
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.

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.










