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On a night where the wind was dry and arid coming off a summer day of rain that left the surrounding woodlands humid trees sticky to the touch, their red-brown bark left dark by the torrential downpour now it seemed a clearing gave way in unnatural air everything within the radius, dry and hot as sand in the desert there not one wet blade of grass nor trampled twig not even morning dew graced flowers that blossomed outside the huts on the occasional sprig in the center of this drought stood a lone tower, only a head taller than the tallest buildings and still not as tall as the mighty trees beyond the surrounding woods wherein lived a fell and gnarled creature, once human who long ago had communed with magick forces for a wicked bloodprice cursed to hold the borders of this meager keep against all life for its lifetime thrice With a flourish they walked across these loose dirt roads a dress laden with intricate gold against green cotton and silk inlayed against such decorated, attentive details it seemed with every rise and fall of the ***** that it covered to take on its own life with every step and slightest breeze, to dance away from the wearer a ghost trapped, tethered to the vain spirit of flesh that owned it who's to say if a mason saw this, a bricklayer, the architect or some knight-errant who had settled, no, in fact it can't have been the Knight-errant Ser Hobbe was he, of barrel chest and light armor, with the club and leather shield to match his manners, errant not to court a maiden, though the beauty enchanting him lived and breathed, life into a person wearing her, the Garment of Green and Gold Trees fell as the well-traveled road from the castle felt farther away, and well supplied the people settled a village, small, in a reasonable clearing near to a river with plentiful game and resources, intending to make it larger by calling upon workers once they had established a safe foothold there and a system of order approved by monarchy which lent itself to the tower rising, one floor first. Housing the nobility, some cousin or other related to king and queen who lived weeks away they stood in the barren home, admired the hearth and stone, then ordered it as if the earth itself would stand on command to "rise" and "make it greater" with only a crew of few able-bodied guardsmen sworn on their honor to the noble blood, and all but two working at their behest, it became a setting for a coup in this development Two stories. Another half or third, not quite as full and even as the first that housed who became known as the Wizard though they are unknown themselves, only that the nobility found them and enticed them took them in, and they were witnessed by Ser Hobbe, who was sworn into their service no longer errant, now a Knight of their blood, promised the garment and its possessor in return as though he were retaining a corpse that had been stolen from his care on the way to a proper burial, as soon as Ser Hobbe was permitted this price, he took it in fashion, the Wizard, an advisor on alchemical things, medical and magick to the nobility it is speculated, was there in service to offer assistance to an ailing noble be it the wife or husband, it has never been known, but in what became the attic that incomplete, roofed over, third of a story that was itself the third floor they were established themself, a center to operate it is said that for months following the completion of the Tower neither Ser Hobbe nor the Wizard were anything but venerable to anyone anywhere in Ford-Moore A ritual, tongue dipped to the root in ink for that captures the essence of the wronged whose voices cannot speak with curses that run as deep as their entire life, the heavy iron-gall burnt wood mixed by mortar and pestle poured over the throat and words in a language of blood-magick druids of highest orders have long forgot whispered loudly the gallows-making cost onto these thatched-hut pigs to slaughter that was heard and incomprehensible, as birds fled from trees, deer were scared towards people rabbits hopped, and rain fell with heavy, pounding, driving, blinding force and fog encircling the lot, an ancient voice that can only be conversed in once for the cost of two lives one taken to make the poultice in preparation to receive the knowledge, and another to be the bearer of the power every word symbiotic with something human eyes look upon and hear, but to listen and see a mortal mind cannot one of the nobles, never know why or which, enacted the toll on the other and inherited the Tongue of Rot it is said then that first the Wizard was alerted, and that Ser Hobbe was second to know both quartered in the Tower, the Wizard scrying saw madness and sensed Hobbe who was gripped by the fell Green Garment, as he wandered through the hall below bursting through the seems of that cursed thing he sought, his face stained with a pleasant, warm grin and the blood of the maiden owner, he faced the Wizard over the dining table two dead nobles mere rooms away, Ser Hobbe an unwitting champion had an unshielded mind to the plot with his might and club he was as formidable as the Wizard was, and they did not smell blood in the air before they fought Rain fell so heavily there was no passage to or fro no matter, as wandering forth from the Tower came a sinister glow and all that is surely known is the faces of the dead then after, were contorted with the look of an everlasting nightmare and woe they said for three times the natural life of anyone, as long as they walked past Ford-Moore East, if the sun was low you could still see the sparks inside the tower from the battle raging, and feel the presence of all the residents warning you death awaited beyond the border; wise children and men regarded the wives' tale not to go.
0
Aug 20, 2022
Aug 20, 2022 at 2:11 PM UTC
A Ghoulish Occurrence At Ford-Moore East
On a night where the wind was dry and arid coming off a summer day of rain that left the surrounding woodlands humid trees sticky to the touch, their red-brown bark left dark by the torrential downpour now it seemed a clearing gave way in unnatural air everything within the radius, dry and hot as sand in the desert there not one wet blade of grass nor trampled twig not even morning dew graced flowers that blossomed outside the huts on the occasional sprig in the center of this drought stood a lone tower, only a head taller than the tallest buildings and still not as tall as the mighty trees beyond the surrounding woods wherein lived a fell and gnarled creature, once human who long ago had communed with magick forces for a wicked bloodprice cursed to hold the borders of this meager keep against all life for its lifetime thrice With a flourish they walked across these loose dirt roads a dress laden with intricate gold against green cotton and silk inlayed against such decorated, attentive details it seemed with every rise and fall of the ***** that it covered to take on its own life with every step and slightest breeze, to dance away from the wearer a ghost trapped, tethered to the vain spirit of flesh that owned it who's to say if a mason saw this, a bricklayer, the architect or some knight-errant who had settled, no, in fact it can't have been the Knight-errant Ser Hobbe was he, of barrel chest and light armor, with the club and leather shield to match his manners, errant not to court a maiden, though the beauty enchanting him lived and breathed, life into a person wearing her, the Garment of Green and Gold Trees fell as the well-traveled road from the castle felt farther away, and well supplied the people settled a village, small, in a reasonable clearing near to a river with plentiful game and resources, intending to make it larger by calling upon workers once they had established a safe foothold there and a system of order approved by monarchy which lent itself to the tower rising, one floor first. Housing the nobility, some cousin or other related to king and queen who lived weeks away they stood in the barren home, admired the hearth and stone, then ordered it as if the earth itself would stand on command to "rise" and "make it greater" with only a crew of few able-bodied guardsmen sworn on their honor to the noble blood, and all but two working at their behest, it became a setting for a coup in this development Two stories. Another half or third, not quite as full and even as the first that housed who became known as the Wizard though they are unknown themselves, only that the nobility found them and enticed them took them in, and they were witnessed by Ser Hobbe, who was sworn into their service no longer errant, now a Knight of their blood, promised the garment and its possessor in return as though he were retaining a corpse that had been stolen from his care on the way to a proper burial, as soon as Ser Hobbe was permitted this price, he took it in fashion, the Wizard, an advisor on alchemical things, medical and magick to the nobility it is speculated, was there in service to offer assistance to an ailing noble be it the wife or husband, it has never been known, but in what became the attic that incomplete, roofed over, third of a story that was itself the third floor they were established themself, a center to operate it is said that for months following the completion of the Tower neither Ser Hobbe nor the Wizard were anything but venerable to anyone anywhere in Ford-Moore A ritual, tongue dipped to the root in ink for that captures the essence of the wronged whose voices cannot speak with curses that run as deep as their entire life, the heavy iron-gall burnt wood mixed by mortar and pestle poured over the throat and words in a language of blood-magick druids of highest orders have long forgot whispered loudly the gallows-making cost onto these thatched-hut pigs to slaughter that was heard and incomprehensible, as birds fled from trees, deer were scared towards people rabbits hopped, and rain fell with heavy, pounding, driving, blinding force and fog encircling the lot, an ancient voice that can only be conversed in once for the cost of two lives one taken to make the poultice in preparation to receive the knowledge, and another to be the bearer of the power every word symbiotic with something human eyes look upon and hear, but to listen and see a mortal mind cannot one of the nobles, never know why or which, enacted the toll on the other and inherited the Tongue of Rot it is said then that first the Wizard was alerted, and that Ser Hobbe was second to know both quartered in the Tower, the Wizard scrying saw madness and sensed Hobbe who was gripped by the fell Green Garment, as he wandered through the hall below bursting through the seems of that cursed thing he sought, his face stained with a pleasant, warm grin and the blood of the maiden owner, he faced the Wizard over the dining table two dead nobles mere rooms away, Ser Hobbe an unwitting champion had an unshielded mind to the plot with his might and club he was as formidable as the Wizard was, and they did not smell blood in the air before they fought Rain fell so heavily there was no passage to or fro no matter, as wandering forth from the Tower came a sinister glow and all that is surely known is the faces of the dead then after, were contorted with the look of an everlasting nightmare and woe they said for three times the natural life of anyone, as long as they walked past Ford-Moore East, if the sun was low you could still see the sparks inside the tower from the battle raging, and feel the presence of all the residents warning you death awaited beyond the border; wise children and men regarded the wives' tale not to go.
write please read and enjoy
Evilhappy
Written by
28/M/Texas
Aug 20, 2022
Aug 20, 2022 at 2:11 PM UTC
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