Autumn of Year TwoThe merchants arrived on the 17th of Limestone. As agreed to last year, they would strike our stone gate five times, signaling their arrival. Olon the Diplomat was first out the front gate, and hurriedly talked with the nearest tradesman, chatting about this or that gossip from the capital. Del followed close behind, hoping to confirm the cararvan brought us an anvil or two. Turning the corner, Del saw nothing strange about the scene, but as he walked closer to the arriving wagons he saw something horrible!
A ragged corpse, clothed in tattered leather, rose from the sand and flung itself at the last wagon! Surely it can't be moving?
----
Time for a short history lesson.
That swollen corpse, what used to be Abli Luretome the human, was turned necromancer only after living most of his life. Born to unknown parents, not much happened until in his 23rd year of life he earned a position as a low bureaucrat. You might think that would keep him off the battlefield, but so often was his home of Cactushexes attacked by marauding necromancers that he pretty much fought for the rest of his mortal existence.
During this fighting, he unwittingly made friends with secret organizations dedicated to spreading the knowledge of undeath. How ironic.
Every year, the resurrected hordes would assault Cactushexes. Every year, Abli and the rest of the town's population would fight off the creatures, using all manner of improvised equipment and weaponry. After, when the enemy had broken, a call would sound from the darkness and the husks would immediately stop their fight and drag off any corpses they could. Abli would be celebrated for his heroism, Cactushexes would be repaired, and life would return to normal.
Until the next year, when the husks would return, and this time their ranks were reinforced with those who died the previous year. Abli would often move to attack a husk climbing the walls, only to look at their maggoty face and recognize, beneath that rotting flesh, an old friend or a past lover who had been dragged off into the night.
Abli did this for thirty years before breaking. He slowly became jealous of the power these necromancers wielded, and longed for an end to the hopeless nightmare that was the neverending siege of Cactushexes. And so Abli turned.
----
Del acted quickly, despite failing to comprehend the situation fully. "CLOSE THE GATE!" he shouted down the staircase. The safety of the outpost was above all. "Get inside the gate or there's no saving you!" he yelled to those on the surface.
Meanwhile, the necro closed with a hapless caravan guard. And then kept running past him. This necro was an absolute coward, it turns out, and whatever strength of character Abli had when he was alive was lost in the transformation. So he ran off into the desert, dropping bits of skin and bone. He did scare the heck out of a few camels.
Once they stopped laughing at the ridiculous situation, they again knocked five times and we hesitantly opened up the gate, weapons at the ready. As soon as we saw it was clear, it was like nothing had happened and we started bringing up the summer's craftwork for trade.
We traded for an anvil (thank god!) and also a steel sword for our swordfighter Nish.
Later, Del pulled me aside.
"Let's just keep this on the down-low, alright? I don't want anyone else to freak about what I saw up there."
"Well, of course. . . but do you think he will be back?"
"It's possible. We just have to keep the gate shut, waiting for those five knocks. If we're smart, nothing will get in."
----
In other news, we discovered a gigantic cluster of rubies! Our miners carefully extracted the gemstones, only to discover a precious star ruby amidst the others.
Unib is on her feet now, but isn't quite %100. I don't have enough experience to say whether she will fully recover, but at least she can lend a hand with the simpler tasks.
Oh, and my little experiment with surface farming proved a great success:
Life goes on, and I can't help but wonder: why does Fate tease us so? To narrowly avoid catastrophe, with the knowledge of how close we came to a horrible death, is a punishment in it's own right.
I should finish up my turn today, it's finally my weekend