Goonfire
I CAST GUN!!!
Ruin had come to the company of brave knights. The entire party lay dead in the fog-shrouded forest—except for one. Beneath a slain beast of indescribable horror, Sir Reynar Cope clawed at the moist earth. He was suffocating, his cracked ribs making it harder to breathe as he pulled himself with one good arm from under the half-ton abomination. As for the other arm, a powerful blow had fractured the bones, rendering it nigh useless.
Reynar found the strength to escape—adrenaline and luck helping his case. The young knight observed the tip of his sword protruding through the monster’s back, the hilt sinking into the soft dirt under its weight. His half-plate armor was heavily dented and gouged, the convex design of his steel breastplate having saved him from evisceration. He knelt by each of his six fallen comrades to check for signs of life. No luck... He ended the inspection with a quick prayer for all of them.
Their horses had fled; only his Morgaine remained. Reynar felt lightheaded from the blood loss. He sat by a tree with her, nursing his wounds with his broken breastplate discarded beside him. He had patched himself to the best of his ability, then mounted up to return to his sunny homeland. His enthusiasm was short-lived, as the entire forest spun still. There was no way he could make it home without further care and rest. The fresh-faced newcomer wandered in the direction he haphazardly assumed was correct; he hadn't bothered to note his path in his company's pursuit of the monstrosity that had terrorized the outlying farming towns.
Reynar raised his head when he found a stone wall mere yards before him. He looked up and his jaw dropped in horror. He knew that foreboding castle—the foundation of horror stories and cautionary tales told throughout his homeland of Hegary. Swallowing hard, he approached the formidable iron gate that had only started to rust in all its years. Oddly, the gate was locked; he had expected looters and legend-seekers to have bypassed the lock years ago. A shiver crept up his spine.
Thunder heralded a coming storm. There was little perceivable choice besides staying the night in an unsettling legendary castle, in a land with a name the faint of heart dare not speak. With no way to get through the gate, Reynar had to improvise.
His answer came in the form of the flora. A thick layer of brambles coated the seemingly-deserted castle's outer walls, along with patches of slippery moss. "I'll be back soon, girl. Just need to get that gate open..." Reynar tethered Morgaine to a nearby tree, then made the effort to climb with one arm. Unable to support much weight with the left, he looped the vines around his right and pushed harder with his legs. He nearly fell twice before reaching the top, the motion to pull himself up causing him to seize with pain in his ribs. More blood seeped through the crude bandages.
When Reynar turned to descend, he slipped. A panicked, staccato shriek escaped his mouth as he plunged ten feet. Branches snapped under his weight, thorns of an overgrown bush piercing his clothing and skin. One more breathless holler erupted from the knight upon landing. The cry faded with his senses and, soon, his consciousness.
Jewel
Reynar found the strength to escape—adrenaline and luck helping his case. The young knight observed the tip of his sword protruding through the monster’s back, the hilt sinking into the soft dirt under its weight. His half-plate armor was heavily dented and gouged, the convex design of his steel breastplate having saved him from evisceration. He knelt by each of his six fallen comrades to check for signs of life. No luck... He ended the inspection with a quick prayer for all of them.
Their horses had fled; only his Morgaine remained. Reynar felt lightheaded from the blood loss. He sat by a tree with her, nursing his wounds with his broken breastplate discarded beside him. He had patched himself to the best of his ability, then mounted up to return to his sunny homeland. His enthusiasm was short-lived, as the entire forest spun still. There was no way he could make it home without further care and rest. The fresh-faced newcomer wandered in the direction he haphazardly assumed was correct; he hadn't bothered to note his path in his company's pursuit of the monstrosity that had terrorized the outlying farming towns.
Reynar raised his head when he found a stone wall mere yards before him. He looked up and his jaw dropped in horror. He knew that foreboding castle—the foundation of horror stories and cautionary tales told throughout his homeland of Hegary. Swallowing hard, he approached the formidable iron gate that had only started to rust in all its years. Oddly, the gate was locked; he had expected looters and legend-seekers to have bypassed the lock years ago. A shiver crept up his spine.
Thunder heralded a coming storm. There was little perceivable choice besides staying the night in an unsettling legendary castle, in a land with a name the faint of heart dare not speak. With no way to get through the gate, Reynar had to improvise.
His answer came in the form of the flora. A thick layer of brambles coated the seemingly-deserted castle's outer walls, along with patches of slippery moss. "I'll be back soon, girl. Just need to get that gate open..." Reynar tethered Morgaine to a nearby tree, then made the effort to climb with one arm. Unable to support much weight with the left, he looped the vines around his right and pushed harder with his legs. He nearly fell twice before reaching the top, the motion to pull himself up causing him to seize with pain in his ribs. More blood seeped through the crude bandages.
When Reynar turned to descend, he slipped. A panicked, staccato shriek escaped his mouth as he plunged ten feet. Branches snapped under his weight, thorns of an overgrown bush piercing his clothing and skin. One more breathless holler erupted from the knight upon landing. The cry faded with his senses and, soon, his consciousness.
Jewel
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