This is a book in the "Riverhaven Academy of Learning" library.
* - Note, I have found two different versions of the Elven Human War in different libraries, the text is exactly the same, and the difference is that one is supposedly written but the bard Silvrylock as reflects in the Riverhaven library. The in game title has 'rw' in both versions where the author is identified. Apparently somebody is doing a little plagiarizing.
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An Account of the Elven Human War
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As Recounted
by
Rowan Windlyric*
or
Silvyrlock*
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Introduction
============
Once, long ago as Humans reckon
time, a great Empire united much of the then-known world.
Called the Empire of the Seven-Pointed Star after its main sigil and for
symbolic reasons, the empire united much of what was the civilized world.
But the Seven-Pointed Star that
symbolized unity was only the result of a much more turbulent time that occured
before the rise of the imperial kingdom.
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The Elven-Human Wars
====================
Perhaps the thing that brought
about the crashing realization about the terrible times civilization faced were
the poorly named Elven-Human Wars.
The War began when a
fragile alliance was to be formed between two Elven nations -- that of the
Forest and the Mountain. Sorril,
daughter of the Elven Lord Keirnion, was to marry Rivyn, the son of the Mountain
Queen Morganae. Unfortunately,
Sorril fell in love with a Human by the name of Kanton, the son of a now-lost
clan whose name is forgotten even by the Elves.
The night of her wedding (when
the alliance was to be sealed) Sorril fled with Kanton into the night.
When, at the proper time, the maidens of Grace (special servants of
Hodierna amongst Elven tribes who see to the ritual niceties of weddings) came
to get Sorril, all they found where she should have been was her wedding gown --
carefully folded on her bed -- and her crown, gleaming gently on the dress'
bodice.
At Kanton's clan, the two were
wed. Because Kanton was the clan
leader and the most powerful warrior in the tribe, few saw reason to try and
challenge the marriage, and those who did were called by Kanton into a duel to
the death that Kanton -- inevitably -- won.
The Humans, while not fond of the Elves, saw little reason to risk their
short-lived lives to try and stop something that was, after all, Sorril and
Kanton's own decision.
When Keirnion found out that
his daughter had broken the oldest taboo of Elven lore (Human and Elven
interaction in matrimony is frowned upon by both races so much that couples who
usually engage in such activity are put to death), he rallied the Elven forces
to find her. Morganae, she of the
bloodiest clan of the Elven nation, joined Keirnion, agreeing with him that,
though his daughter was an upstart, the Humans would pay for housing and
encouraging this obscenity of Elven tradition.
The Elven forces moved in on
Kanton's clan with a one day warning from Kanton's scouts.
When Kanton heard the Elven warcry he saw an opportunity he had been
waiting for for years. Quickly he
gathered a council of the nearest clan's elders and, together, five clans united
to stop the Elven "menace," with runners sent out to the other clans
to help them in their battle.
The war forces threw themselves
at each other savagely, and bright Elven blood flew in silver streams, mingling
with the darker Human blood and watering the fields they fought on, feeding the
trees they fought in.
Keirnion, when he realized that
the Humans -- while not as seasoned as Elven fighters -- were still more
numerous, rallied the other Elven nations to join him in the battle.
The prize, after all, were the Human lands -- perhaps even mass
extinction of the pestilence that were Humans themselves!
Sorril, his daughter, was forgotten.
When Kanton saw the more
seasoned Elven fighters taking out his men, he turned to the oldest enemy of
Elvenkind in existence -- the Dwarves. Striking a deal with the old King
of the Mountain of the time (a Dwarf named Membrach), he agreed that, should the
Elvenkind fall, Morganae's mountain would be once more the Dwarves'.
Excited by the fervor of the possible riches in store for him, he watched
with pride as the Dwarven nation poured over the battlefield, slicing through
the Elven forces like knives through butter.
Back at the clan, Sorril, his wife, was forgotten.
In response, Keirnion called in
the Elotheans, who brought great magics to the fore.
Kanton, in turn, pulled in the Dwarven allies of the Gor, who turned out
to be the best fighters by far. Keirnion,
desperate now, struck a deal with the one race that Kanton had been completely
against creating treaties with -- the S'kra.
Wracked by a bad season of harvest, the S'kra willingly accepted
Keirnion's coins.
It was soon learned that the
forces of the now falsely named Elven-Human Wars were equally matched.
While the Human side had far more brawn and manpower with its Dwarven and
Gor allies, the Elven side had unmatched magics with the S'kra, and foresight
and war counsel from the Moon Mages of the Eloths.
Halflings were hired as scouts or spies, and the small folk took coins
from both sides since, in their opinion, neither side deserved any form of
respect.
Years passed, side wearing away
at side, and the war mages of the S'kra developed hideous and powerful magics
that began sloughing away the Human line. The
snakes, ages old enemies of the Gor, took a cruel delight in roasting the giant
greenskins, and the Gor, not bright but driven into a frenzy, ploughed in
suicidal packs toward the rear of the war lines, trying to get to the S'kra
mages. Elven arrows, tipped with
S'kra poison, flew into the Human line. Even
the usually peaceful Elothean magics became deadly now.
At last, it was the land itself
that caused the tides of battle to change.
The S'kra had developed, within a short span of a few years, a deadly
magic that would destroy a large portion of the Human forces.
On the day the spell was cast, the sky darkened and the air stilled, but
the magic itself never completed, for at that moment the world met its first
Guardians.
The Guardians, it is said,
stepped out of nowhere, one male and one female.
Both wore simple white robes and looked like a strange mix of Elven and
Human. They drew up their arms and
all the battlefield stilled as the entire forces felt their limbs grow heavy and
unmovable. Then the Guardians said, in quiet voices that carried across
the fields, that, while they cared little for the war, they did care for the
magics being exchanged, and warned for a halt.
They discouraged further abuse of the magic that was a gift to all races,
and gave one final warning -- then vanished.
One warrior mage, whose name
has since been trampled into the mud and forgotten, ignored the warning,
proclaiming that he was more powerful than any Guardian.
He invoked the great spell of destruction that the mages had been
attempting to call down before -- and a bloom of white-hot fire burst up around
him, incinerating everyone within a quarter mile radius -- which happened to
include the entire Wind Clan of the S'kra.
With this stranglehold on magic the war was soon decided in the favor of the Humans. The Elves, painfully aware of their martial shortcomings in the face of Dwarves with just as many years of experience as they, began to fall back, grudgingly giving ground. Exhausted and shattered by the horrors of the battles, the Elotheans began to fade back toward their capital city of Shard, cursing the name of their Ferdahl who had led them into this war. The S'kra, however, were not fools. They would not lose to Gor'tog's -- not if they could help it.
In the night, a S'kra chieftain
approached Morganae and Rivyn and told them there was a simple way to end this
war -- assassination. He had asked
Keirnion to consider it many times over, but the Elven lord had stuck to his
ethics and told the snake to forget it. Now,
at last, the S'kra had turned to the one person of the Elven leaders who might
actually entertain his idea. It is
said that Morganae, who had sent her people out in conservative numbers and
mostly sat from her mountain watching with calm eyes, smiled at the chieftain
and told him that she had been waiting for someone to mention this....
A messenger was sent to Kanton,
telling him that Sorril -- who had since become pregnant with Kanton's child --
had miscarried and to return to the clan to be with her.
While Kanton had forgotten his beloved, he had not stopped loving her.
The message was like a splash of cold water, and he left orders with his
men, then returned to the clan.
Treachery waited him there.
Sorril, still pregnant and well, waited in her tent as she had every
night since the war started. Unfortunately,
Rivyn was waiting as well with his men and a spell of undetectability woven over
him by Morganae. As Kanton entered
Sorril's tent, the Elven Queen's son leapt from his hiding place and backstabbed
the great warlord of the Human tribes.
Sorril's scream of agony echoed
through the tribe as she pulled Kanton's rapidly stiffening body to her, her
tears of silver streaming down her cheeks and mingling with his darkening blood.
Rivyn attempted to drag her away, but -- furious and driven blind by the
death of her beloved -- Sorril drew Kanton's right hip short sword "Glisinais"
and stabbed Rivyn through the heart with it.
The Elven lord fell, quite dead.
The body of Kanton was burned
ceremonially, as Sorril silently watched. When Morganae learned her only
child was dead, she immediately withdrew all her men and women and told Keirnion
the war's cost had now grown too high. She
also advised him to look to his own costs, and then once more cloistered herself
in her mountain.
Now crippled, Keirnion watched
helplessly as his men and women were slaughtered.
The Humans, driven into a frenzy rather than demoralized over their
leader's death, ploughed through the Elven forces.
The S'kra, seeing that they would most likely soon be taken down by the
Gor's, withdrew completely, and, with their loss and the final parting of the
Elothean forces, the Elven forces fell.
By now, Sorril had had twins --
a girl and a boy. Unusual for an
Elven woman, and unusual still that the children survived, she turned them over
to a nursemaid and then walked out and disappeared.
It is said that she Faded as Elvenkind will do, vanishing into
Urrem'tier's embrace.
Keirnion, distraught over the
losses, died a month later for unknown reasons.
Some say that the S'kra, who had been promised a victory, sent an
assassin after him, some say Morganae hexed him into death, and still more say
that he died of a shattered soul.
The victory was the Human's,
but the victory was hollow. All
races -- even the Halflings -- were affected by the five years-long war.
Fields lay strewn with bodies, and crows feasted sweetly.
In the worn and weary races grew a new desire as they gazed at the
desolation half a decade of war had caused.
A need for peace.
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