work. At first, he was simply an elven ranger I had met upon the Coast, steady in his manner and watchful in the way good woodsmen are before they know whether they are welcome. I thought there was something in him worth bringing before the Circle. I was right about that one, at least. I wrote of him in my report, named what I had seen, and let those above me decide what weight to give it. That was part of the work too, though I did not yet understand how much: not only watching roads and signs, but watching people, and knowing when a name should not be left to pass like any other traveler’s. Then, when there was time enough for bruises, Toshiro put wooden swords in our hands and reminded me that distance was not always mine to keep.

Catam D’Argente was another name moving near the same work, though I did not yet know how much I would come to lean on him. He was a half-elf, steady enough, with the sort of quiet that could be mistaken for absence until a man noticed he had been watching the right thing all along. Some men make a great noise when they are useful. Catam was not one of those, or at least not as I first knew him. He belonged to that growing list of people I knew by report, patrol, passing word, and the odd shared road before I knew what place they would hold. That is how circles are built more often than not. Not all at once, and not by grand design. Names gather. Someone remembers them. Someone has to.

Toshiro came at me again, not quickly at first, which was the insult of it. Speed would have let me blame speed. Instead he stepped in at a pace slow enough for me to see everything and still choose poorly. His left blade came high. I lifted to meet it. His right tapped my knee before I understood my guard had answered the wrong question. He told me my feet were arguing with my hands, and I told him my feet had no complaint until he hit them. If he found that amusing, he did not show it. He only told me to go again.

Toshiro did not explain much if he could avoid it. He hit me until I learned, and when I did not learn quickly enough, he found another angle and hit me from there. A man told not to lean too far forward may nod and forget. A man put face-first into damp leaves tends to remember the ground. I did, anyway. Several times that morning.

Still, I was not helpless. I had been taught by Kolandir, by necessity, by the roads, by the Grove, and by the simple fact that anything with claws, teeth, or a blade does not always respect an archer’s preferred distance. I landed a strike on Toshiro’s forearm after his third correction, another against his shoulder when he pressed too close and I stopped trying to retreat from a space already lost. Once, I caught his ribs clean enough that I allowed myself the beginning of satisfaction.

He did not say good that time. He did not say anything at all. He only reset his stance and came on again, which was rude of him. I decided to count it anyway.

The Coast itself had begun to speak of the south in those days. Not loudly yet. Roads rarely begin with shouting. A teamster might arrive two days late and blame inspections. A wagon master might refuse the Nashkel road unless paid more than the load was worth. Flour came damp in one shipment and short in another. Men from Beregost carried different rumors than men from the Gate, and men from Nashkel carried different worries still. People said Amn and the Gate were only posturing, which usually meant both sides had begun counting spears.

The Circle did not belong to either city’s pride. That was easy to say. The harder truth was that roads, fields, rivers, and forests suffer whether banners belong to them or not. A ranger may avoid politics for as long as he likes, but a hungry village, a burned wagon, a poisoned stream, or soldiers cutting green wood for fires will eventually drag politics into the dirt where he works. Toshiro understood that better than I did.

He gave me papers before I understood they were part of the same lesson. Not proper books, and not the kind of neatly copied reports a scribe would take pride in. Loose notes. Names. Half-finished accounts of patrols. A message that had been folded too often and read by hands that left mud on one corner. Some had come by hand. Some by Eaglemail. Some, I think, had been copied from memory by men who trusted mud less than ink and ink less than their own heads. There were mentions of seekers, roads, supplies, trouble near this crossing or that grove, warnings that might have been old or might have been waiting to become costly. I had thought ranger work would keep me under leaves more than over parchment. That was another romance cured quickly.

“Sort these,” Toshiro said.

I looked at the pile, then at him. “For what?”

“For what matters.”

That was all, and it was not enough until I began doing it. I learned quickly that a circle could lose a trail on parchment as easily as in mud. A name misplaced might become a seeker forgotten. A warning left under the wrong stone might become a wound that should have been prevented. I put one note in the wrong pile because the first line mentioned boars and the last line, which I had not bothered to read, mentioned boot prints near a farmstead. Toshiro moved it without comment. That was worse than correction.

Men speak grandly of leadership when they are not the ones sorting old notes by firelight, trying to decide whether a report of tracks near a farm is still useful after rain, or whether the ranger who wrote it has already gone north for a season and told no one who would tell me. Yet much of the work lived there. Not glory or song. Just work.

Toshiro had a habit of giving such tasks without dressing them as trust, which made them harder to refuse.

There was more to the morning than sword work. He asked questions while we trained, not the sort that had clean answers and not always about the thing they seemed to name. What would I do with a seeker who lost the trail twice? What if it was carelessness? What if it was fear? What if there was no time to learn which it had been? I don’t remember every word. Probably wouldn’t help if I did. Old men who claim they can repeat a morning perfectly after so many years are either blessed, lying, or selling something. What stayed with me was the pattern of it: a question, a blow, an answer made worse by pain, and Toshiro watching to see which part of me moved first.

At one point, when he pressed the question of a frightened seeker and no time left for patience, his right blade came low. I stepped aside instead of back and felt the wind of it miss my thigh. My answer was something about sending someone steadier with him. Toshiro’s eyes flicked down to where my foot had landed, then back to my face.

“Better,” he said.

It took me years to understand how often his questions were testing more than judgment. At the time, I thought he was making conversation to spoil my focus. He was doing that too. Toshiro was economical, not single-minded. But he was also watching where my judgment went when my hands were occupied and my pride was being bruised. Answers come easier beside a quiet fire. Mine certainly did. Toshiro seemed more interested in what came out after my ribs had been struck a few times and my temper had started helping.

He did not speak much of Faerynn. Few did, at least not around me, and that suited me well enough. I had no hunger to return to that clearing with my tongue. Still, silence did not erase the thing. It sat in the Grove, in meetings, in the spaces between names. Toshiro, I suspect, knew more than he said. He never told me that was why we trained. He only hit me until I stopped assuming the next blow would come in the shape I preferred, and that, I think, was kinder.

The morning wore on. My shoulders tired. My grip grew less certain. A wooden sword feels light until one has held it too long while being corrected by a man who seems to have made no agreement with fatigue. The next time Toshiro advanced, I saw the same opening I had seen twice before, and twice before it had been a lie. This time I did not chase it. I let his first blade draw my guard, turned my foot before my arms could argue, and stepped inside the line rather than away from it.

My practice sword struck his sleeve. Only the sleeve, which I’m sure Toshiro would have said did not count if I had been foolish enough to ask. I counted it anyway. For once, he did not immediately put me on the ground. He looked at the mark, then at me.

“Again,” he said.

This time there may have been something near approval in it, or perhaps I needed there to be. Memory is generous with small mercies. In truth, he came at me harder after that, and I regretted whatever pride had warmed me. I landed two more touches before we were done. He landed many more. That seems a fair account.

When we finally stopped, I sat on a root and tried to breathe in a way that did not announce how many bruises were reporting for duty. Toshiro stood over me with both wooden swords in one hand.

“You fight better when you stop backing toward ground you’ve lost,” he said.

I wiped sweat from my face. “Is that meant to be praise?”

“It is meant to be useful.”

That was Toshiro. Praise, if it came, usually wore work clothes.

He handed me one of the wooden swords, then the small bundle of loose reports he had made my problem earlier. I stared at them, then at him, and told him I thought we were done.

“With the swords,” he said.

“There is a difference?”

“Yes.”

He crouched then, resting his forearm across one knee, and began pointing out names, roads, and notes as if my ribs were not busy throbbing beneath my tunic. One report needed to be copied cleanly. One name had to be found, or at least asked after. One seeker needed watching but not crowding. One southern path had gone too long without word. A gathering would be called soon enough, and before then someone needed to know which reports mattered and which were only old leaves pretending to be tracks.

I understood, dimly, that I was the someone.

He asked me, in one form or another, who should speak when rangers disagreed and he was not there to answer for them. I gave him some answer about knowing the ground, then another about listening better than the next man. He seemed satisfied enough to call it good. Then he gave me another road to check, because apparently a good answer was not allowed to remain only an answer.

I left that practice with sore ribs, muddy knees, a corrected grip, loose papers tucked beneath one arm, and three paths Toshiro wanted checked before the next gathering. I did not know then how many orders, letters, and names would find their way into my keeping. That might have been for the best. A man takes one bundle of papers more readily than a future.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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3 - 27

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Not every fire begins with flame.

Some begin in the chest, where fear has no clean road out. A cornered animal is dangerous, but a cornered village can be worse. An animal bites because it must. Men have the harder gift of explaining why the bite was righteous, and enough frightened voices gathered together can make almost any foolishness sound like courage.

That was a lesson I had not learned cleanly yet. I had known fear in myself. I had seen it in men on roads, in beasts with their backs against stone, in villagers who kept one eye on the treeline while pretending not to. But fear in a crowd is different. It has more hands. It passes from face to face, grows warmer with each retelling, and by the time it becomes action no one man feels fully responsible for what all of them have decided to do.

The trouble did not begin as Green Triad business, not strictly. I will likely call us the Circle often in these pages, even for days when our name had not yet settled there, because names changed more easily than duties ever did. Men bullying men was older than any grove, and if every poor bargain, hard threat, and frightened settlement had been ours to answer, we would never have left the roads. There were laws for such things, or there were meant to be. Elders, guards, lords, clerics, magistrates, whoever a place trusted when trust had not yet been beaten out of it. But the Green Triad was not made of stones arranged in a ring. It was made of people, and people bring their own consciences with them. When armed men began feeding off a village that had taken them in for protection, none of us were likely to shrug and say the trees had not yet complained loudly enough.

Besides, the trees had begun to complain.

Their camp had crept close to the wood. Green branches had been cut where deadfall would have served. Snares had been set without care for what they caught. Game had been taken badly, more for proving hunger than feeding it, and fire had been spoken of too easily. Human desperation has a way of spilling past fences. A quarrel over coin becomes a trampled field. A hard bargain becomes a burned copse. A man with power over other men starts looking at the land with the same appetite. By the time we reached the village, the matter had roots where it should not have.

If memory serves, we had not gone there looking for a village quarrel. We were already on the road for heavier work. Six of us did not travel together because someone had set a poor snare or cut a few green branches. Toshiro, Isenduil, Bethany, Fildith, Leonia, and I were bound toward trouble near the wilds, perhaps, or something moving where it should not have been. We meant to pass through the village, ask after the road, fill skins, perhaps buy bread if the place had any to spare, and continue on.

Instead we found the village holding its breath.

I do not remember the village’s name. That shames me a little, though I suppose there are more unnamed villages in a ranger’s memory than named ones. I remember the square. I remember the low roof of a house darkened by old rain near where Leonia and I were later posted, the muddy ground churned by too many anxious feet, and the way the villagers stood too close to one another, eyes moving between us, the road, and the trees beyond the fields. I remember an armed man among them, one of their own, or one they had chosen to speak for them because fear likes a blade in front of it.

The men they feared were the so-called protectors they had hired in from the road. The outsiders had several names depending on who spoke. Southerners. Amnians. Mercenaries. Refugees. Deserters. Hired guards. Men from the road. Fear is not careful with titles. The shape of it, as best as I understood then and recall now, was that they had come north out of trouble and found employ in the village. Protection was the word used at first. The roads had grown less certain, and small places often have to choose between bad choices before larger places remember they exist. Armed men at the edge of a village can look like safety when the night is long enough.

Then safety began asking for more.

More coin. More food. Better lodging. Deference. Respect, though men who demand that word usually mean obedience. They had been hired to stand guard, and somewhere along the way began acting as if the village itself were part of their pay. That is a common sickness among armed men. Give a man a post, a sword, and frightened folk who need him, and too often he begins to mistake need for permission. Give him a few others at his back, and soon he calls his appetite order.

Toshiro did not need much time to divide the work. He rarely did. He and Isenduil would go toward the camp and speak with the mercenaries, or whatever name those men preferred that day. Bethany Ashby and Fildith Coppertop were sent to another side of the village to keep watch as a pair. Leonia and I were stationed by the house at the edge of the square, where we could keep an eye on the gathered villagers and any turn in the mood there. That was how the work was divided: some eyes for the threat beyond the village, some for the fear still inside it.

There is an insult young men sometimes feel when they are left behind. I knew it then, though I would not have called it that. Toshiro and Isenduil were going toward the camp, toward the men with blades and numbers and the shape of the problem as most would see it. I was left by a house with Leonia, watching villagers, doors, children peering from behind skirts, and a muddy square that seemed determined to swallow one of my boots. My left boot still had not forgiven the Sharpteeth. Every shift of my weight brought a wet little complaint from the sole, and I resolved then to find myself a new pair, with all the solemnity a wet sock can inspire.

I pulled my brown cloak tighter at the shoulder while I waited, the ranger’s clasp cold beneath my fingers, the cloak itself one provided by the Circle to its rangers. It was a small thing beside the day’s trouble, but I remember it because it still felt new to me then, another sign that I had begun to belong somewhere beyond the road.

Leonia stood nearer to things than most would. A scrap of writing, a mark in mud, a frightened face, it made little difference. A fool might have mistaken that for weakness. I did not. Her eyes were not made for long distances, but there are other ways of seeing, and that day she saw things I was too busy measuring in bow-lengths and sword-reach to notice. I watched hands. She watched faces. I saw who carried knives, who kept glancing toward the trees, who stood too close to the armed villager as if courage could be borrowed by proximity. Leonia heard the tremor in a woman’s voice when she asked whether Toshiro would return before dark, and the anger in a farmer who had not yet decided whether he wanted justice or someone to bleed.

It is a bitter thing, needing help and hating the hand that gives it. I think Leonia understood that before I did. The villagers had made a bargain because they were afraid. Perhaps it was even a wise bargain at first. A few armed men on the road can keep worse men away. But when those same men began taking more than agreed, the village had to live not only with the cost, but with the shame of having invited the cost inside.

I knew something of villages that thought themselves too small for the world’s cruelty. I had lived in one once. We had served the Earthmother, kept our little rites, mended roofs, watched seasons turn, raised children, and believed, perhaps without saying it aloud, that being modest might make us overlooked. It did not. The world can find a small village easily enough when hunger, hatred, or ambition goes looking.

So I did not think these folk cowards. That is worth saying. Fear makes poor choices, but it does not make a man contemptible by itself. Some of them wanted to march on the camp before Toshiro returned. Some wanted the southerners gone no matter what had been paid. Some wanted to bar the door, hide the food, and hope armed men would take insult gently. All of them were wrong in some way, as frightened people often are, but wrong is not the same as wicked.

Leonia said little at first. She had a way of letting silence gather use before spending words. When one of the villagers muttered that the Green Triad had no right to tell them to wait, she did not snap back. She only looked toward the house, then toward the line of trees where Toshiro and Isenduil had gone, and said something about waiting long enough to know which fire they were about to step into. I doubt those were her exact words. Age gives better phrasing to old memories. But that was the shape of it.

The armed villager did not like being told to wait. He was not a bad man, I think. Or if he was, the day did not give me enough of him to judge it. He was a man with a blade, a crowd behind him, and shame sitting on his shoulders. That can make a dangerous creature of almost anyone.

I kept my bow in hand but low. That mattered. A raised bow can speak faster than the mouth, and not always in the language intended. My sword stayed sheathed. Leonia stood near the house, close enough that any rush toward that side of the square would have to account for her, but not so close that she looked as if she meant to bar villagers from their own place. Bethany and Fildith held the far side, though I only caught sight of them now and then between buildings. It helped to know they were there. A village can feel large when anger starts moving through it.

“If you go now, you go blind,” I told the armed man, glancing toward the trees where Toshiro and Isenduil had gone, or something near enough.

It was not a grand speech. Most useful words are not. I told him Toshiro had gone to learn whether those men still meant to honor their bargain or needed reminding of it. I told him that marching frightened villagers toward an armed camp would give the mercenaries every excuse they could want. I told him the woods did not need fire because men could not hold their tempers. He answered sharply enough, more for the crowd around him than for me.

Leonia did better than I did with the women near the edge of the square. I think that is true. She did not speak to them as if they were problems. She asked who was missing, who had last gone to the camp, who had paid what and when. It gave their fear something to do besides grow. That is a small mercy, but small mercies matter when a crowd is close to becoming a mob.

From where we stood, the mercenary camp was more feeling than sight. Smoke through branches. A raised voice once, or perhaps only a crow making ugly music. The knowledge that Toshiro and Isenduil were there, standing before men who had grown too comfortable being obeyed. I have wondered since what was said. I doubt Toshiro pleaded. I doubt he threatened in the way city men understand threats. More likely he showed them the shape of things. He showed himself, showed that he was not alone, showed that the village they had mistaken for easy prey now stood under eyes that knew the difference between protection and feeding.

There is a way the wild corrects a thing that has overgrown its place. Not with speeches. Not with a magistrate’s seal. A vine that strangles too much is cut back. A wolf that grows bold enough to take from pens every night is driven off or put down. A sick branch is pruned before it can cost the tree more than the tree can spare. Men are not vines or wolves or branches, though some do their best to prove otherwise, and killing is not the first answer simply because it is the simplest to imagine. But the lesson remains. A thing that takes more than its place must be made smaller.

That, I think, was what Toshiro did at the camp.

He did not make those men saints. No ranger I have known carries that much magic. He made them remember the shape of the work they had accepted. They would guard the village. They would take what had been agreed and no more. They would pull the snares that had no business being there, move their camp back from the trees, and stop speaking of fire as if flame were another hired blade. If they could not do that, then they would leave and take their hunger elsewhere, preferably before it learned what the Green Triad looked like when patience was finished.

I put that more neatly than it likely happened. Memory smooths the edges of things that were probably muddier, louder, and less satisfying. But I remember Toshiro returning from the trees with Isenduil near him, and I remember the village changing before anyone explained the terms. Shoulders lowered. Voices that had been climbing began to fall. The armed villager looked relieved first, then annoyed at having shown it. Leonia noticed that too. I saw it only after she did.

No one cheered. That is worth remembering. The villagers had not been saved from monsters, and the southerners had not been transformed into honorable men by one stern conversation beneath the trees. The bargain had only been put back inside its proper fence. Sometimes that is all peace is: men with power being reminded that power is not ownership.

We had other business on the road, and it had not grown lighter while we stood in that square. There were trails to follow, woods to watch, darker rumors waiting farther along the road. Yet a frightened village, armed mercenaries, cut greenwood, loose snares, and talk of fire were enough. More than enough.

I thought of my old village as we left. Not sharply. Not as a wound opening. More as one feels an old scar pull when rain is coming. I thought of how small places live by bargains: with weather, with soil, with roads, with strangers, with whatever powers pass near enough to notice them. I thought of how quickly help can become another danger when the helper begins to enjoy being needed. And I thought, though I would not have said it plainly then, that Mielikki must have patience beyond imagining to watch men learn the same lessons so poorly in every generation.

I did not pray that day, not in any way I would have named. But I remember wishing, quietly and without much shape, that the village would not become another place spoken of only after it was too late. Perhaps that is where some prayers begin: not with words fit for a shrine, but with a wish made under one’s breath while standing beside a frightened house.

No song would ever be made of that watch by the house. No beast fell under my arrow there, and no enemy captain died by my hand. Bethany and Fildith kept their side. Toshiro and Isenduil returned from the trees. Leonia stood by the house until the anger around the square had cooled enough to become only tiredness. The villagers stayed in their own square, the camp moved back from the wood, and for a little while, at least, the fire inside men did not find flame.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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3 - 28

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A man may become many things, but he is always someone’s son.

Lydia’s message found me on the Coast, at a time when I had convinced myself other duties were pressing enough to fill both hands. There were roads to watch, reports to sort, names Toshiro wanted asked after, and no shortage of small troubles waiting to become larger ones. Yet some summons are older than rank. I had been a ranger of the Circle for only a short while. I had been my mother’s son since my first breath.

The message did not need many words. Mother was failing. Lydia wrote that if I meant to see her again, I should come soon.

So I went.

It had not been so many years since I had last gone back to Waterdeep, though it felt like another life when I thought of it. I had gone there after the Silver Tern failed to arrive, taking ship myself because the sea had seemed the quickest way to meet the woman I loved. I remember that crossing poorly. I remember gulls, wet rope, the slap of water against the hull, and the foolish hope that every league north brought me closer to an answer.

Waterdeep gave me none.

Flora had not come ashore. No captain had carried her name. No sailor had brought her last words. No letter waited where one should have been. I stayed as long as I could bear to stay, then left again because the harbor had nothing more to give me. After that I took to roads, ports, coastlines, and tavern talk, following rumor like a man following smoke. I did not think of it as leaving my family then. Not plainly. I thought of it as searching. Maybe I needed to think of it that way.

This journey north was different. There was no hope waiting at the end of it, only a room I had been told to reach before it was too late.

I do not remember much of the road, which may be mercy. I know there was rain for part of it, because I remember my cloak never feeling dry. I know I slept badly, ate because grief does not feed a body, and kept finding my hand near the small things I carried from the Coast: knife, bowstring wax, the little habits of a ranger pretending readiness had any use against age and illness. I had faced claws, blades, poison, and darker things by then. None of that helped.

Waterdeep had not changed as much as I had. The streets were still loud, the stone still wet with sea air, the markets still crowded with people certain their own errand deserved the road more than anyone else’s. Carts rattled over uneven stones, sailors cursed with the confidence of men who believed volume could settle most disputes, and somewhere near every busy corner a vendor had discovered that hunger, hurry, and coin make reliable companions. Yet I walked those streets differently than I once had. When I first lived there after the ruin of our village, I had been a wounded son trying not to become only a wound. When I came back for Flora, I had been a husband hunting an answer that would not show itself. Now I had work that waited for me beyond the city walls, names that looked to me for answers, and a call I was beginning to understand did not stop at the treeline.

I had once thought serving the Lady meant returning always to deep green places, as if the trees were the only ground where she might hear a man. I knew better by then, or had begun to. Her road ran through forest first, perhaps, but not only forest. I saw that more clearly in Waterdeep than I expected: in window herbs, market strays, rain barrels, and weeds stubborn enough to grow between the stones. I had not thought much about that before. Not properly. I preferred branches overhead, but that was preference, not calling.

We had lived in the Southern Ward in those years, near enough to the Trades Ward that morning brought the sound of carts, apprentices, and shutters being thrown open before a man was ready to hear them. The Dock Ward was close enough for its smells and tempers to wander uphill when the wind favored them, but it was not where Mother had made our home. She had done what she could with modest rooms, window herbs, a clean table, and habits Lydia and I noticed more once she could no longer keep them. There were still places where I could turn a corner and remember being younger against my will.

Lydia met me with a face that had learned too much patience. That was the first thing I noticed. Not grief, though grief was there. Not exhaustion, though that was plain enough too. Patience. She had been keeping the room, keeping visitors quiet, keeping track of draughts and cloths and which healer had said what. The fever had settled in Mother’s chest before winter, and though healers had eased what they could, and a Chauntean priestess had come more than once, no one spoke as if there would be a cure. They spoke of comfort, sleep, and keeping her warm. She hugged me as if she had meant to be angry and forgot how once I was in reach. I would not have blamed her if she had kept the anger. She had carried much of those last days without me.

“She has been asking for you,” Lydia said.

That was all she needed to say.

Mother was smaller than I remembered. I have never liked how illness can do that, as if a life may be folded inward before it leaves. Her hands were thinner, the bones clearer beneath the skin, but they were still my mother’s hands. I knew them by old memory: hands that had mended my torn sleeves, held Lydia’s hair back when she was sick, cuffed me lightly when I lied badly, kneaded dough, carried water, soothed fevers, and once gripped my shoulder hard enough to remind me that foolish boys may grow tall before they grow wise.

She woke while I was there. Not fully, perhaps, but enough. Her eyes found me after a moment’s searching.

“You came,” she said.

I had thought of many things I might answer on the road. A man does that when he is afraid. He prepares words as if words are tools and grief a broken hinge. But when she said that, all my prepared thoughts became useless. I took her hand and told her I had come, and that I would stay. It was not enough. Nothing would have been. But she seemed to rest easier with it.

I did stay. I do not mean that as some great virtue. I only mean I stayed. Through waking and sleeping, through Lydia’s quiet movements about the room, through visits from those who had known Mother in better years, through the small practical indignities that gather around a sickbed and must be tended because love is not too proud for them. I learned the rhythm of that room: the shift of blankets, the scrape of a chair, the careful pouring of water, Lydia’s footsteps when she tried not to wake anyone, the way Mother’s breath sometimes caught and made both of us listen. There were healer’s bottles on the shelf, clean cloths drying near the basin, and a little Chauntean charm Lydia had tied to the bedpost after the priestess left.

Lydia had always steadied herself with song, though in those days she barely let it rise above breath. Once, while changing the cloth beside Mother’s bed, I saw her lips move through a prayer I did not know then, one of Milil’s little invocations perhaps, not sung so much as held behind the teeth. It was the nearest thing to music that room allowed. Mother stirred at the sound of it, or seemed to, and Lydia stopped at once, as if she had been caught doing something too private to name.

Lydia and I had not been easy children, though I suspect few children are as easy as they later claim. We had our share of mud, stolen fruit, broken tools, arguments, and clever plans whose cleverness ended the moment Mother saw our faces. Lydia was better at looking innocent. I was better at looking guilty before anyone had asked a question. Mother’s patience did not always look gentle at the time. Sometimes it looked like a wooden spoon set down with great care before she spoke. Sometimes it looked like silence. Sometimes it looked like work done again because we had undone it poorly the first time. I think of that more often now than I did then. Children remember being corrected. Adults remember the tired face across the room.

Mother had served Chauntea in the way many good folk serve best: by keeping others fed, warm, corrected, forgiven, and alive. She was no temple speaker, no grand voice of harvest or hearth, but she knew the Great Mother in bread, garden soil, stored grain, clean water, and children who needed feeding before they understood gratitude. She hated waste in a way that made sense only later. A heel of bread, a bent carrot, a handful of seed, a bit of clean cloth—everything still had use if a person cared enough to find it. I served another goddess, and my road led under different branches, but I do not think the two were strangers to one another.

When Mother slept, Lydia and I walked the city. Not far at first. Neither of us had much hunger for wandering, but after too many hours in that room, we needed air. We walked streets we had known younger, passed places that remembered us less faithfully than we remembered them, and bought food neither of us had much appetite for. We passed near the Trades Ward edge, where Harald’s old work had once left sawdust in my cuffs and splinters in my fingers, and for a moment I could smell cut wood so clearly that I almost expected to hear him calling me careless.

I saw Marek Tallowhand too, outside the Bent Nail, which had not improved in manners or ale since I last knew it. Marek had once nearly broken my nose there before deciding, a tenday later, that I was worth sharing a table with. He had more grey in his beard than seemed fair, and laughed when he saw the bow on my shoulder.

“Still looking for trouble, then?” he asked.

I told him trouble had learned to find me without help.

He laughed at that, then saw Lydia beside me and the shape of our faces, and the laughter went out of him without fuss. Marek was not a gentle man by nature, but he knew when roughness had no use. He asked after Mother. I told him enough. He nodded once, looked away toward the street, and said he would tell the others not to crowd us unless we wanted crowding.

That was kindness, in his fashion.

Lydia told me of old friends as we walked. Some had married. Some had left the city. Some had died. A few had gone adventuring, which surprised me less than it should have. Waterdeep has a way of filling young heads with roads, ruins, and coin enough to make danger sound reasonable. Some had become so ordinary that their ordinariness felt like a blessing. I caught up with a few myself, men and women who had known me after the village was gone and before the Coast had given me another shape. They looked at my bow, my weathered gear, the changes in how I stood, and most were kind enough not to say too plainly that I seemed both more settled and farther away.

There were other names I did not seek out. Elira Voss among them. I had known her when I was younger, and that was enough to leave it there. I had no wish to knock on old doors while carrying my mother’s grief.

Once, the city had been a place of survival. After our village fell, it had held what remained of us. It gave us walls, work, noise enough to drown memory some days, and crowds large enough for grief to move through without being noticed. It had also become the city where Flora had not arrived. I owed Waterdeep more than I had admitted, but I had not returned often enough to repay any of it. Yet walking it with Lydia while Mother slept, I felt the difference between hiding in a city and living through one. The Coast had changed me. The Circle had changed me. Toshiro’s work, the Lady’s call, even the bruises and mistakes had given my feet a direction that was not only away from what hurt.

I prayed during those days, though not as I would later learn to pray. I did not ask the Lady to spare what age, winter, and a tired body had already claimed. That would have been a child’s bargain, and I had made too many bargains with grief already. I asked for steadiness. For Mother’s road to be gentle, if such roads are given. For Lydia’s heart not to break beyond mending. For my hand not to tremble so much that Mother felt it. Whether those words belonged to Mielikki, or whether some of them found Chauntea’s fields by another path, I cannot say. I only know I said them.

She had clearer hours near the end, and darker ones. In one of the clearer ones, she asked after the Coast. Not with curiosity alone, but with the old mother’s worry over whether her son was eating enough, sleeping enough, and keeping company that would not get him killed through foolishness. I told her some of it. Not all. She did not need every shadow I had walked through. I told her there were good people. I told her I had found work worth doing. I told her the Circle had taken me in, though I think she heard more in my voice than the words themselves.

“You sound like your father when you speak of trees,” she said.

That hurt, but gently.

I told her I hoped that was a good thing.

She smiled a little. “Mostly.”

Then, after a while, she called me her winter boy, as she had when I was small. That hurt too, but differently. I had not heard it in years, and I had not known until then that I had missed it.

That was Mother too.

On the seventh day of Uktar, in the Year of the Bright Blade, her last breath came with Lydia on one side and me on the other. I am grateful for that, though gratitude is a strange word for such a thing. Mother had been sleeping more than waking by then. The room was quiet. I remember that more than I remember the words anyone said after. At some point her breath did not come again. Lydia knew before I did. Or perhaps I knew and would not admit it for the space of a heartbeat. She bowed her head over Mother’s hand, and I sat there uselessly.

Mother was given to the earth in Chauntea’s keeping. That was fitting. There were words spoken over soil dark with winter damp, and seeds placed with her, small promises of life sleeping under cold ground. Rest after labor. Earth after breath. I understood little of comfort while watching the soil cover her. Lydia wept then in a way she had not allowed herself in the room. I held her because there was nothing else useful in my hands.

Losing a mother is one of the hardest things life asks of a man. I do not say that to measure grief against grief. Loss has never needed my help to be cruel. But much of what a mother gives is invisible while she gives it: meals made before anyone asks, patience spent on foolishness, clothes mended, fevers watched, tears heard through walls, worry carried quietly so children can mistake safety for the natural state of the world.

I remained in Waterdeep only a little longer after the burial. Not long enough to pretend I belonged there as I once had, but long enough not to flee the moment the rites were done. Lydia and I put small things in order. We spoke of what Mother had kept, what should be saved, what should be given away, what neither of us could bear to decide yet. There was a little pouch of seeds among her things, tied neatly, though neither of us knew whether she had meant them for planting or simply could not bring herself to throw living promise away.

I saw a few old friends once more. I walked past places that remembered the years after the village better than I wished they did: Harald’s old workshop, the tavern doors where I had once wasted anger, the streets Lydia and I had crossed when we were still learning how to live without Father. I had not come home long enough to know what to do with all of it.

When I returned south, I did not feel stronger. I felt older, which is not the same thing. The Circle’s work had not paused out of courtesy. Work never does. There would be roads unwatched, reports waiting, Toshiro carrying more weight than he should, and trouble enough that would not care what I had just buried. I went north as a son. I came back still a son, but with one fewer voice in the world able to call me by the name I had worn before all the others.

Be at peace, Mum. Your son loves you.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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3 - 29

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Blessings and burdens both ask more of a man.

I had begun to understand that by then, though not as cleanly as I might like to pretend. A blessing is easy to mistake for rescue when a man first feels it answer him. Strength comes when it should not. Breath steadies when fear has made a fist around the ribs. Pain loosens its grip enough for the body to move. It is tempting, in those moments, to think the gods have reached down to carry what a man cannot. But that is not how it has ever been for me. What is granted still leaves the hand to draw, the feet to choose, the eyes to judge, and the heart to answer for what was done with what was given.

Responsibility is much the same. A title does not make the road shorter, the reports clearer, the seekers wiser, or the old arguments quieter. It only makes more people expect you to know which of those things must be answered first.

I admit that in my early days with the Circle, I felt a need to prove myself. It was not only pride, though pride had its teeth in me too. I was a human standing among long-lived folk, many of them older, stranger, and more rooted in the Coast’s wild places than I was. I had also learned what it meant to step forward when needed and fall all the same. Mauglir had taught me that, though not by kindness. Some part of me wanted to prove I belonged there. Another part wanted to prove it to myself. What I did not understand was that my efforts were being regarded.

Toshiro had a good eye for the kind of strength that does not announce itself. There were other rangers in those days, some older in years, some with longer names in the Circle, some better known to the Coast than I was. He did not seem much interested in choosing the loudest bow or the proudest trail-name. The Circle was thin then, and thin things survive by knowing what they can actually lean on. I was present. I answered when called. I took patrols that needed taking, read reports that needed reading, stood through meetings, and returned from roads with what I had found. I thought I was proving myself useful. Toshiro, I think, was deciding I already was. Or perhaps I was simply the last fool still standing close enough to be handed the work. I have considered that possibility too. It is also possible that I had only made the old mistake of working too hard where a wiser man would have looked busy elsewhere.

So by the time he went east, toward Shadowdale and the rumors that had begun moving with the first hard winds of the Amnian troubles, there was no great naming to be done. Word from the Fist had already come that Amn meant to advance toward Beregost within days, and that passage south of the town would be blockaded. Roads, woods, and coastlines that had been dangerous in ordinary ways were beginning to matter as lines on a war map. Toshiro had many reasons to look east and south at once, and none of them made the ranger work lighter.

Toshiro was Supreme Ranger in those days, a title that has since faded from use, or from need, but then carried weight among the rangers of the Circle. I was High Ranger beneath him. No hand needed to be laid on my shoulder before the Grove. No speech beneath the branches was required. The ranger work came to me because that was the shape he had already trusted into being. Everyone knew it. That made it no lighter.

His letter before leaving was practical, as most useful letters are. There were warnings in it, instructions, names to mind, and roads that might soon matter more than they had the tenday before, especially with Amn’s shadow lengthening northward. He had a way of writing as if the next disaster were already standing just beyond sight and needed only a careless man to invite it closer. I found that irritating when I was younger. Later, I found it accurate.

Toshiro’s letter named Catam D’Argente as my second while he was away, which was sensible enough. Catam had been with the Circle long enough to know its moods, silences, and old scars better than most. He was not always an easy man to read, but easy men are not always the ones you want beside you when the work turns difficult. In time, I would come to count the half-elf among the most loyal and dependable rangers I knew on the Coast. The Coast had many men with bows. It had fewer who could be trusted when no one was watching, and fewer still who would stay when the storms came.

By then, the Circle had already begun making do with the hands still present. Aerwin Swift had been named High Druid so the druids had someone to look to, and the ranger work had settled more heavily where Toshiro’s absence left it. None of it felt like ceremony. It felt like gaps being covered before the next hard rain found them.

Responsibility brought another lesson with it, less grand than men imagine and more difficult than it sounds. A High Ranger cannot know only roads, tracks, and reports. He must know his rangers. Not as names on a roster, but as living men and women with strengths, tempers, habits, blind places, and gifts they may not yet have learned to trust. Some read sign better than they speak to frightened folk. Some stand bravely in a fight and still need watching when patience is required. Others are fit to guide a seeker, follow a trail no one else can see, or stand in the rain until a village remembers it is not alone.

Celduil Sellie was one of those I needed to know better.

He had been only a name to me once, one more report carried into the Grove and placed among the many matters Toshiro expected me to notice. By then he was no longer ink and rumor. He was a ranger of the Circle, walking beside me beneath Cloakwood branches, and because I was High Ranger, that meant I had to know more than his name. I had to know how he watched, how he judged, when he spoke, when he held silence, and what sort of trust could be placed in him when no one else was near enough to correct a mistake.

The road that gave me that chance led us toward Caldur Greenleaf.

I write his name carefully because Caldur Greenleaf did become part of the Circle, and no name that took root there should be handled as if it were only passing through. He was not one of those whose road crossed mine again and again in the years that followed, not as Toshiro’s did, or Celduil’s, or Catam’s. But the worth of a man’s place is not measured only by how often he returns to the page. Some enter at the right season, teach what the moment requires, and remain part of the wider wood even when their branch grows beyond the path a memoir follows.

The letter, as I recall it, came from a druid of Silvanus who had already reached toward the Circle before we went looking for him. That mattered. Men often came to the wild claiming to love it, but there is a difference between a man who declares himself guardian of all he sees and one who asks to be measured by those already bound to the work. Caldur had not demanded a place. He had reached for one. That made him worth hearing. It did not make him already trusted.

Celduil brought me the matter as one ranger brings another a track he is not yet ready to name. There was interest in his voice, but not certainty. That was one of the first things I liked in him. Certainty is useful once the arrow is loosed. Before that, it can blind a man. Celduil did not press Caldur into virtue before we had seen him, nor into danger before we had heard him. He gave what he knew, held back what he did not, and let the road do the rest.

The Cloakwood received us in its usual manner, with damp air, poor footing, and roots where a boot wanted to be. I never found the place gloomy. Dangerous, yes. Unforgiving in places. But not gloomy.

Celduil moved well there. Not perfectly. Perfect is a lie told by men trying to sell training to fools. But he moved with care, and care is worth more in a forest than elegance. He didn’t waste motion cutting at every branch that brushed him. He noticed sign without needing to announce each discovery. When he paused, I began to understand that the pause meant something, not that he had lost the trail. That mattered. Rangers can travel together for days and still not learn one another if each is too busy proving he can travel alone.

We found traces of Caldur’s passing before we found the man himself. Not boastful marks. Not broken branches left like a drunkard’s argument with the trees. Small things. A place where disturbed moss had been set back as best it could be. A snare cut and left where another might see it for warning. A print half-filled with rain where someone had stepped lightly despite the wet ground. None of it proved much by itself. Little things rarely do. But little things are often where a man forgets to lie.

I remember kneeling beside one of those places and pressing two fingers into the soil. It was cold, wet, and ordinary beneath my hand. That suited the work. Trials do not always begin with questions spoken aloud. Sometimes they begin with what a man leaves behind when he believes no one is watching.

“Careful,” Celduil said, quiet enough that it was meant for me and not the trees.

“Aye,” I answered. “Or careful enough to know he is being looked for.”

He looked at me then, not sharply, but with interest.

I shrugged. “The Coast has taught me not to give the first answer too much comfort.”

That may not be exactly what I said. It sounds better now than I likely managed with mud on one knee and rainwater finding the back of my collar. But it was near enough. Celduil accepted it, which told me something about him too. Some men take any questioned conclusion as an insult. Celduil did not.

We met Caldur before the day was done. I remember him less as a face than as a hard presence among trees he clearly respected. He was human, as I recall him, bearded and weathered, dressed more in hide and rough leathers than anything made for comfort. He had the stillness some druids carry when they have spent long enough listening to roots and rain that ordinary speech begins to feel like interruption. There was certainty in him, not loud, not boastful, but settled. He spoke of Silvanus with the weight of a man who had bent his life around an old law and did not think that law needed softening to be true. I believed that much.

Belief was not judgment.

That was the trouble. False men are easier in some ways. Let a false man speak long enough and he often grows fond of his own cleverness. He reaches too far. He forgets which lie he gave first. His eyes go to the wrong place when pressed. Sincere men are harder, because sincerity can walk a man toward ruin with clean hands. Shadow Druids did not lack conviction. Many cruel men do not.

Caldur did not strike me as cruel. He did not strike me as foolish either, though first meetings are poor soil for certainty. It was not doubt I saw in him. That would have been easier. It was conviction, and conviction asks to be weighed carefully when it stands near old wounds. A Silvanite may understand patience better than most men, but even patience can become pride if a man mistakes the forest’s age for his own wisdom. I could respect him. I could also mistrust him.

Celduil watched him differently than I did. Not worse. Differently. He listened for kinship, perhaps, or for the ways one servant of the wild speaks to another when words are not all that is being weighed. I watched what changed when Caldur moved, what he touched without thought, what he ignored, how much room he took in the forest while speaking of serving it. A man may speak well of the trees and still crush what he never thought to look for.

Because I was the one sent to begin the measure of him, I could not only listen for pleasing answers. I was no druid, and I did not pretend to be one. But the Circle was thin, the roads were worsening, and someone had to learn whether Caldur’s letter had roots beneath it. Celduil served as the second ranger’s eye beside me, and I was grateful for it. A second pair of eyes does not make judgment easy, but it makes a man less likely to mistake his own shadow for the whole shape of a thing.

At some point, I found myself wishing Toshiro were there. Not because I wanted him to take the decision from me, though there may have been some of that too if I am honest. I wanted to see what he would notice first. Whether he would ask one of those spare questions that opened a man more cleanly than an hour of speech. Whether he would see danger where I saw only intensity, or promise where I saw only uncertainty. It is one thing to carry rank when the work is plain. It is another when the answer has roots on both sides.

That was when I prayed.

Not loudly. Not with hands raised or words fit for a shrine. I had been answered before. That is the plainest way I know to say it. But being answered and knowing how to ask are not the same thing. In the Cloakwood, with Celduil waiting on my word and another man’s worth not yet clear to me, I asked for something I had not often known how to ask plainly. Not strength. Not healing. Not a keener arrow or a harder skin. Judgment.

Wisdom is not a simple thing to ask for. A man usually expects certainty. It did not come that way. No voice came. No branch bent toward Caldur. No stag stepped from the brush to approve one path over another. The answer, if answer it was, came as a quiet settling in me, the way a trail sometimes shows itself better once the glare has gone. I felt no older, no grander, no closer to the gods than a muddy ranger in a damp wood has any right to feel. I only found myself less eager to decide quickly.

That was enough.

I asked fewer questions after that, but better ones. Or I hope they were better. I asked what Caldur believed service to the Circle would require of him, and what he would refuse even if asked by those wearing our name. I asked what he thought a druid owed to folk who feared the forest, and what the forest was owed when folk had taken too much. I asked when wrath served balance and when it only fed the man carrying it. Men reveal more in what they believe comes after conviction than in how beautifully they name their gods.

Celduil added questions of his own. He was careful, but not timid. That distinction pleased me. A timid man softens every word because he fears the answer. A careful one shapes the question so the answer cannot slip past too easily. I began to see then that Celduil’s quiet had more watchfulness than retreat in it. He did not need to be the first voice in a clearing. He was willing to be the one who heard what the first voice missed.

I do not remember every answer Caldur gave. I remember the shape of them. He did not seem to think the Circle would make his service easier, which spoke well of him. He did not speak as if Silvanus had made him master of every root his boot passed near, which spoke better. There was firmness in him, and I knew firmness could cut both ways, but there was restraint too. Enough, at least, for the first door to open.

So I gave my judgment as best I could. Caldur Greenleaf was worth bringing nearer, worth placing before the Circle’s deeper measure, not because he had spoken well beneath trees one afternoon, but because he had shown enough care, restraint, and steadiness to be trusted with the next step. Toshiro would approve him afterward, brief as ever, but that came later. In the moment, the judgment before us was smaller than full initiation, and difficult enough.

We left the Cloakwood with more damp in our clothes than wisdom in our packs, though perhaps that is how wisdom prefers to travel. Celduil walked beside me for a time without speaking. I did not press him. There had been enough words. My boots found the path poorly twice, and Celduil noticed neither time, or was kind enough not to show it.

Near the edge of the wood, he said, “He believes what he says.”

“Aye,” I answered.

That was all. It was not the whole judgment, but it was the first stone placed where a crossing had been made.

When I made my report, I thought again of Toshiro’s letter, of Catam named beside me, of Celduil no longer being merely a name in another man’s hand, and of Caldur standing beneath Cloakwood branches with a Silvanite’s certainty held carefully in check. I thought of how easily a title can trick a man into answering faster than doubt allows. The blessing I had asked for did not give me certainty. It only kept me from running ahead of what I knew.

I set the report with the others and rubbed dried mud from the heel of my hand before it could flake onto the page. Somewhere beyond the Grove, Toshiro was on the road east, and south of us the first lines of the Amnian troubles were being drawn in roads, villages, and rumors. Catam had his own paths to watch. Celduil had become more than ink. Caldur’s name had been brought in from the edge of a letter and set upon the first part of the path. I remember the smell of damp paper, wet leather, and Cloakwood still clinging to my sleeves while the ink dried.
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Lambe
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Re: Memoirs of a Ranger - Lambe Arkolyn

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3 - 30

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The lines that had to be held.

The Circle did not come to Gullykin on a whim. We were not restless archers looking for a war to enter, nor did we decide that the quarrel between Baldur’s Gate and Amn had become ours simply because men in armor had begun shouting loudly enough. The road to Gullykin had been laid over months, one warning at a time, until standing aside became its own kind of choice.

It began, as many troubles do, with a letter.

Isenduil found it, if memory serves, after seeing a man place something into a hollow tree. The letter was addressed to the druids and rangers of the Enclave of the Green Triad and signed by one calling himself the General in the Dark. The name stayed with me because it sounded like the sort of thing a man chooses when he wants to be both heard and hidden. The letter spoke of whispers of war from Nashkel’s fortified border to Wyrm’s Crossing, of mobs hunting scapegoats, of Dukes ready to treat the breaking of the bridge as cause for war, and of factions friendly to Baldur’s Gate being urged toward defensive pacts should Amn invade.

That was where the matter first began to press against us. The Circle did not belong to Baldur’s Gate’s pride, and Amn’s pride did not offend us more. Pride was common enough on both sides. The roads concerned us more. If war came north, it would pass through woods, farms, streams, and villages. It would cut green wood for fires, trample fields, scatter game, frighten small folk, and leave damage behind long after the armies moved on.

There were arguments after that, as there should have been. Toshiro saw the roads, the allies, and the lines that would matter if Amn broke through, from Doron Amar and the Grove to the approaches through the Sharpteeth and Gullykin. Syclya Fren saw another truth. She was a druid of the Circle, and a wild elf besides, which mattered. Her eyes were not trained first toward city walls, military roads, or the promises of dukes. She looked to the forests, the creatures within them, and the danger of letting the Circle become a tool of one city against another. She warned against fighting for a nation’s pride and spoke instead of fortifying the wild, protecting the forests, and answering only what threatened them.

Both were right enough to make the matter difficult.

By the time I wrote my own report in early Hammer, the question had already sharpened. Word from the Fist was that Amn would be advancing toward Beregost in five days or so. The Fist was preparing to blockade all passage south of Beregost. Armies would be marching through the woods and along the coasts. It was a small report, as reports go, only a few lines, but enough to tell the Circle that trouble was no longer content to stay in rumor.

I was standing near the shrine of Mielikki north of Beregost when the warning finally stopped feeling like rumor. Word came up the road that Amnian forces were nearing Beregost, close enough that refugees had begun moving before the fighting fully swallowed the town. That was mercy of a kind, if a hard one, enough time for some to gather children, bundles, old folk, and whatever could be carried in frightened hands. News travels strangely before battle. It runs ahead in broken pieces, on carts, in prayers, in men who do not look back until they have put a mile behind them. “So it begins,” I thought at that moment. It was not a brave thought. It was the kind of thing that comes to a man when the road he has been watching finally brings what he feared it would.

The days that followed did not move cleanly. There were warnings, sudden departures, men asking questions no one could answer fully, and the steady worsening of roads. Mud remembers armies, and so do broken fences, stripped trees, frightened animals, and villages that begin keeping more doors barred than open. I had seen trouble before, but this was different. A bandit band can vanish into trees. A monster can be tracked to a lair. War spreads.

Gullykin was one of those places the great powers might have called small. But a door is still a door to someone, a garden is still food, and a village is still the whole world to those born into it.

By the time I reached Gullykin, the preparations had begun in earnest. It was not a place I had wandered to by chance. Gullykin had been named before the fighting reached it, a defensive line agreed upon by the Circle and by our allies if Amn tried to press north through that route. Doron Amar had set a defensive point there at the Duke’s request, meant to stop the Amnians from using the Gullykin crossing over the Firewine River to outflank the Flaming Fist position. Gullykin was not the Circle’s line alone. The elves had been asked to hold it, and Vanira Talamora, a councillor of Doron Amar, was among those they looked to. I was High Ranger of the Circle, and Toshiro was still Supreme Ranger, but several groups were trying to survive the same ground, and that required care. We listened where listening was wise, gave counsel where our eyes were useful, and held what we were given to hold.

The Circle was not an army. We had strong hands, sharp eyes, and enough stubbornness to make trouble for a larger force, but numbers matter in war no matter what songs prefer. Our worth was in scouting, warning, reading ground, and finding paths. I did not command that line, but I knew my work upon it. Ground speaks before men do, if a ranger has the patience to listen. Paths, cover, wet soil, bent grass, frightened birds, the places men avoid without knowing why. Those things mattered, and they were mine to read.

Toshiro was there. That matters. I will not dress the memory as if I stood alone beneath a weight no other hands touched. He was still the steadier figure many eyes turned toward without thinking, still the man whose presence could make even confusion arrange itself a little more usefully. But standing beside a man is not the same as being carried by him. A younger ranger may think otherwise until the arrows begin to fall, or the shouts come from two directions at once, or someone looks to him and asks where to stand.

Vanira was there as well. I remember her quiet more than anything she said, and the way her eyes lowered now and then as if the road itself had left its report on our feet. I am sure she noticed the seam giving way along one of my boots. It had been doing that for longer than I cared to admit. I could have bought a new pair in Waterdeep, or in Baldur’s Gate after I returned, but a ranger learns to be careful about boots. I had not yet found a pair worth the coin. So I kept mending the old ones, telling myself they still held well enough, right up until cold water began proving otherwise. If Vanira measured anything from that, she kept it to herself. At the time I only knew that my feet were damp, the roads were growing worse, and war did not care whether a ranger had found better boots.

Azeem was with us too, his hood up against the weather and the work, though I more often thought of him in his turban than beneath a Circle cowl. His skin was dark as tilled soil from the south, and he had a steady way about him that made him easy to trust on a line. In a gathering of archers and woodsmen, steadiness is worth more than most men’s boasting.

Celduil was there as well, and with him his snow wolf, pale against the mud and winter-dark ground. I wish I remembered the creature’s name. I remember the shape of it better than the word for it, white fur dampened by weather, ears attentive, and a stillness that seemed to understand more of men’s tension than most men understood of wolves. There were others near us too, including an elven ranger whose name has not stayed with me clearly enough to set down. I will not invent certainty where memory has worn thin.

The first day was not all battle. Some of it was worse in the way waiting can be worse. Gullykin had to be watched before it could be defended, and watched by eyes that understood more than banners. Word came of a hin family caught where no family should have been. Gullykin’s folk had been sent to Doron Amar for refuge, or so we understood, which made the report worse rather than better. Someone had been missed, or someone had tried to return, and now they were too near a village emptied for war.

The hurry of it stayed with me more than the order, the low voices, checked bows, a hand pointing toward a cut in the ground, the snow wolf restless at Celduil’s side, and Vanira moving as if the path had already arranged itself in her mind.

We found them frightened, not yet broken, which is a mercy I have learned not to call small. What stays with me is low earth, scrub, the smell of damp stone, and the feeling that every moment spent guiding them back was a moment borrowed from some other part of the line. Perhaps there were slavers near them, or perhaps the rumor of slavers grew afterward because frightened folk often give fear the name that fits best in their mouths. It hardly mattered to the family in that moment. They had needed hands between them and danger, and for that hour, hands were found.

Afterward, the line needed eyes farther south. Vanira’s defenders could not hold Gullykin by guessing what moved beyond it. A small party went toward Ulcaster’s ruins to learn whether the Amnian threat was only rumor, vanguard, or army. Later records would call it Doron Amar elves with a couple of human allies, and I suspect Azeem and I were the two meant. That is enough certainty for this memory.

South of Gullykin, we found the answer none of us wanted. The Amnians were there in strength near Ulcaster, too many to dismiss as scouts or raiders. They gave the elves a chance to join Amn, which was either arrogance, poor judgment, or both. The answer was no. We had seen enough by then. The line at Gullykin was not a precaution. It was about to be needed.

Before the worst of it reached us, I set one hand against the earth and asked the Lady for endurance. Not victory, not glory, not even safety. Only enough strength to stand where I was needed and not fail through weariness alone. That was a different prayer than the ones I had once half-mumbled in fear or pain. I knew who I was asking. I knew why. I knew also that an answer, if granted, would not make the arrows miss or the swords grow soft.

The answer did not come as a voice. It came as breath returning when it should have stayed gone, as strength settling into tired limbs like roots finding deeper soil. I was still afraid, still flesh, and my shoulders still burned. But I could stand.

So I stood.

When the battle came in earnest, I did not see it whole. No man inside such fighting sees the whole. I knew it then as noise, smoke, running feet, arrows called for and loosed, and the sickening knowledge that one held line did not mean another had not broken. Men came against Gullykin in armor and formation, not rabble with dull knives and hunger in their eyes. They were soldiers, and soldiers are dangerous in a different way. They know how to trust the man beside them. They know how to move behind shields. They kept coming even when you could see fear had found them. Legionnaires.

There were catapults somewhere in the matter, and they had to be answered before they made ruins of the village. I learned the officers’ names more clearly afterward than I knew them in the mud, Alphonse Entrado with the first company and Samuel Horenze with the second. At the time they were only pressure, orders, armor, and men trying to force their way through. Both died in the fighting.

There were Golden Legionnaires too, or men I came to know by that name after. They were not hard to remember. Some men carry themselves as if they are used to breaking the part of a line others could not. There were Cowled Wizards among the later waves as well, and that danger needed no report to explain it. Once magic began crossing the line, the air itself felt less trustworthy.

Vanira ordered archers toward the wizards when they were seen. I remember that not as a shouted phrase to carve in stone, but as the clear shape of the defense, with eyes looking past shields, bows lifting toward the danger in the rear, and men and elves understanding that some threats must be answered before they reach the front. Spellcasters change a battlefield. They make distance matter less. They can leave a brave man standing useless in his own body. They make a man wish every arrow in his quiver knew the path without help.

One spell struck near enough that I felt the hair rise along my arms before the sound reached me. For a breath the world flashed white around the edges, and a man near the front stood with his bow half-raised, eyes open, body refusing him. Someone dragged him down before the next volley found him. I loosed at the shapes behind the shields then, not because I knew which robed figure had done it, but because the men in the rear had become as dangerous as the men pressing the front.

There were moments that return sharply and others that come only as noise. One Amnian shield lifted just before my arrow struck. The snap of a bowstring near my ear was not my own. Toshiro’s voice carried somewhere to one side, not loud enough to be called shouting, but heard because the right men knew to listen for it. Azeem was steady under his hood, where another man might have spent himself proving he was brave. Vanira moved with that quiet of hers, saying little, watching much. Celduil’s wolf stayed low and ready near the churned ground. I remember a face at a doorway too, pale with fear and stubbornness, there and gone again before I could tell whose side it belonged to.

Once I caught movement where there should have been none, only the edge of a shield behind smoke and winter brush. I called warning before I had fully drawn, and the line shifted just enough that the first rush met arrows instead of backs. It was not a grand thing. Most useful things in a fight are not.

The ground mattered. Low rises broke sight, and small paths bent strangely around homes and earthworks. The village itself refused to become a proper battlefield, which may have been one of the reasons it could be defended at all. Large men in armor are dangerous, but they do not always love low places, narrow ways, and ground that asks them to choose between order and speed. Rangers understand such requests better than soldiers do.

I do not remember how many arrows I loosed, only that I loosed enough for my fingers to grow clumsy and for the next shot to begin in the ache of my shoulder before the target had fully shown itself. I kept moving because staying too long in one place teaches the enemy where to send death. I remember mud pulling at my boots and, once, nearly taking the failing one off altogether. That would have been a fine ending for a High Ranger, killed while arguing with his footwear. I kept the boot, though not without language Mother would not have approved of.

The first company broke, but victory on one part of the line did not end the danger. I did not understand the whole shape of it then. Few of us could have. There was too much noise, too much movement, too many calls pulling men toward whatever danger seemed nearest. Much of the defense had gone forward to meet the attack before it reached the village, and there were catapults to answer before they could make ruins of Gullykin. That work mattered, but it left too few hands behind. While the village was thinned, the second Amnian company under Horenze pressed in and took Gullykin. I remember the knowledge of that landing harder than any single blow. A line can hold in one place and still fail in another, not always through folly, but because there are too few people, too many roads, and no way to stand everywhere at once.

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So we went back.

At one turn between the low houses, smoke made strangers of everyone. I drew on a shape near a broken fence and stopped only when I saw the flash of green at his shoulder. One breath later he was gone, and I was moving again, but my fingers remembered how close they had come to loosing.

What memory keeps clearest is the return, the sick taste of it, the knowledge that a place we had tried to shield now had enemy feet inside it, the defenders gathering what strength they had left and moving to retake Gullykin. I cannot put every step in order. Smoke, shouting, and a rush through ground that had become familiar too late remain clearer than the order of steps, as does the small wrongness of seeing an enemy where a villager should have been, and the hard work of pushing men out of a place once they have had even an hour to believe it theirs.

I held until my breath went ragged again. Then the blessing held me a little longer, not beyond pain or fear, but long enough. My arm shook. My legs burned. Once I had to lean a hand against damp earth and swallow hard before standing again. But the strength returned where it should have failed completely, and that was enough to loose, move, warn, and stand.

The Amnians did not lack courage. Some pressed forward with the blank obedience of soldiers who had already accepted the day’s bargain, some looked as afraid as any man should look when arrows were in the air, and some reached ground I wish they had not reached. We gave ground where we had to, took it back where we could, and tried to keep the village from being swallowed by a war that had begun far from its doors.

Gullykin’s defenders were not all Circle, and the Circle was not the reason the village held. Hin courage was part of that day even if most of Gullykin’s folk had been sent to Doron Amar. Some had carried warnings. Some had guided larger defenders through ways we would have missed. Some had sheltered those who could not run before the village emptied. I have no wish to steal their share of the memory. Doron Amar’s line bled there. The Evereskan rangers arrived when the first line had been pressed hard, and their coming mattered.

Vanira passed near me at one point, or I passed near her. Memory will not swear which. Her eyes lowered again, and I thought absurdly of my boot. It had no place in the middle of such a day, and therefore it stayed in my mind. Men remember strange things under pressure, such as a crow on a fence, a loose strap, mud on another man’s cheek, or a woman looking at a failing boot while armies tried to decide whether a village would remain itself.

Azeem’s steadiness stayed with me too. He made the line stronger by not needing to prove he belonged on it. Hood up, cloak dark with weather, bow or blade where needed, he wasted little motion on display. Later, in quieter times, he would pass a better pair of boots to me, as simply as Circle folk often passed along gear that still had use in it. A thing no longer needed by one could still serve another. But that came later. At Gullykin, my old boots remained my problem.

Horenze died in the fighting, as Entrado had before him, but not every Amnian died where he stood. Some of those who remained fell back after setting part of Gullykin to flame. Gullykin was back in friendly hands, though it did not feel untouched or safe. Too many had died for the word victory to sit easily in the mouth. The village was badly damaged, and some of the fallen would only rise again because priests and healers did the work that comes after blades are lowered. The line had held, broken, and been taken back, which is not the same thing as holding cleanly.

When the fighting eased, I found I had mud nearly to my knees and no clear memory of when it had climbed that high. My bow hand ached when I opened it, and the fingers did not want to straighten. My mouth tasted of smoke, rain, and old fear. The blessing that had steadied me did not leave all at once, but neither did it remain as strength to spend freely. It settled back into me like a tide going out, leaving behind exhaustion enough to prove it had not been mine alone.

Toshiro was still there. Not as a shining figure or some storybook captain, but as himself, damp, watchful, still measuring what had been held and what might yet need holding. I understood, perhaps more than I had before, that his presence did not make the burden smaller. It showed me its proper size.

In that moment, there were low doors still closed against the weather, small windows darkened by smoke, and muddy paths where weary feet began to move again. Somewhere behind me, someone called for water and no one answered quickly enough. I stood with damp socks, a sore hand, and the taste of war still in my mouth, looking back at a village the great powers might have called small.

The line buckled, but it held enough.

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