Fragment 16 – Eril Scouts

Diaries The Saga Of Berra — Fragment 16

1625


Hailing the Heroes of Sacred-Time Questing
Berra stepped into the crowd with proud Eril
Marched with the brothers of Humakt in concert
Saw Kallyr Starbringer starting the Light Quest

There in the man-press was Rajar the Mighty
Slighted by Eurmal in guise as a sneak-thief
Rage made him strike with his hand opened shieldwise
Flat to the chest of the robber who used him

Eril Humakti was swift to the scene then
Sword of all Swords and as stiff as their sword-blades
Ever unyielding and strong in the line-fight
Model of Humakt the Eager for Battle

Berra stood by at the shoulder of Eril1Another heroic interpretation, rather unlikely given the rank of the junior initiate within the temple, and their known tempestuous relationship
Watching with awe as he sought truth from Rajar
Seeing the Y-rune was burning within him
Inward swore Berra to learn of his wisdom

Walking and eating a while with the Bison
Berra’s sharp eyes spotted Nala in turmoil
Followed with Rajar to Ernalda’s temple
Heard of the vision that Nala was fearing2We can say with some degree of certainty that Berra was not in the meeting in which Kalis interpreted the vision of Nala; given the happenings over Sacred Time there was an unusually deep investigation conducted in Boldhome, and this conversation is recorded as having only Kalis, Nala, and ‘a horse, un-named’ presumed to be Tiwr the Unicorn

Swift were her feet as she ran to fetch Eril
Sword-Lord of Sword-Lords and Head of the Fyrdfolk3Often ‘fyrdmen’ but a neutral, plural noun
Speaking plain words in which fear never featured
Berra caused Eril to turn to greet Nala

Orders were given for scouting from Northgate
Berra was trusted to lead a contingent
Calling her friends to the head of the ramp-road
Berra had Tiwr4Some early manuscripts have ‘Nala’, but there is surprising consistency in Tiwr standing in for Nala here, across the surviving corpus and Serala and Rajar

Out on the Road Berra rode with her scout-group
Eyes of the hawk matched with eyes of the Dagger
Unicorn eyes and the eyes of the bison
Seeing the crush of the grass by the roadside

There stood the ghost of the murdered man Vengulf
Cottar of honour with wounds from sharp arrows
Berra protected his ghost from destruction
Had Nala lay him to sleep with due honour

Then cunning Berra sent back to the city
Sent back the galloping horse of Serala
Rider with warning of scouts on the roadway
Lunars in number too small for invasion

Lesser in number and creeping in darkness
Berra led onward on foot in the roadway
Showing by hand and by feel of the footing
Places for others to follow the foot-sword5We would use ‘Infanteer’, but of note is the training regime of the Nochet Humakti Battalion, famed for asking every officer how they would get their swords to where they were needed, before any other questions were asked of a battle. The correct answer, of course, considers whether swords are needed, and the movement of large numbers of troops.

Up where the mountains held tight a small valley
Lunars had taken the house of a freeman
Slaughtered his family laughing to do so
Leaving their bodies trod into the pig-muck6A particularly brutal way of denying death rites to a body, while rendering animals taboo and useless for the Sartarites of the area

Few were the warriors facing the Lunars
Fewer when Berra sent Nala to Boldhome
Sending her spirit to soar on the air-wind
Leaving an axe and a sword to the road-dust

Berra spoke then to sweet Mellia White-Robe
Now we may die and the Lunars are many
You who are weaponless must fall if we do
We stand together and thus I release you

Mellia spoke in reply to the Sword-child
You will be warring with many and need me
How can I leave those I know will be wounded
Ask not this thing for my heart breaks in pity

Wide was the smile of the daughter of Jarang
Death is my lot but your hand may save many
Go then with Nala and keep watch with honour
We who are warriors face death unflinching

Then in the night-cloud stout Rajar she ordered
Building redoubts for defence in the roadway
Bloodied were hands by the effort of building
Fitting their offering ere there was slaughter

Battle was joined before others could muster
Swift on the wings of the warning to Boldhome
Arrows rained down on the dry rock around them
Rajar was bloodied and Berra crouched with him

Now in the darkness Serala had ridden
Cantered to Boldhome down paths lit by Yelm-light7This is probably a Yelmalio rather then Yelm Light, likely the Catseye runespell
There she found waiting and cloaked in the darkness
Sword-Lord Humakti D’Val of the duck-folk

Swift to the battle to save his proud daughter8Sword-daughter, or battle-maiden, was a common epithet of the time, but not often applied to a personal relationship
Sword lept to saddle9A riding Duck is as unusual as it sounds, and this line has caused some perplexity. D’Val, who may have been an amalgam of several heroes, in this case might have been a human with duckist sympathies. However, a D’Val is attested in the rolls of Humakt, and so we must, as we have done previously, treat him as a single entitiy. and rode on the night-road
Deep in the darkness Serala behind him
Galloped above Boldhome sleeping below them

Wounded and bloody the Bison of Boldhome
Lay behind rocks as he waited with patience10The compelling personality of Berra Jarang’s Daughter is clear here. Persuading a Storm Bull not to charge at Lunars is strong evidence that she was born to leadership.
Schooled by Humakti to pause before slaughter
Letting the Lunars be gathered together

Into the corral of Billy and Road-horse11“Why Road? They get you there faster, but the infantry always complain about them, and they never go quite where you want to be.”
Riding with speed came D’Val and Serala
Evening numbers to four stout defenders
Bringing the news that the message reached Boldhome

Burning the wall of the stockade before them
Piercing with arrows of fire and of flame-tongue
Berra drew out the attackers of Vengulf
Counting two handsworth the four stood to battle

Smiting with arrows the slayers of children
Berra kept Rajar in spirits and waiting
Letting the enemy close their position
Under the Yelm-Light12This probably was the light of Yelm Serala was gifted

Back at the longhouse a master of evil
Trained in the ways of the Priests of the Lunars
Summoned the light of the Red Moon upon them
Untouched by arrows that came from Serala

Seeing how bone-heads had broken upon him
Berra took power from anger within her
Struck at his shield with the rigor of Humakt
Clove it in twain with the Truth of her soul-strength

Then from her quiver she drew a sharp arrow
Flint she had knapped from the land of Esrola
Drew back her bow in the way of the Southland
Sped on its way a death-splinter to eye-hithe13eye-haven: the arrow struck him in the eye, and lodged there, probably through his brain.

Smiling to see how the caster dropped slaughtered
Berra released Rajar’s rage to the battle
Calling his charge as the ranks of the lunars
Thinned out by Nala were reaching the rockworks

Deep in the fury held sacred to Urox
Rajar rode out with his heels striking steed-blood
Screaming defiance to scions of Chaos
Axes he held and his eyes promised murder

Bloodied and wounded he charged through their arrows
Smiting with axe-blow and head-strike14Contextually, mighty blows that take off a head or smash a skull. Also, colloquially, head-butting. Given the situation this could be both. before him
Rajar was wounded so blood wet the rock-ground
Still he lashed out in the fury of Storm-Bull

After came Berra and Sword-Lord Humakti
Slaying the horses and riders before them
Keeping the life of the Bison before them
Keeping his flanks as he carved through the foe-men

What Really Happened

Session Quotes

  • 1
    Another heroic interpretation, rather unlikely given the rank of the junior initiate within the temple, and their known tempestuous relationship
  • 2
    We can say with some degree of certainty that Berra was not in the meeting in which Kalis interpreted the vision of Nala; given the happenings over Sacred Time there was an unusually deep investigation conducted in Boldhome, and this conversation is recorded as having only Kalis, Nala, and ‘a horse, un-named’ presumed to be Tiwr the Unicorn
  • 3
    Often ‘fyrdmen’ but a neutral, plural noun
  • 4
    Some early manuscripts have ‘Nala’, but there is surprising consistency in Tiwr standing in for Nala here, across the surviving corpus
  • 5
    We would use ‘Infanteer’, but of note is the training regime of the Nochet Humakti Battalion, famed for asking every officer how they would get their swords to where they were needed, before any other questions were asked of a battle. The correct answer, of course, considers whether swords are needed, and the movement of large numbers of troops.
  • 6
    A particularly brutal way of denying death rites to a body, while rendering animals taboo and useless for the Sartarites of the area
  • 7
    This is probably a Yelmalio rather then Yelm Light, likely the Catseye runespell
  • 8
    Sword-daughter, or battle-maiden, was a common epithet of the time, but not often applied to a personal relationship
  • 9
    A riding Duck is as unusual as it sounds, and this line has caused some perplexity. D’Val, who may have been an amalgam of several heroes, in this case might have been a human with duckist sympathies. However, a D’Val is attested in the rolls of Humakt, and so we must, as we have done previously, treat him as a single entitiy.
  • 10
    The compelling personality of Berra Jarang’s Daughter is clear here. Persuading a Storm Bull not to charge at Lunars is strong evidence that she was born to leadership.
  • 11
    “Why Road? They get you there faster, but the infantry always complain about them, and they never go quite where you want to be.”
  • 12
    This probably was the light of Yelm
  • 13
    eye-haven: the arrow struck him in the eye, and lodged there, probably through his brain.
  • 14
    Contextually, mighty blows that take off a head or smash a skull. Also, colloquially, head-butting. Given the situation this could be both.