
Storm Crows
The Ettenmoors
(Private with Tara and Moriel)
Frost’s neck wound throbbed and pulsed for the first few hours after they departed the company of the vampires. The further they got from the blood sucking bastards the life his injuries seemed to possess. Bruises would be forming soon in a dozen or more places all over his body, he could feel the dull ache from so many places that it all seemed unfocused and uncentered. The damp, freezing air was the only thing that dulled the pain. Frost grumbled and mumbled to himself for a few miles, turning back every so often and looking at the spot in the ashen sky were Arioch and his bride had disappeared. He could not shake the feeling that this was not the last time he was going to see him, nor was it the last time he was going to cross blades with the creature.
The landscape ahead of them was cold, desolate, and dreary. The sky was a depressingly simple mixture of grey heartless clouds, ashen shadows passed over the ground where they walked and slate hills rose up and materialized out of the gloom. The Ettenmoors were hellish pits of nothingness, sagging hills and dried up riverbeds. Tombs were scattered across the land, laid open and bared and devoured by crows and wolves and worse. Wordlessly, the pair of them passed a totem made up of over a dozen skulls and femurs. Was it a warning? An invitation? A challenge? The nonchalant attitude of his guide made him think that if it was a threat, it was not one they needed to be concerned with. The bones looked old and cracked with years and years of age and decay falling upon them. Frost spat; the sound echoed louder than it should have been. The structure of the land was bent like a massive bowl, his head swam but he could feel them reach the nadir of the moors. They camped and Hrafnhildr vanished on some pretense of “hunting”.
Frost, alone with his swirling thoughts, looked to the clouds. There was indeed a massive storm coming. The sky all around them was dark and foreboding. The darkness stretched from horizon to horizon. The storm was still a long way away, with any luck they would be able to get to Angmar and Carn Dûm before the thing hit. Frost thought he could see faces in the clouds, angry, misshapen faces screaming in agony without mouths or sound. What tortured spirits had been forced to take shape within the clouds at the bored whim of some sorcerer? He grumbled to himself, half formed words of protest and annoyance. The cold didn’t bother him, it would be a poor nickname if it did, but he was getting tired of the smell of horse and peat and shire and the feel of lumpy malformed rocks underneath him.
His thoughts strayed to the Lossoth, his distant kin, as they continued their way north. They were a cold and stony people, as harsh and as humorless as the ice they seemed to be carved from. This Hrafnhildr was cut from the same block of flavorless ice as the rest of them. He asked a few gentle probing questions here and there to get a measure of this supposed Amazon he was traveling with, but she proved to be as communicative as a lump of bog iron. They were all like that. He remembered his time with them, so many years ago. They were a harsh and unloving people, untrusting of strangers or southerners (and he had been both). It had not been until that night with the wolves that they started looking at him without the suspicious squint to their eye. The longer they travelled the less likely it seemed to Frost that this particular Lossoth would do any warming. She was a frigid block of concentrated annoyance. Was it just him, or was it all of life that this woman seemed to hate? And more importantly, did Frost even care? There had been only one Lossoth that truly warmed to him, that truly welcomed him. That night, instead of dreams of blood and fire and death, he dreamed of seal skin blankets, walrus ivory, soft whimpers, interlocked fingers, and a voice that whispers "Don't leave me here".
He woke in a foul mood, made fouler by the weather and the lack of interest from his travelling companion. How much did he need her anyway? Frost’s urge to kick his horse into and unrestrained gallop grew greater and greater with every passing hour. It was not the dreams of burning ships and rivers of blood that unsettled him, he’d almost grown accustomed to them now, nor the lethargy that seemed to hold onto him like a squid’s tentacle, it was the boredom of traversing faceless, nameless, forgotten hills and rock formations and ruins that were older than man’s first breath. The closer he came to the north, the more the past seemed to throw itself at him. There were memories here, memories both sweet and acidic. Whatever it was that he was supposed to do here, he hoped it was over quickly. There was very little left for him in the northern wastes of Middle-earth.
His bones ached, his blood simmered. Frost wanted a fire but his taciturn compatriot refused to help, wanting to push on through the slagging hills and rugged mountains that tore the earth around them. Frost was in a unique position. He’d never been to Angmar before, it was an alien place with mountains and skies foreign to all the lands he’d seen before. He’d been to the most extreme places on earth, from Mordor to Lemuria in the Uttermost East and the Lands of Forever Winter in the north, yet this place may as well have been on another plane of existence. It made his skin crawl. His spiders whispered in his ear, complaining of the cold and the damp. They were almost as eager to be done with this place as he was.
“How long is it now?” he mused aloud, loud enough for Hrafnhildr to hear but he addressed the very air around him. The mists and vapors swirled around them; their iridescent grey limbs threatened to entangle the horses’ legs toss them from a cliff. Frost had heard stories about what lived in mists, and at the bottom of cliffs ready to feed and fit into their skin.
They travelled on and on, passing rocks that looked like the rocks they had already passed and dry stream beds filled with the bones of armies of unfortunate fools. How much further did they need to go? Frost could feel his energy sapping from his bones faster and faster the further north they went.
Hrafnhildr stopped and pointed to an orange bloom in the distance and casually mentioned dragons. Frost inhaled a lungful of frozen, fetid air and groaned. “Dragons. Naturally…”
He’d had his fill of dragons in the past. They were fantastically nasty creatures, even if they had a certain appeal. He remembered one dragon in the far east that had been quite… persuasive, not that he would tell that story in polite company.
“So,” he asked with more than a hint of frustration and bitterness in his voice, “how long?”















