The sound of heavy hooves, swords on steel, and arrows intensified on the other side of the gate, building to a cacophony of battle as Kohb counted to ten. As soon as he reached the end of his count, he raised a hunting cry to the gate guards, who took it up and cried over the wooden battlements. It was repeated on the other side, so Kohb pounded on the gate as a signal to open it.

As the Ochre Gate had sprung open on a counterweight, so too did the Azure Gate before Eyon and his friends. Sir Kohb spurred his horse onward, followed by Gullywick and Myn. A handful of Gattne riders sallied forth with them, a dozen riders all told, and they burst out of the gate into the blinding sunshine to find chaos outside.

A swarm of riders coalesced around them; it was difficult for Eyon to see with the jarring up-and-down of hard riding, but the men were definitely wearing the bright crimson of Varrett and bearing its sigil, the Leaf-on-Shield. Through gaps in the mass of men and horses, though, he could see the Ioxans’ hammer banners approaching at a rapid clip. Arrows flew between the two groups as the few mounted archers on either side let fly, and after hearing a war cry sounding on his left and being answered on his right, Eyon realized that the pursuers were trying to surround him.

Above the din, he could hear Delra of Ioxus shouting at her troops, exhorting them to tear the Varrettans apart to avenge her twin humiliations. “A gold sovereign to any of you who brings me so much as a scrap of that boy’s flesh!”

“Keep up the pace, you louts! We’re lighter than they, but they’ll rip us to shreds if we let them engage!” shoutedd Sir Kohb. Then, softer: “Still so eager to be king now, hearing that woman telling them to tear you limb from limb for gold?”

“No one would be shouting something like that in my kingdom,” Eyon replied.

“Hmph. Every king, every kingdom, needs someone shouting that,” the knight said breathlessly. “You’d be no different.”

“When my kingdom becomes the first, I’ll make sure you have a better position.”

Sir Kohb rolled his eyes. “Ho there! Keep those Ioxans at a distance!” he cried.

His men, armed with short lances, jabbed them at the baroness’s horsemen. The Ioxans responded in kind, and Eyon cringed as he saw one of the Varrettans hooked off of his saddle and flung beneath the hooves of his fellows with a terrible cry. A mounted archer galloped next to Kohb’s horse, taking careful aim with a short bow before losing an arrow up and over both of them and another Varrettan besides, landing firmly in the flank of an Ioxan horse and tumbling both it and its rider to the dry Gattnean plain.

“How much longer?” Eyon said, looking away from the sight. “Until we’re safe in Greywacke Wood?”

“Only about an hour,” Sir Kohb said. “Assuming we can keep this pace. If we can’t, it will all be over much, much sooner.”

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The birds parted on either side, as if Lola were somehow unpalatable to them. They squawked and flapped but otherwise allowed her boots to crunch over the hard-packed snow of the frozen lake.

Lola did her best to remain nonchalant, hands in pockets. The bitter lake wind tore at her unbottoned jacket, but she dared not make the move to bundle up. The geese honked at her, outraged, but in a small miracle not one bit of down escaped from them to touch or even approach her.

The sullen, rotting tower of the Baikash refugees with its tattered banners and faded signs, slowly began to sink below the treeline. As Lola continued her trek, some of the geese keeping pace while others fell back to look for stragglers.

As Joyce had said, and as the occasional bleached bones on the ice attested, the birds’ feathers were highly toxic and being near enough to be nipped could impart a fatal dose of ionizing radiation in moments.

It was a long way, an awful long way, to the orange dot on the far shore.

Inspired by this.

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The cop slapped down a file on the desk, freshly if illegally procured from Southern Michigan University’s Office of Student Records. “Saylor Effingham, is it?”

“I go by Effie.” Folding her arms, Effie leaned back in her chair. If the cop was too dense to pick up on her closed off body language, at least he wouldn’t get a look at her goods since she was wearing only her simple green tank–for practical reasons, naturally.

The cop snorted. “Effie, huh? Kids make fun of you for that?”

“Not as much as they did for Saylor.” Effie had no idea what her mother had been thinking. Mom claimed that a flash of inspiration had struck when she was about to name her daughter Taylor, and it certainly didn’t seem like much thought had been put into the proposition. Her short-sightedness had led to two decades of bad puns about “Saylor talk” and boys teasing with “Hey there, Saylor, looking for a good time?”

“Hmph.” The cop smirked. “Well, Ms. Effie, I’m Gerald Clayton. You can call me Gerry if you like. I also answer to Gerald, Clayton, pissface, asshole, or you-there.” Clayton had already been called all of them today, all but one by his wife.

“Charmed,” Effie sneered. “I’m sure.”

“Now I’ll be blunt, Ms. Effie.” Clayton pulled out a chair and sat backwards on it, draping his arms over the back in what he thought looked like a relaxed pose, even though it was uncomfortable as hell. “This isn’t an arrest. You’re not here against your will; you can walk out that door any time you like. But if we wanted to, we could have you in the lockup by dinnertime. So I’m hoping you’ll listen to what I have to say, since we have an out for you.”

Effie didn’t budge. “Who’s ‘we?'” she asked, narrowing her eyes.

“Tecumseh County Metro Illicits Unit,” said Clayton. “Not the catchiest name or acronym, but it wasn’t my choice.” Tecumseh Area Criminal Overwatch had been his suggestion, and it had gotten as far as the bureau chief before anyone realized that the initials spelled TACO.

“So I’m into illicit activity, huh?” Effie said. “I know my rights. Why don’t you just prove it?”

“Well, if you say so.” Clayton picked up a tablet off his desk, made a few swipes, and handed it to Effie. The color drained out of her features and the points on her pixie cut seemed to droop a bit at what she saw.

“I see kids like you all the time in here,” Clayton said. “First time away from home, first time out from under that apron, and you just go nuts without any regard for the law. I bet everyone said you were a real good kid at home, looked the other way when you got a little illicit. Well this ain’t home, and I ain’t your parents. This is real, kid.”

Effie struggled to maintain her composure. It was one thing for Mom and Dad to disapprove of her new hairstyle, the clothes she’d taken to wearing, and the fact that she only visited to do laundry anymore. But this…

“We’ve got video, we’ve got witnesses, we’ve got sworn statements,” Clayton said, sliding the tablet out of Effie’s stony hands. “Like I said, you’re free to go, but if you do, you’ll be back in here inside of 24 hours. And when you leave then, it’ll be with a conviction, which means a bust on your record and hard time in the lockup.”

“You really think they’ll believe I was busted for that I supposedly did?” Effie said, trying to sound confident. Most people liked to deny what she did even existed, after all, write it off as urban legends or hysteria.

“We list those…illicit…offenses under the Michigan State Penal Code § 113,” said Clayton. “Any Other Posession of Regulated Substances.”

“But I don’t possess anything!” Effie’s upper lip curled into a snarl.

“Whoa there,” Clayton said. “Down, girl. As far as the Penal Code is concerned, you are an illicit substance. You want that on your record? We put it in there in code, of course, but you’ll never be able to hold down a job with a conviction like that. No one’s going to want to hire you when there’s even a little chance of you going off on them. No one.” He scowled. “Now maybe if you were an art history major that wouldn’t matter so much, but veterinary science? They don’t take chances with people that have access to horse tranquilizers.”

“So what are you going to do, then? Just stand there and laugh at me for trying to have a little fun before you lock me up?”

Clayton shrugged. “Girl, if I wanted to laugh at you I got it out of my system after looking at your file. That name? Your parents? Hell, your emergency contact for the university is your pa, and his email address is @effingham.com!”

Effie drew her arms closer, looking very intently at the cheap linoleum.

“No, kid, I’m offering you an opportunity. Big things are going down in Hopewell right now. Lots of illicits, lots of confused kids getting roped in. You become an informant for us, and we let you walk. 20 busts and you’re out. We’ll even get you hooked up with medication, a shrink, and a support group.”

“You want me to be a snitch?”

“Like I said, 20 busts. It’s not a not. We have a nice, invisible two-way wire you can wear on…all occasions.” Clayton leaned over, opened a desk drawer, and produced it, a spidery set of wires around a button-sized transmitter. If it were taped under clothing or buried under hair, there might not be any seeing it.

“They’d smell it in an instant, and hear your voice a mile away.”

“Look, Ms. Effie, this ain’t my first rodeo,” said Clayton. “We’ve had over a hundred kids work for us as informants and there are three others out there right now.” He gestured to the tablet. “Or we could put you in the pound for that, have your parents find out exactly what their little precious snowflake’s been up to.”

Effie looked at the still image, paused, from the Secret Undercut concert. A large wild-looking dog was running through the frame. Her. “All right,” she said. “I’ll do it.”

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“The prophet Hephastus was never wrong,” said Cybina, her eyes intractable. “He predicted the fall of the kingdom, he predicted the Great Deluge that split our lands in twain, and he predicted that the cruel yoke of the Outsiders would fall upon us.”

“And he also predicted that the true ruler of these lands, the Crimson Child, heir to the throne before the throne, would help us cast off that yoke,” said Shayya. “We’ve all heard it. Nationalist drivel, mostly. The last king, Hannibar IV the Red, had no children.”

“No,” said Cybina quietly. The sage turned away. “Nor was there any kingdom before that which his ancestors raised up.”

“I thought so,” Shayya sighed. “For all that’s happened it was just coincidence and tricks. Little Heren couldn’t possibly be the Crimson Child.”

“But,” Cybina added. “There was a kingdom before Hannibar’s ancestors ruled.”

“That’s ridiculous,” said Shayya. “No one inhabited these lands before that.”

“No people. But there were others, other rulers, other thrones. Heren is in fact the Crimson Child…but she is not what people think she will be.”

“What…what do you mean?” said Shayya.

Cybina turned back to Shayya, and the latter gasped. Her eyes were suddenly orange, slit-pupiled, burning in the darkness. “The great serpents ruled before any man did,” she intoned. “And Heren is one of their number.”

Inspired by the song ‘Climson Child’ by Hiroki Kikuta, released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

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“You all know me as a consciencious woman, and I intend that to be the case into my reign,” said Charlotte. Though not yet officially invested as Queen of Anjion, she posessed the Privy Seal and the full backing of the Estates of the Realm.

More importantly, with her parents both the only child of only children, and her brother dead in a shallow foreign grave, Charlotte was the only claimant to the throne who was not also a noble from the hated rival kingdom of Burgevy.

The garden party, amid the magnificent topiary that had been the passion of Charlotte’s father King Gordon, was the first chance for nobles from the First Estate to meet and speak with their young new queen.

“The military adventurism of my brother Sebastian is at an end,” Charlotte continued. “My ministers have just inked a proposal for a lasting peace between the Malmidites and ourselves that will include the return of hostages and the bodies of the dead in return for a small indemnity.

“Truly, yours is an enlightened reign to be,” said the Earl of Salaman. “We, the nobles of the First Estate, stand ready to advise her majesty on all matters of import.”

“Ah, yes, that,” said Queen Charlotte with a delicate smile. “It’s come to my attention that there has been quite a bit of jockeying for…influence…in my court. I want it understood that the final decision in all such matters will rest with me.”

“Surely her majesty would be more comfortable with a firm male hand on the rudder of the ship of state,” said the Marquis D’Undine. “We would not seek to have the full weight of administration resting on such delicate shoulders.”

“Of course you would,” said Charlotte mildly. “Which is why you are going to trim this entire garden this afternoon.”

“I…I beg your pardon, majesty?” stammered Marquis D’Undine.

“With your sword,” Charlotte added. “My father, King Gordon, found his greatest inspiration in statecraft from his topiary and flowers. I trust it will be just as inspiring to your lordship.”

“Your majesty, I must protest,” said the Earl of Salaman. “Asking a member of the first estate to do such a thing with his sword of state? That is unheard of. Uncalled for!”

“You are quite right, my lordship,” said Charlotte with a quiet curtsey. “You will assist the Marquis in his cultivation, and I will assign a few of my Life Guards to oversee your efforts and ensure that you do not neglect your education.”

Before any more protests could be uttered, Queen Charlotte was away, moving with a brisk step.

“If they protest or try to escape, see that they trim the black poisonwood next. Without any gloves. The blisters will serve as a reminder of their lesson today.” In a singsong voice, Charlotte continued: “Now, let us away to the piano for a jaunty tune.”

Inspired by the song ‘Queen Charlotte’ by Hiroki Kikuta, released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

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The Branding
Only the Kingdom of Mangeni resisted integration into the Realms. The result was a campaign of slaughter and terror to subjugate the land; it lasted for two decades before a native Mangeni dwarf noble managed to unify the land and submitted in exchange for certain rights, notably the continuance of the Right of Strength. The name comes from the procedure of branding cattle, and is at once both facetious and irredentist.

Crownfall
The Four Realms were mismanaged in the years leading up to the Crownfall Wars, and eventually the kings found themselves faced with a restive population. In a brutal campaign lasting ten years, the King and all three Archdukes were forced to abdicate or were killed on the battlefield. Attempted intervention by the Empire of Vachen led to further war between it and the newly declared Republic of the Realms.

War of Independence
The Empire of Vachen’s intervention, ostensibly at the behest of the rightful heirs to the crown, lasted five years. It was notable as a struggle both internal and external, as Swynwr, Mangeni, and Tavallinen all sought independence from the central administration of the Republic in Dahlgren. This led to the Peaceable Settlement, an agreement that autonomy would be protected and the Old Right and the Right of Strength allowed to continue. The war ended with the total defeat of Vachen.

War of Rights
In time, opposition in Dahlgren and parts of Tavallinen to the Old Right and the Right of Strength grew. Increased incursions into Tavallinen and Dahlgren for “unprotected” citizens led to a war of laws between the Republic and its constituents, and ultimately Swynwr and Mangeni attempted to regain their independence, aided by a significant portion of Tavallinen. Five years of brutal war followed between the Republicans (the government of the Republic of the Realms) and the Rightists (officially the Federation of Rights, sometimes called the Federals or Federalists). Eventually, the Rightists were broken and annihilated, their ancient Rights abolished, and all the Realms brought under a centralized and bureaucratic administration. An attempted intevention by the Empire of Vachen also failed spectacularly.

The Brushfire
The defeat of Vachen’s intervention meant that the victorious government of the Republic of the Realms was able to annex the Verge, an area they had long desired. Desolate and sparsely populated, the Verge was rich in minerals and other resources but had never been developed by the Empire due to its remoteness and fierce resistence from native inhabitants. After the War of Rights, though, the resources of the Republic were turned to the region and it was flooded with soldiers, refugees and exiles from the defeated armies, and opportunists. This led to a series of small but intense conflicts, some spanning months or years; this 50-year period of violence has entered history books as “the Brushfire.”

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Officially called the Four Realms Under One Crown, the Four Realms consisted of the Kingdom of Swynwr, Kingdom of Mangeni, Kingdom of Dahlgren, and the Kingdom of Tavallinen. The line of Dahlgren kings ruled as the One Crown, but the former rulers of Swynwr, Mangeni, and Tavallinen were allowed to retain their former royal houses as Archdukes. It was a land of many peoples and many tongues, held together only by the strength of the Dahlgren crown and the existence of the Empire of Vachen as a major rival.

Swynwr: The Old Right
The woods of Swynwr were the traditional dwelling-place of many nations of elves, most of whom had practiced subsistence agriculture or hunter-gatherer lifestyles. Though the most powerful groups elected from among their number a Queen Over the Wood, the first centralized administration was brought by Tavallinen when it invaded and conquered the area. The most powerful and most populous of the elven fiefdoms, Brenin, came to rule over the others in the years after the conquest. Though many humans and dwarves settled in Swynwr, it maintained the Old Right: legally, anyone who was not under the protection of an elven fief was subject to capture and the confiscation of their essence. The Old Right allowed the creation of enaid, soul-batteries, that were the center of elvish life; the husks left behind were turned into meirwon, used as thralls in armies and police forces. The One Crown generally turned a blind eye to the Old Right, including its plundering of other lands for candidates, in exchange for meirwon for the royal armies and a supply of enaid for weapons.

Mangeni: The Right of Strength
Mangeni was home to many dwarves, though it was not their homeland. They had arrived as adventurers and fortune-seekers from overseas before establishing themselves as rulers over a land that had once had only a sparse population of humans and elves. Their kingdom grew on its great natural wealth, and established a strong central administration. The dwarves of Mangeni brought from their homeland the concept of hawlcryf, rendered into Dahlgrish as The Right of Strength or the Right of Might. It holds that anyone unable to defend themselves is subject to the full depredations that anyone may wish to heap upon them. This took the form of robbery most often, but increasingly to the confiscation of whole people to work the mines. As with the Old Right, this was overlooked by the Dahlgren court due to the fantastic productivity of the mines. Mangeni was the only one of the realms to resist integration in a fierce campaign still known as The Branding.

Tavallinen: The Right of Unification
Tavallinen itself was a hodgepodge of human, dwarven, and elven petty kingdoms, but they were held in rigid order by the Right Lord of Tavallinen, who later became the Archduke. Prime and productive farming land, Tavallinen was the center of a robust trade with the other realms and had a reputation for producing fierce soldiers. The relationship was such that elves from Swynwr and dwarves from Mangeni were allowed to exercise their Rights upon the land as if it had been their own, though the punishment for doing so in error was very severe, typically death. It was Tavallinen that first subdued the unruly elves of Swynwr, and it was their royal house that, upon the extinction of the male line of Dahlgren, unified the Realms. Fittingly, due to its polyglot nature, the royal house has both dwarven and elvish blood.

Dahlgren: The Right of Rule
Long the most populous and prosperous of the realms, Dahlgren is so ancient that its origins are largely lost. Largely a realm of humans, it nevertheless boasted many regions and languages with long histories of animosity before their unification. The capital lay within its bounds, and its fields and factories were long some of the ablest producers out of any in the land. Dahlgren’s royal house stretched unbroken to the defeat of the Vachen Empire, of which it had once been a vassal. The last King married his daughter to the King of Tavallinen, only to see his sons fall to battle or illness. This led that king to declare the realms unified, though The Branding raged for twenty years before Mangeni was firmly under control. Moving the court to Dahlgren and leaving a cadet branch on the throne of Tavallinen, the king ‘s consolidation of power set the stage for 300 years of union.

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“Ed Boneshredder,” said the muscled mercenary. He bore many tattoos on his unarmored torso, from a wiry spread devoted to “Ed Bonecrusher” that suggested he himself was not quite sure of his proper appellation to a heart on one bicep devoted to someone named “Peter.”

“I know that,” said Iffy the mage. “But why are you so angry at me?”

Ed Boneshredder,” replied the mercenary through gritted teeth, spraying saliva on the demon bartender as well as Skeletonio the Skeleton Mage seated nearby.

“What?”

Ed BONEshredder!”

“Does anyone have any idea what he’s trying to say?”

Adenan the halfling, who had an affinity for languages, piped up: “He’s saying you insulted his friend and must pay for your crimes at the hands of the Threadbare Gang.”

“How in blazes did you know that?” spat Tinuviel the rogue, nearly choking on her raisin wine.

“I’m good with languages,” said Adenan, “and I spent some time with the Nisiar of Lehsir, who can only speak their own names due to their religion.”


With the bar clear and his meaty group of shirtless Threadbare Gang pals matching the adventurers blade for blade, Finnegen Funderberger IV strode up to the bar with a supremely confident swagger. Bearing a ritual Nisiar Revenge Katana, he seemed unmoved by Iffy’s rant about his prowess in bed and the length/hardiness of his shillelagh.

“I will have my revenge!” he cried, adjusting the wig on his head to cover up a spot of stubble from where the adventurers had shaved him bald on their last encounter.

His revenge started, it seemed, with a savage attack, lightning-fast, on Iffy. Or, rather, on Iffy’s hair. In a flash of steel and burst of keratin, Funderberger lopped off 18 of the 20 inches on Iffy’s head.

“My…HAIR!” cried Iffy. “That’s it! You must die for your crimes!”


Seeing that the battle had gone ill, and with their leader dead and de-wigged, the remaining two members of the Threadbare Gang attempted to flee.

Droog McPhereson, who had spent most of the battle passed out thanks to the vivid clashing hues of a Color Spray spell, tipped his jaunty hat and starched collar (unattached to any shirt) before disappearing up the steps. His getaway was eminently roguelike: quiet and efficient.

Ed Boneshredder, for his part, ran for the front door of the Demon Arms. The direct approach seemed to suit him best, after all. “Ed Boneshredder!” he cried over his shoulder, the words having the affect of “I’ll get you next time!”

However, Tinuviel the rogue had retreated to the door in a failed attempt to pepper the Threadbare Gang’s archer, Daniel Midland, with arrows. She stuck out a stubby, hairy leg and tripped the man-mountain as he tried to pass.

The human-tibia axe that Ed Boneshredder used shattered and buried itself in his chest as he went down. “Ed…Ed…Boneshredder…” he gurgled before breathing his last.

Chanel the cleric pulled the wig off of Finnigan Funderberger IV’s dead head and placed it on the countertop in front of Iazgu the Slayer, demon of the Demon Arms. “There you go,” she panted. “For your bald head.”

Iazgu looked at the wig with a distasteful expression, as if a dead ferret had been slapped down on his bartop. Then, with an air of humoring the bloodied adventurers before him, he doffed his chambermaid’s had and placed the bloody, dripping wig atop his hairless demon head.

“…thank you…” he murmured. “Just what…I have always wanted…I’m sure.”

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The sector of the Hürtgenwald that Lt. Col. Lindsay Elliott’s men attacked was the oldest and deepest part of the forest, one that had lain essentially untouched for centuries. The German defenders were dug in deep, though reports from prisoners indicated that they were deeply uneasy due to nativeHürtgenwalders telling them stories about a local legend.

They spoke of an inner sanctum of the wood called das Herzwald, “the Heartwood,” where the ancestral spirits of the boughs lay in quiet repose, unless disturbed. This had the effect of the German lines routing around the deep woods said to be so protected and creating a salient until General Model intervened and ordered the area to be occupied and fortified.

Lt. Col. Elliott’s men battered themselves against the defenses for a week, carving roads for their tanks through the deep brush. But on the seventh day, fire from the German lines snaking through das Herzwald stopped. Probing attacks found the positions deserted as if in great haste…but no bodies.

Elliott sent five patrols against the abandoned lines. Field communications were lost with four of them, and men refused to be sent in after them. His solution was as expedient as it was brutal: set the Herzwald alight with incendiary artillery strikes.

As it turns out, that was a major mistake.

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No one is quite sure how it came about, but the Wickham House at the edge of town came to posess a remarkable power. From the inside, each of its 97 windows showed a what-if visible only to the viewer.

We all have our what-ifs, after all, those decisions we made but also lingered over long after they had faded. 97 of them waited behind the cloudy panes of Wickham House, snippets of what might have been.

They are like echoes, like dreams. You can see as if through a clouded mirror, hear as if through a thin wall. Always something interesting, always seen as if peering through some other window nearby. 97 alternate forks in the road, just visible enough for you to know of them.

People have tried to open the windows and climb through; they invariably find themselves in our own world, on the other side. People have tried to shatter the panes in hopes of I know not what; that is why only 97 remain. Some old-timers swear that at one time there were only 86 windows intact, and that the others have quietly grown back.

The county sheriff has sealed the property off for years. It’s dangerous, they say, a property on the verge of collapse and infested with black mold.

and yet still people come, sometimes from miles away.

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