Part of its body had been smashed, apparently stepped on by one of the giants, but even so he rifled through its clothing, finding nothing but a twisted blade of goblin make and various bits of metal and small shiny stones in a pouch upon its belt. He moved on. Three corpses later he located half of a goblin with something useful. Around its neck it wore a thick necklace of layered, metal chain armor. The thing was obviously too large for the goblin, but ripping it free from the corpse, Gnak was able to pass his head through the piece with little difficulty. It was a snug fit for his thick neck, but protected the whole of his throat from damage. It was valuable armor. Removing his own necklace from beneath the metal addition with some effort, he opened the pouch upon his own belt and dropped the necklace in. Then it struck him.
Every goblin corpse he had found carried a pouch. Though instead of teeth and bits of bone like he carried, the small leather or cloth pouches held different sized disks of various metals and shiny stones. If it was precious to them, could it not be useful to him as well? Dumping his own, larger pouch, he discarded that which he could easily collect again if he chose to. Then tying his necklace about his ankle, he returned to all the corpses he had already picked through and gathered up the metal disks and stones. For more than an hour he scavenged one corpse after another, working his way into the mouth of the pass itself. He had found a very well-crafted dagger, and a piece of armor a goblin wore upon its leg which fit nicely upon his forearm. By this point his pouch sagged from the weight within it, filled with the metal disks, jewelry in various fashions and the shiny stones in different colors. But still he collected.
Another hour passed and the sounds of the battle within the pass grew louder and louder. He now had five goblin pouches about his belt as well, each filled to capacity. Nearly a hundred goblins lay within the pass, each of them now stripped of the odd items they carried. Gnak was no fool. He knew it had to be their form of currency, but so heavy was his belt becoming that it threatened to snap beneath the weight. It was then that he made a decision.
Scaling up the side of one of the walls that was made by the gorge between the mountains, he found a deep crack within the stone. Carefully untying each pouch but his own, he placed them into the crack, out of sight from the ground below, or giant eyes above. Finished, he dropped back down to the trail below just as things took a sudden turn. From out of the pass ahead of him, goblins came running, rounding a corner in the pass, each of them scrambling as the ground began to shake beneath them. Gnak ducked low into the shadow of the stone wall and moved as quickly as he was able to exit the pass. Screams echoed louder and louder as the reverberating steps of the giants approached. He cleared the end of the pass just as the first goblins began to spill out as well. Carefully circling a tree beside the entrance, he crouched in its shadow and watched as the mass of goblins fled. They ran wildly, putting as much distance between them and the pass as they could, with constant looks back over their shoulders. Why they had wanted the pass cleared remained a mystery, but the outcome certainly was not. Just when Gnak thought the spectacle finished, he was proven wrong as his gaze returned once again to commotion within the pass.
More than two hundred more goblins ran atop their fallen comrades, sprinting as fast as their little green and black legs could carry them. The ground shook more with every passing second. With the tree creaking above him in protest, it was only a minute longer before the giants revealed themselves. The first was a great brute of a male, dragging an immense club of wood the size of a tree in one of its four hands. Stuck within the sides of the club were various blades and bones from enemies it had smashed. He was a hulking mammoth with dozens of wounds upon his feet, ankles, and shins, but so thick were the tissue and scars there that the wounds did not appear to slow him. From the effort of his chasing the goblins, the giant’s great maw opened and closed with a whooshing sound as air was sucked into and out of his lungs. It was a foe that none ever hoped to cross paths with unaware.
The second giant was a female near his equal in size. She worn naught but a great loincloth, her immense sagging breasts flopping against her belly with every step. She screeched at the retreating forms, waving her hands in threatening gestures as the male continued picking off stragglers, smashing them beneath his feet as if it were a game. Gnak saw his chance.
If these were the only two giants within the pass, he had an opportunity. Slipping out from behind the tree slowly to avoid detection, he carefully moved back into the mouth of the pass and into the shadows. Then it was all or nothing.
Sprinting down the path, he dodged outcroppings of stone and fallen goblins alike in an effort to make the first bend in the pass. Without so much as looking back he rushed headlong, hoping that no more giants awaited ahead, alert and ready to swat at him. More or less sliding around the first bend, he heard nothing from behind that told him he was being pursued, but ahead he saw something he had not been prepared for.
Skulls and bones. Millions of them were piled along the sides of the pass. Between the piles the ground was slick with goblin blood and gore, the majority of the dead having been smashed beneath the feet of the giants. A limb lay here, a head there, but Gnak’s eyes automatically sought out what he had spent the past few hours collecting. Everywhere the disks of metal and stones lay scattered upon the ground. Belts with pouches littered the ground, and scraps of weapons and armor lay in piles to either side of the path along with the bones. It was like nothing he had ever before imagined. There was enough metal here to armor an entire tribe of Orcs, and enough goblin blades to reforge them into something more practical. The giants had been in the pass for years it seemed, letting the dead and their belongings simply pile up.
Sadly, there was nothing for Gnak to do about it at present. His Catunga task was to capture an enemy and bring it back for sacrifice. A human was what he sought, and a human castle is what his vision had showed him. Visions were messages from the gods, and as such he had sworn to bring them a human sacrifice.
Without further thought of the material wealth laid strewn about the mountain pass, Gnak trotted along at an even pace, slowing around each bend, staying alert for movement or unusual sound. It was not long until he noticed the change.
Ahead there was a humming, almost musical in its quality. The further he ran the louder and more distinct it became, and no more than a mile more, rounding a curve, he found its source.
In a large opening in the ravine sat a giant. It was young, showing obvious signs of immaturity. Where adults had muscle and knobby joints, this giant had a thick layer of fat, that spread beneath it. If Gnak had to guess, it was a giant child, pre-adolescent for sure, but still nearly fifteen feet in height had it been standing. It was said that giant children were faster than adults of their kind. Gnak would not take his chances with this one, deciding instead to watch it for a moment to see its intentions.
With its back to him it swayed this way and that, humming a tune as it snatched dead goblins up from a mound of corpses beside it. Tipping its great head back, the giant child would drop a goblin into its wicked maw before gnashing it over and over with its rows of teeth. Cracks and snaps ensued with the occasional spurt of blood, but it was the humming that made Gnak uncomfortable.
After a few more minutes the young giant picked up several of the deceased goblins, and slapping one atop its head, it took up two others, one in each hand and played at making them fight like dolls before he smashed them together into a gooey mess of gore. Then its little song began anew, and this time Gnak could hear the words now that the giant’s mouth was not full.
Goblin meat, goblin meat,
Goblin meat is good to eat.
Goblin meat is yummy yummy,
So it puts it in my tummy.
On and on it repeated the tune in a deep rumbling voice that sent a shiver up his spine. Gnak wondered if the giant had a song for Orcs. He dared not wait and find out, if discovered.
Decided that the giant had no intentions of moving, Gnak picked ou
t a course through the wide opening ahead and began to creep forward, ducking behind anything he could use for cover. Again the song became muffled as the young giant stuffed more remains in its mouth, gnashing, grinding, and spurting.
Ahead Gnak saw what appeared to be a huge, giant sized bedroll and, watching the giant every step of the way, he sprinted towards the heap. Finding a momentary respite behind the mound of hair, furs, leather, and stench, his lip curled up in disgust. The smell of the apparent bed was more than offensive. The scents of waste, sweat, and bodily fluids fought for dominance within his sinuses, but Gnak was a born soldier and did not blanch. Instead, he picked a path ahead and, leaping two dead goblins, he began to run. Here there was no cover. If the giant did not see him it would be a miracle. No such luck.
With a trumpeting scream that any adult would recognize, the giant child announced danger to its parents. From behind and beyond, the call was taken up by the immense adults, and the walls of the pass shook with their now approaching steps and thunderous frightful screams. Gnak simply kept running. He had a decent lead and he was fast.
Rounding another bend he found another pair of the giant stinky beds and the crackling remains of a huge fire, but there was no time to explore further. On and on he ran through the pass, first upward and then back down, hoping no more giants lay in waiting ahead. Mile after mile the giants pursued, their roars seeming to be ceaseless. Beyond the giants’ apparent camp the scene was much the same as before, with piles of bones and discarded items, only here the majority of the bones and items were different. These belonged to humans and trolls. If he were not being chased, Gnak knew that he could find suitable armor for his entire body here. Alas, he was being chased and as such he ran and ran some more, rounding bend after bend, leaping and dodging obstructions as they came. He only stumbled once, and barely so, after having stepped upon a stone or something similar that rolled beneath his foot.
It was hours later, the sun already having set, when Gnak emerged from the giant gash in the mountains, the last traces of sound from behind him having vanished more than an hour ago. With the last light trailing crimson stains in the sky, he looked out over a great valley below. It was wide and open, a grassland as lush as any could imagine, and beyond the valley the ground arose once more into a great plateau.
It would be easy enough to simply saunter down the slope to the valley, cross it and climb back up the opposite side, but it was all open ground. Dangerously open. No, instead he would skirt the valley, clinging to the base of the forested mountains and foothills. From there he would again turn north in search of the great black castle.
Deprived of sleep and in need of both food and rest, he began his trek through the forested foothills of the mountainside. Signs were all about that these grounds were regularly hunted. Both by human and troll. But all signs were days or weeks old, and as such he kept alert but did not expect an encounter.
With free time to think and explore while he sought suitable shelter, Gnak’s mind drifted to the images he had seen at the Catunga ceremony. He remembered the castle but it was of no use. Instead he focused on the memory of the gathering of chiefs beneath the great chief. There he scanned the faces, and realization struck him. In the vision, he was the chief of the Gathos clan. He was a leader. It had to be destined by the gods. How else could anyone explain his run-ins with both goblins and giants without so much as a fight, let alone a scratch. If this was his destiny, the gods would see to it that nothing went wrong. After all, the gods were all powerful. If they had chosen him for this task, surely they would see him through it. Puffing his chest out, Gnak strode through the woods fearful of nothing, confident that the gods guided his every move.
It was not until near the middle of the night when he found a suitable cave for shelter. It was neither very deep nor very well hidden, but would have to suffice if he planned to get some rest. Plopping down upon one of the three large rocks just outside the entrance to the cave, he opened his bundled leather and pulled from it two strips of dried meat he had brought for the journey. Eating both vigorously, he realized that his body would not be satisfied by the meager meal as his stomach churned and growled loudly. He dared not eat more, at least not until he could find a suitable source of food, and as such prepared to get much needed rest.
Snapping a few green branches from nearby trees, he climbed into the entrance of the cave, pulling the branches with him to conceal the entrance. He intended to sleep the remainder of the night and the entire following day, to strike out again once darkness returned. The world did not seem to care much about his plans.
Inside the cave was damp and cool, the ground making up the bottom consisting of a thick sticky mud. So different was it to his own home just across the mountains, that he shivered violently, jerking himself awake time and again throughout the night. When morning did come, the sun seemed to bring some warmth with it, but so stiff were his muscles from nearly freezing the night before that he could hardly get comfortable enough to sleep. It was hours into the morning when sleep finally took him without fits of cold, but it was only a few more hours before something awoke him.
Gnak’s eyes shot open, his ears straining for anything unusual. The branches he had dragged to the front of the cave remained, but something had alerted him into wakefulness. A moment later he heard it. It was not so much a voice as a grunt, but he knew it was some form of man. Whether he had been tracked or stumbled upon by accident, something was outside his shelter. He needed more information.
Twisting slowly inside the limited confines of the small cave, he got his arms beneath him. Then lifting his body up he half slithered, half crawled towards the entrance. Carefully, so carefully, he reached up, pulling aside the leaves of the branches that covered the entrance. At first he saw nothing to alarm him outside. Everything seemed perfectly natural. The stones remained, and nothing else seemed to be present but the trees. That was until one of them seemed to move. Then he saw the creature for what it was.
Thick limbed, the stout race of trolls were covered in a thick leathery hide. Their young, it was said, appeared as polished river rocks, so shiny and smooth was their flesh. But so heavy was their hide, that as they aged it stretched and wrinkled, appearing more like the bark of an old oak tree. Outside his cave, Gnak could distinguish two of the creatures. The first, with its back to him, stood just beyond the three stones. It was a tall creature, perhaps slightly taller than he, with legs as big around as his own chest. The creature’s torso was massive, its back bulging and hunched over. Two immense arms sprouted from the shoulders, unnaturally long, the knuckles of the beast easily touching the ground. Its wide lump of a head sat atop a thick tree trunk of a neck, from where grunting sounds emerged.
Just past the first, the second stood, obviously having some sort of conversation with one another. The second had less wrinkles and lighter toned flesh, but otherwise was equal in proportion to its peer. Neither carried a weapon so far as Gnak could see, but he had a distinct feeling that the odd race of men needed little more than their fists to kill most of their prey.
Having never faced a troll before, he thought it wise to watch them instead of attack. It was only a short time later that the grunts ceased, and the thick creatures decided to settle upon the stones just as he himself had done the night previous. There the two pulled out some sort of meal that appeared little more than burned rodents or rabbits, and together the pair crunched upon the charcoaled carcasses in almost silence as Gnak watched from his cover within the cave. After eating, the two lingered still, for more than two hours, simply sitting and looking off into the distance in silence. Finally, what seemed an eternity later, the younger appearing of the two began to move again, its head swiveling slowly around. It was then that Gnak heard the sniffing.
Just like the sound a bear or wolf made when following a trail, the troll began sniffing rapidly, its odd almost nonexistent nose picking up something of interest. Gnak watched as its gaze slowly turned, its body twisting as its eye
s settled upon his cave. Carefully he let the leaves fall slack, and inched backwards reaching behind himself.
Without thought or plan, he wrapped his fingers about the shaft of his spear in the darkness just as the branches covering his only exit were torn asunder, a thick gray head thrusting into the hole they had concealed with a deafening roar. Like lightning Gnak reacted, lashing out with his spear with all his might. Deep into the head of the troll it pierced, another raging roar exploding from the creature.
Rearing back, it dragged the spear and Gnak with it halfway out of the hole, reaching up with massive limbs to tear the spear free of its face. Crawling to extricate himself, and make himself clear of the wounded troll, he rose before springing aside to put some distance between himself and his foes. The second troll had just registered the change and was now rising from its place upon one of the rocks. The first pulled the spear free, a deep green blood oozing from the hole that remained. But even with such a grievous wound to the head, the beast did not relent. Instead, it dropped Gnak’s spear before charging, its arms raising before it to grasp and crush him with immense hands.
Fortunately for Gnak, he was quicker. To his advantage he had not only speed, but apparently could reason much faster as well. Diving aside, the troll missed him by a wide margin before he rolled back to his feet. Pulling his blade from his belt, he slashed at the first troll as the second charged. The blade of his weapon cut a green streak upon the troll’s shoulder, but the wound was neither deep nor effective. Dodging the second troll, he again sprang into a roll and turned to strike at its back. This time he stabbed instead of slashed, to much greater effect.
Though it took a great deal of effort, the blade of his crude sword slid deep into the back of the creature, slamming into thick ribs somewhere beyond the flesh. Pulling it free, he watched the thick green blood ooze from the wound a split second, as the troll reacted unexpectedly quicker than Gnak could have anticipated. Swinging its torso nearly completely around, it struck out with the back of its arm and hand, smashing him full in the side of the head with one giant balled fist. Lights exploded before Gnak’s eyes as ringing sounded in his ears. Stumbling back, he felt the blood trickling down his face. Blinking his eyes over and over to restore his sight, he watched as both trolls turned to face him. Though he had underestimated them, he would not do so again. Now he had a plan.
Letting them charge, he simply out maneuvered them once again, diving aside at the last second as they slowed their own momentum to a stop before turning. Having outwitted them, Gnak snatched up his discarded spear and placing the butt of it upon the ground then slashed at it with his blade, slicing the end off at a sharp angle. It was only seconds before the younger turned yet again, beating the older troll by a moment, and without hesitation this time it charged with its arms wide, hoping to catch him as he sprang away. But Gnak did not spring away this time. No. He needed to use the creature’s own momentum.
Raising his spear as the troll smashed into him bodily, he drove it as far as he was able into the chest of the beast, the blade of the spear slicing between the troll’s ribs. Angrily it roared, trashing at him with its arms, but Gnak ducked them and moved back too quickly for the beast.
Turning to face the remaining troll, he kept one hand on the spear, keeping the angry troll behind him at a distance. When the second troll charged, it was all Gnak could do to line up the blow as he struggled to hold the first troll in place.
Smashing against his body, driving him back towards the troll behind him, the second troll had no intentions of slowing its charge, prepared instead to crush Gnak between it and its kinsman. Instead, the creature not only drove the spear further into its own comrade, it also impaled itself upon the now sharpened end of the shaft. There they stood a moment, confused, the remaining foot or so of spear shaft between their chests, both impaled by the same weapon.
Gnak managed to free himself from the clenching hands of both foes by slashing with his sword and head butting one of the beasts full in the face. Once free, he moved further down the slope to a safer distance to watch the trolls struggle, but nothing of note happened. Both trolls slowly ceased their thrashing before their heads leaned forward slightly towards the other. That was it. So thick and stout were their legs, that when attached together by the spear as such, even in death they remained standing, leaning into one another, without any indication that they would ever topple over. Gnak damned his luck. There was no way he was going to be able to retrieve his spear.
Reaching up, he accessed the wound upon the side of his head. Already it was swelling; the skin, having been smashed apart, was bleeding freely. All he could do was let it clot on its own and hope the swelling would subside naturally. He had not thought to bring any supplies from the shaman for wounds, and now it was apparent that the gods did not intend to make his Catunga task an easy one.
So it was with a pounding in his head that he set out again to skirt the great valley in the early afternoon daylight. Hungry and poorly rested, Gnak stalked off to the west, keeping to the trees and slopes for the remainder of the day and night that followed. The night had proved uneventful, minus hearing the howling of wolves and finding a small spring-fed stream to drink from.
It was near morning when he reached the western edge of the valley and, deciding again that he did not want to spend the daylight hours crossing an open expanse, he hunkered down within a copse of trees at the forest’s edge. Leaning his back against one of the trunks, he again ate two strips of his dried meat and prepared to wait out the day. Unintentionally he dozed on and off throughout the day, without any disturbance beyond the occasional fly who sought to lay eggs in his face wound. Was no place safe from flies?
Day came and went, and then finally it was time to make his way across the rim of the valley to the other side.