Chapter III, Part One: The First Year
Jormund, Re, and Nabaja sat around a campfire late that night. Nal and his mother had gone to sleep. The mercenaries has brought beer from the tavern and conducted a celebration. For what, Jormund couldn't be sure, but they were happy, and he wasn't going to rain on their parade. They were asleep now, happy and drunk.
The mood around the campfire was not so happy, however. Jormund was sure his lie to Re was about to come back and bite him. Re himself was staring mindlessly at the fire, what he was thinking no one could guess. Nabaja could sense Jormunds tension and Re's indifference, and it made her uncomfortable.
"So," started Re. Jormund readied himself for the tongue-lashing that was about to come.
"You're a mage then."
Jormund furrowed his brow. "No, I don't think so." They had discussed how this formerly lifeless land had come to be, that Jormund was the cause of it. They'd also tried to puzzle out what it all meant, but none of them could reach an answer that satisfied them in the slightest.
"How aren't you? Look at this," Re gestured to the land around them. "Only a mage could do something like this."
"The old man called me a 'Channeler.' I don't know what that is, but I do know what a Mage is. My mother told me stories when I was a child, stories her parents had told her. Stories of a time when magic flowed freely, and many people could command it. Stories of the Titans, the Shards, and how the Magic had left the world because of our folly."
"The Forge," Re stated.
Jormund nodded. "If I were a Mage, then I think it stands to reason that I'd be able to use magic my whole life."
"You couldn't," Re queried.
Jormund nodded his head. "No. Like Nabaja mentioned to you before, I was an Assassin. I used completely mundane means to kill my marks, nothing like lighting them on fire..." He thought of the wolf.
"I see." Re picked up a nearby stick and poked the fire, sparks flying high into the air.
"So," Nabaja began, "What now? You can't honestly believe what the old man said, all that nation business and stuff..."
"I don't know," Jormund said, "I did this... Maybe he was right... Maybe I do have some kind of Destiny." It sounded absurd just saying it.
"Well, you gotta have a destiny," Re chimed in. "He was right 'bout the... 'Channeler' thing, wasn't he? If he was right 'bout that..."
Jormund's head sank. "I know."
Nabaja stood up. "Well, whatever's goin' on, there's no sense tryin' to figure it out right this second. We should get some sleep and think on it more tomorrow."
Re stood up, nodded, and approached his family. Nabaja went to sleep by the mercenaries. Jormund looked into the fire, remembering the wolf again. He replayed the event over and over in his mind, conjuring flame, and directing it. It scared him just to think about it, but he stomached it and examined every detail. The Warmth, the oppressive feeling of dying, wanting to let it loose, cast it aside...
He shook his head and went to the tent. His tent, he thought now. Using his cloak as a blanket, he reluctantly drifted off to sleep.
It was the most restful sleep he'd get in quite some time.
Several days passed without any exciting events happening. Re and his family went back to the tavern, most of the mercenaries accompanying him. Nabaja and a man she called Marz stayed with Jormund, exploring the wonders of the field and trying to sort out what could be going on. Marz was entirely unhelpful in this endeavor.
On the fourth dawn, Jormund awoke with a start. Re was shaking him, begging him in an urging tone to wake up. He had a sword in hand.
"Jormund, we've got trouble."
Jormund got up and replaced his cloak on his shoulders. "What's wrong?"
"There're people, a bunch of 'em. They're comin' here, and they've got... Well, I guess they'd be tools... Sharp-lookin' tools."
Within half an hour, the people reached Jormunds camp. Hoe's, pitchforks, shovels and other implements in hand. Their leader came to the front.
"Which one o' ya is Jormand?"
"It's Jormund," he said as he came to face the man. He willed the Warmth to begin bubbling up inside him, ready to defend himself, no matter how gruesome the results.
There were maybe a dozen people, each one carrying a tool, and each one looking haggard and agitated. Some of them were pretty young, the youngest looking no more than thirteen summers old.
"So it's you then." The man looked him up and down. "Never thought you'd be dressed so gaudy-like." Jormund remembered the bright-orange shirt and vest he was wearing.
The man brought his shovel down off his should and gripped it with both hands. "So... I hear there's a field that needs tillin'."
Jormund was taken aback. "What?"
The people all spread out and began systematically destroying the field Jormund had created. Some dug, others tilled, and other still went off to the woods with axes and a cart. The man told Jormund his name was Norm, and that these people were all from the Empire of Resoln, escaped slaves and refugees. A certain smuggler had gotten wind of a field from one of Re's mercenaries, and the people, having been showered with stories of the old mages, came to make a new home for themselves, hoping the stories to be true. Jormund wondered how they could possibly stand up to any place that held the title of 'Empire.'
"Ceresa's still small-time, most of 'em are, but she's the closest one to these parts, and you're the closest one ta her. We would'a gone to that Irane woman fer help, but she's two weeks travel, and we couldn't carry enough with us to make it."
"So there are other Empires?"
"Oh, Irane's no empress, at least not how we hear it. She's fashioned herself Queen over the midlands, raising a Kingdom. Supposedly, her an' Ceresa can do strange things to the land, bringing them to life... Or killing them worse than the wastes." Norm's eyes drifted off.
"So you've seen this?"
"Aye, I have. It's a gruesome thing... The trees bloom full, sure, but in the color of ash, and the ground turns black, almost 's if Demons themselves were under the soil. We been made to work there, but we snuck out, hopin' to make a place fer ourselves out of Ceresa's reach."
Jormund hoped they hadn't brought worse company with them.
Days passed, and buildings were raised. A longhouse for the people, a work yard for them to cut wood, a field with newly sprouting crops. Weeks passed, more people trickling in, one by one, helping with the construction efforts, all looking to Jormund for guidance. He had none to give. Eventually, the people became upset with his lack of knowledge, thinking him some supreme being. They began to question if he was what they'd heard he was. A Magic-user. Jormund wasn't about to appease them.
Mid-way through the second week, Nabaja came to Jormund's tent with interesting news. Her and some of the people had gone and explored the surrounding area, trying to make a map of the lands. They'd made a discovery.
"It's a building."
"There are ruins all over the waste Nabaja."
"No, not ruins, a standing, whole building. And it's big. Bigger than anything I've seen but the ruins of the old castles."
Jormund's brow furrowed. "Why should I care?"
"Well, I took a look inside. No one else would come with me, yellow brats they are, but I found somethin' inside."
Nabaja produced the item in question and handed it to Jormund. "What is it," she queried him.
The item she'd handed him was a book. Books were few and far between in the wastes, and a find like this could go for thousands of gold, given to the right person.
"You found this in those ruins?"
"I'm tellin' ya, they ain't ruins. The place is chocked full of these things."
"FULL?!" Jormund's eyes alit with suspicion and intrigue.
"Full," Nabaja replied. "And boy is it ever, three stories of 'em, lined wall to wall on shelves taller than any man. You ought'a see it Jorm, it's quite a sight."
"It's Jormund." Nabaja had taken to shortening his name, too lazy to produce even the shortened enough version of it.
"Yeah, yeah. Look, you comin' or not?"
Nabaja guided him to the building, a quarter days walk away. Jormund followed by sound while he read the book. He'd found one before, and his parents had had one when he was a child. They had used it to teach him to read, saying that in the old days, it had been an invaluable skill. Jormund never saw any practical application for it, but as he read the book, a novel of some kind, he thanked the spirits of his parents for having taught him.
They arrived at the building and Jormund, enthralled by the book, nearly plowed into Nabaja before realizing they had stopped.
Looking up, a building that reached it's central spire towards the heavens stood before him. It was sunk into the ground some 40 feet, which explained why he hadn't noticed it on the horizon before. At the entrance stood a pair of stone gargoyles, which Jormund remembered were guardians against bad spirits and bad intentions. Superstition, but it seemed to have worked for this building.
"See? Somethin' else, eh?"
Jormund ignored her, suddenly feeling the urge to enter the building. It was different from the compulsion he'd felt to go to the field somehow. He approached, stairs climbing down the hill to the entrance. Nabaja followed, taking in the amazing sight for a second time. Jormund could only focus on the entrance.
"Careful," Nabaja started, "The door is-"
Jormund went to swing open the door, causing it to fall over entirely, the hinges so rusted and the door so rotten and twisted that they could no longer support its weight.
"Rotten..." Nabaja shook her head.
Entering the building, Jormunds jaw dropped. It was just as Nabaja had described, books from end-to-end, shelves 5 and again the height of a man, a second story containing even more shelves, and rotten ladders attached to the shelves. The whole thing must've been 200 feet across and 150 feet deep Jormund decided, and the books, somehow, despite the rot and age that had stricken the rest of the place, were in near-perfect condition, kept that way by the cooler air and the dry atmosphere.
A huge book sat before him, in the center of the room, contained on its own pedestal. The book was nearly half as tall as he was, and he imagined that when it was opened, it's wingspan was just as long as his. He slowly approached the book. Its cover was hard leather wrapped around a thin sheet of wood, it's pages parchment, beginning to yellow with age. On it's front, the title, in huge letters, read, "The Complete Hiergamenon." Jormund had no idea what that word meant.
"I would'a brought this one back, but we'd need a wagon to carry the damn thing, and five men just to get it outta here."
Jormunds hands trembled for no reason he could surmise. He could feel that this book was the source of his compulsion. It called to him, singing in his head its want to be opened, its pages caressed, its word examined.
"Nabaja," Jormund started. "Go back to the town, and ask the people to bring food and water here for me. I'm going to read this."
"You're gonna what-now?"
Jormund shook his head. "Read it, Nabaja. These are books. Contained within are the stories of old, some true, some imaginary, but all important to a day and age long past."
"How do you know all that?"
"My parents told me."
"Oh... I was expecting somethin' more dramatic... Like that fireball..."
Nabaja left then, and Jormund stared at the book for a time. Finally, he reached for the edge of the cover, slowly prying open its pages. Within the first page, he found a near-exact copy of the words and lettering on the front, with a small difference.
"The Complete Heirgamenon"
"-Transcribed by Morizan'allarah."
Jormund stared at those words for a long time. His parents had always told him to guard his name with his life, that Allarah was their legacy, what was left of it, and that their ancestry went back generations. He understood his urge on reading these words. This really wasn't like the Field, or the fire he'd conjured. It was the spirit of his ancestor calling out to him, begging him to free its soul through the reading of this book. He left the pedestal, and grabbed a nearby chair, rotten and twisted. He tested it with his foot first, making it sure it could hold weight, then that it would hold his weight. Placing it in front of the book, he sat, turning the page, and beginning to read.
For two weeks he sat there, only rising to relieve himself. Nabaja delivered the food and drink as he'd requested, and when she asked him about the contents of the book, her words went ignored. Less ignored as completely unheard. She could see Jormund mouthing the words as he read them, almost seeming to be in a trance, completely unaware of her existence. After a couple days, she stopped asking, and merely delivered the provisions.
The people were creating a rather nice little town while he was away, but many of them were certain he'd ran away, caught in his lie. Nabaja tried to explain to them that he wouldn't want to be disturbed, but it was not enough for many people. On several occasions, they forced her to take them to his hiding place within the building. Same as Nabaja, when any tried to disturb him, they were met with the same indifference, and just as Nabaja had, they could see that he was in a trance of some kind, being drawn into the words on the pages, almost as if he were living the events scribed within.
For two weeks, he read. His reading led him finally to the last page, a page not part of any of the Heirgamenon books.
"My name is Morizan'allarah. I've written this book, a copy of all the books of the Heirgamenon, because the world is coming to an end. The Heirgamenon is being collected, the books themselves being moved to a protected location where hopefully others may find them. Most expect this land to be destroyed, but it is my belief that this place, my own Lost Library, will be a turning point in the future of Elemental. All Librarians hope this for their Libraries, but I've always known, more than any visitor, and more than anyone who's never been here could know, that this place is special. I hope that whomever finds this book and has read the pages within understands the importance of them, and uses the knowledge this book grants in a wise manner. If this book survives, and if it is read, know that the very essence of my spirit now dwells within you, and that my life, boring as it may have been, is now fulfilled in your reading."
Jormund could feel it then, the special feeling that his ancestor had described. He could feel that it wasn't the library itself that was special, nor had it been the gargoyles out front that had protected it. It was Morizan, who in his death, willed this place to survive. He could feel his spirit there, and asked aloud to the air, for him to deliver his thanks, and his love, to his parents.
Nabaja entered then.
"Did you say something?"
Jormund turned with a start. "Oh, no, nothing."
"Ahhh, so you're actually talking to people again. We were kinda worried you'd die of starvation, you were so captured by that read."
"That what?"
"That read. You said you were going to read it."
Jormund chuckled. "It's called a book, Nabaja. Sorry for not explaining that." He remembered then that he had explained it.
Nabaja's brow furrowed. "Whatever." She was carrying more provisions.
"That won't be necessary," Jormund said as he stood. Upon reaching his full height, he collapsed, tumbling to the ground in a heap.
"Jormund!" Nabaja quickly set down the provisions and raced over to him. "Are you okay?"
Jormund laughed, the first hearty laugh he'd ever had in his life. "I'm fine. I guess I'm just weak from sitting in that chair. How long was I reading?"
"It's been a fortnight and then some."
"TWO WEEKS?!"
As they returned to the town, Nabaja supporting Jormund as he could barely stand on his own, they spoke of what Jormund had read, on the events of the Cataclysm, the Arnor, the Shards of the Telenanth and how the magic of the world was imprisoned within them. They spoke of the growing town, and of Nabaja's other find in the woods, another building, not as grand as the Library, but grand still, containing all sorts of alchemy within, and more 'pieces of books.' Jormund explained that those were pages, and tried to explain the concept and purpose of a book to Nabaja with little success.
Upon arriving at the town, Jormund found it to be rather bustling. A small square had been set up, where a few people provided goods and provisions to those who needed them, free of charge to Jormunds surprise. People were working and there were even a few children now, and what looked like a Tavern was being raised. On the roof of the frame, he could see Re, driving nails into the support beams of the roof, his wife carting food and drink to those around the town.
Nal was playing with the other children near, the square, and shouted a welcome upon seeing Jormund. This caught the attention of every adult in the town, all of whom now turned their gaze on him.
"So, the false leader finally returns," one man shouted. They all gathered around him now, and Nabaja, becoming defensive, tightened her grip on Jormund, crouching further down than Jormunds weight caused her too, obviously ready to combat any who would cross him. Jormund spoke to her, telling her to go to Re, and that he would be fine. He nearly collapsed again as he struggled to stand on his own, but he managed, wobbly knees and all.
"What's-a-matter, little under the weather?" The men gathered into a mob now, many of them with their tools in hand. Hammers and shovels, wielded in deadly fashion this time.
"You wanted a leader? I never claimed to be such a man."
"Then what was all this? Why did you make this?"
Jormund ignored him. "But now I understand. I know now why the people need a leader."
The man was rather infuriated at being ignored. He approached Jormund now, Hammer half-raised, but not ready to strike. Jormund could see the mere thought of it irked the man to an extent, but his rage was beginning to far surpass his reluctance.
"And what makes you think we would have you? You've done nothing for us, you haven't guided us, and you ran away for two weeks to read a silly book! Why shouldn't we just kill you right here and now?"
Jormund spotted the campfire then, and an idea sprang to his mind. He stumbled over to it.
"Listen," he addressed the crowd now. "I know I haven't been the leader you were promised. Until today, I never wanted to be that leader. I'm still not sure I do. But I know now that I'm the only one who can be!"
"I could lead this town better than you ever could," one man shouted. "Me too," another shouted. Their shouts were met with cries of 'Me too,' and 'Yeah, so could I.'
Jormund shook his head. "No, you can't. I'm the only one who can protect you now." No one responded to this verbally, but their looks showed an utter disbelief and a rising hatred, each and every person in the mob thinking him arrogant.
"You don't believe me?" His query was answered with shouts of 'Hell no' and 'No way.'
Jormund willed the warmth inside him to grow then, imagining a fire in his belly, being fed and stoked, prodded and poked. He controlled it then, not letting it grow too large, nor letting it get too small. He willed part of that fire to go to his hand, and when he looked, he was holding a small lick of fire in his hand.
The people watched, awestruck as the lick grew, becoming a candle-sized flame, and them a torch-flame, until finally, with a rushed motion, Jormund willed it out of his hand, and threw it at the campfire, causing it to burst into flames, some of the wood sent flying, pattering onto the ground nearby.
The people gasped and looked on in fear and wonderment.
"I'm the only one who can protect you now. I'm not the only one who can do things like this." He pointed at Marz, "Ask him about the dead lands where the self-styled Empress Ceresa resides, how black they are, how the trees bear ash, and ask him how he thinks that came to be. He will not have an answer. But I do! I'm a Channeler, and so is she. We are the few who can use the magic of this world, once thought dead and lost."
He had their full attention now, the fear leaving their eyes, the wonderment abated, and he knew then what he must do.
"Ceresa will not be happy that we're here, in lands she's sure to think belong to her. But she's wrong! These lands belong to you, to us, the people who founded it, the people who worked it, the people who made it more than just a patch of grass! I have made this tundra livable, and you have made it worth living in, but it is certain that there are those who would seek to change that, to take away our new-found way of life!"
"I ask you now, not as a Channeler, but as a man, same as any of you... Let me lead you! Let me protect you! I cannot promise that I will not make mistakes, and I cannot promise that I will actually live up to the promises I'm making in asking you to let me lead. But I can promise that I will give my life before I let anyone take these lands from you, that I will give my heart to see the people of this place thrive, and that I will give my soul to keep the peace."
His arousing speech was not met with a cheer, nor fanfare, nor any sort of measurable reaction. For a time, the people just sat there, in silence, looking upon him. It was one young, intrepid boy, by the name of Nal, who set Jormunds speech into motion.
"But we need a name!" Re hushed his son, but smiled on the inside, knowing it to be true.
Jormund chuckled. "He's right... We need a name..." The people began shouting names, most of them their own, or variations of their own. Jormund shook his head at the chaos, and asked for quiet.
He saw a bear in the distance then, a mother escorting her cubs across the open field. The bear looked at him, as if it knew what he would say next.
"Talranth." The people looked at one another, queries rising amongst them, wondering what kind of name that was.
"When I was young, my mother used to tell me a story... This story was of the great bear, Talrania. Talrania died, protecting her cubs from all manner of creatures, even felling a Dragon, so that her cubs would have food to eat and a place to sleep once the bones were picked, and that the skeleton of the creature, a creature so fearsome felled, would protect them."
"We will take that name. We will live to that ideal, the ideal of protecting our own, such that even Death itself cannot stop us from doing so. We will fell Dragons and beasts so fearsome, that none will dare cross us. We shall be known as the Kingdom of Talranth!"
The men and women cheered their agreement. The kids clapped and giggled. Re smiled. Nabaja shook her head and snuck into Jormunds tent.
The next day, Nabaja led Jormund to the site she had mentioned before. This building, not as grandiose as the Library, had all sorts of strange tools inside. Beakers and vials, some full of viscous-looking liquids, some broken, and notes scattered about the entire building. Jormund collected the notes, and found them to be ideas on practical applications of Spells. He was able to learn a great deal about magic from these notes, and was soon able to cause crops to grow more quickly and produce greater yield. He would be able to shield his town and its people if the need arose. He even learned how to summon a bear-cub, his 'Familiar' he called it, who could talk and help him riddle out the answers to questions contained within the notes.
People came from far and wide across the Northlands to join his growing Kingdom. The life returned to the lands near the town as Jormunds power grew. The people prospered.
Then one day, Jormund, doing his rounds through the town, saw something odd. A small group of men, taking a mule and provisions, bearing the newly created flag of Talranth. The black bear and orange banner flowing in the breeze brought joy to Jormunds heart. The sight of people preparing to leave, did not.
"What's going on here?"
"We're leaving sire." That was a new one. He'd never been called Sire before. Sir, and Jormund he was used to, but never something so regal as 'Sire.'
"Whereabouts?"
"The snows melting far and wide sir. While most of the Northlands are still lifeless, just wastes now, we think we might be able to settle a new town on the other side of the Talranian Woods."
"And the banner?"
"Well... We intend to extend the nation sire... We... Well, we didn't want you to know, honestly, and we're really sorry about that... But you can't have a Kingdom with just one small town, can you?"
Jormund nodded. "I see..." An idea sprang to mind, something on one of the notes from the Arcane Laboratory he'd read. "Wait here." The men looked nervous.
Jormund returned a short while later carrying a beaker salvaged from the lab. The note that the beaker had been set atop of had mentioned something about the water contained within being the essence of life magic.
"Take this, and pour it on the ground when you arrive. Use only a single drop, for it's all we have."
"What is it sire?"
"An experiment. If I'm right, it will make your work making the land livable far easier."
"And if you're wrong sire?"
"Then it's just water."
They left, saying goodbye to their friends and families, for those that had them, and it would be some time before they were heard from again.
Attiembi grew. The name Nal had thought of, and while it wasn't laced with meaning like Talranth was, it seemed to fit somehow. Nal was becoming quite the researcher, and had taken to reading like a fish to water, more skilled at it than any other researcher Jormund had at his service, even the adults. The boy was quickly becoming a well-spoken young man.
On one particular day of note several of the Pioneer's returned, bringing news of the new road they'd constructed between Attiembi and the newly founded settlement of Embineas. It was official now. Jormund had a kingdom.
Several more Pioneer's were sent out in the coming weeks, and before long, the nation of Talranth contained six settlements, each more successful than the last. Caravans were coming to and from Attiembi twice a week, and they were arriving to and from the newer settlements as well. Jormund finally took it upon himself to explore the lands that were being called his, and he rode out with the next caravan.
For every town he visited, he was greeted with fanfare, hailed as the wise and mighty ruler who'd made the Northlands into a paradise. Jormund smiled and refuted these claims, but none would hear of it, and they praised him everywhere he went. Until he returned to Embineas.
His trip had taken him through Embineas, then to Tanath, the Northmost settlment in his empire, nestled near the ocean and deep in the mountains. Then towards Nokeslil, and lastly, to Isiir then Iherr, the 'Twin Cities' as they had come to be known to the residents. Travelling back through them, he arrived again in Embineas, but none of the fanfare of his first visit was present. He wasn't especially surprised, seeing as how it had only been a few weeks since his last visit, but what did bother him was the fear he sensed in the townsfolk. They spoke in hushed whispers and went about their work as if a great weight had been set upon them. When Jormund questioned them about it, many of them looked away and refused to respond, begging for his forgiveness. He never turned them down, always trying to remind the people that he was just a man, and while he may be their leader, he took no pride on it. Not that he shouldn't, of course, but rather he didn't want it going to his head.
It was during his questioning of one child that the Pioneer, Tral, came up to him and requested his attention on something of great importance. Embineas had grown into a large settlement by now, and it was a quarter-days walk to the object of the townspeople's concern.
They arrived at a pedestal, built into the side of the mountain that Embineas was nestled against. It was truly massive, the whole pedestal being about half as large as the Lost Library which now resided within Attiembi's town. At the top of the Pedestal, there was floating in the air, a massive stone. It's color was that of red and orange fire, and the color actually seemed to mimic the way a flame moved and licked, giving the stone a truly surreal appearance. Jormund could sense something special about this stone, and the closer he got to it, the more the fire inside of himself began to well up without his willing.
"This is what has the townspeople so frightened sire."
"Well, that's certainly a cause for alarm."
"Aye sire. Any idea as to what it is?"
Jormund sifted through everything he'd read up until know, his internal collection of books becoming quite massive. None seemed to fit, until he came upon his first great discovery... The Heirgamenon.
"It couldn't be..." Jormund approached the stone then, making his way up the hundred-some-odd stairs, Tral following apprehensively.
"Couldn't be what sire? Do you know what it is?"
"Tral... I think that this may be a Shard of the Telenanth."
Tral stopped then, twenty steps up the pedastal. He looked in awe at the shard, the stories of these mythical stones having spread to the whole of Jormunds nation by now. Tral had been there on the day he'd made his speech, and in the days after that, Jormund had explained the contents of the Heirgamenon to the town, outlining the people's true history on Elemental. While none had forgotten the Cataclysm, many had forgotten how it came to pass, and that magic once proliferated every aspect of their world. None in Talranth would ever forget. Jormund approached the shard, finally reaching the top of the pedestal. It hung their ominously in front of him, and he could hear the hum of magical power contained within. Two feet from the ground it floated, rotating ever so slowly, the fire within swirling more rapidly as Jormund approached it.
He touched the shard, and the fire inside it swirled at a maddening pace, the center of the vortex forming around Jormunds hand. He felt the fire well up inside him, growing to proportions he could've never imagined. The power of the shard ebbed and flowed through him, using him as a conduit, but his own power was still too young and small to contain the full power of the shard. His own magic boiled over at an incredible pace, consuming him in an aura of fire. He could not remove his hand from the shard, bound to it by the magic that flowed through it. He realized then that his curiosity had gotten the better of him.
If it hadn't been situated so far above the town, it's likely that Embineas would have been destroyed by the resulting shockwave. A few of the people closest to the shard would go deaf many years down the road, as the sound was so immense that it damaged their ear-drums. The people of the town would fear the shard for many weeks after this, convinced it was an evil spirit despite knowing the truth, and until Jormunds return, they would try to destroy it with no success. Jormund would not know of any of this for several days. When the magic had finally reached a breaking point within his body, the excess had been expelled, leaving Jormund a slumped heap near the shard, unaware of the events that had just passed.
When he finally awoke and learned of the story, Jormund ordered the shard sealed off from the rest of the town, and ordered that no one was to even attempt approaching it before his return. He returned to Attiembi and poured over the notes in the Arcane Lab, trying to see if there was a way to harness this power. He admitted to himself, it might be folly, but he could feel that something, an event of epic proportions, was about to unfold.
While he did not find anything relating to harnessing this energy, as most of the notes were from before the Shards had locked away all the magic of the world, he did find many useful notes pertaining to how he might harvest its power. Gold seemed to resonate with Magical Energies, and Stone was a sound way to help direct those energies, being resistant to the actual magic, though not its side-effects.
Three wagons left Attiembi, one full of Gold, one full of Stone, and the third containing the strongest workers Jormund could find. He had devised a way to potentially harness the energies of the shard, allowing him to access them regardless of where he was. If he was right, it would produce results much like those on the day of the shockwave, but in a more controllable manner. The magic contained in the shard would trickle into him constantly, giving his magical abilities a boost, without causing them to overflow like they had before.
The work began in earnest, with Jormund supervising the project. Many of the townsfolk thought him insane to try such a thing, so to help abate their apprehension, he put on a show the night after the work began. He displayed feats of magic, even summoning a molten giant to do a jig. In the end, it did little to ease the apprehensions of the citizens.
When the work finally finished, Jormund approached the shard once more, apprehensive after the results of last time.
He approached the shard slowly, and it reacted to his presence still, though to a lesser extent. He decided the only thing he could do was try and hope he didn't kill himself. He touched it, feeling the magic well up inside him for a moment, and then it abated. His power felt bolstered by a significant degree, but it was obvious the Shard still contained most of its magic. Pleased, Jormund considered it a success. As he climbed down from the shrine, Tral approached him in a fluster. He climbed the steps at a blistering pace, taking no time to awe at the huge construction of gold and stone.
"Sire! Sire! I've terrible news!"
"What is it Tral?" Jormund was rather exhausted from his endeavor.
"Sire... A missive has just come from Nokeslil, brought by their fastest messenger. They're under attack."
"Bandits?"
"No sire... The missive, and the messenger, say that the attackers have skin of ash and features of ghosts. They wield massive weapons and wear armor of steel. Their leader claims they're soldiers of Resoln..."