King Alexander stood stone faced as he listened to the
report regarding the mine. The mine would be unusable until an attacking force
could be sent to clear the mine out of any creatures, then the mine would have
to reinforced under the protection of soldiers and then the mining could only
resume under the watchful guards. All of the miners survived because they
stopped work and went home for the recent religious holiday. The one guard
recovered and only two guards were missing. The only silver lining in the dark
storm cloud of a situation is that almost no one died.
The King sent a group of soldiers,
Joseph the engineer and Captain Brussles, to take back Steel Haven’s the iron
mine. Captain Hurly Brussles was a decorated soldier who specialized in
fighting in confined spaces, like a bustling city or a mine. Captain Brussles
had black hair, olive skin, a short groomed beard and a long mustache that
reached the edges of his face. Brussles carried a sturdy spear when he was on
the battlefield and when in close quarters he carried two, single edged axes
with him, with shortened handles. His body was mostly armored and had sharp
hooked blades attached to the armor covering his forearms. These hooked blades
could defend a sword strike, then hook around the blade and when pulled would
disarm the opponent and break weaker swords. The hooked blades could also slash
and cut anyone who tried to get the drop on Hurly.
The group
rode towards the mine, everyone stayed on high alert as Joseph watched for any
signs of the Tirk creatures. The soldiers were all told of how the creatures
fought and the magical gem that one of them had. Joseph had secured the fire
gem from the previous battle and it was being stored somewhere safe within
Steel Haven. It was Joseph’s job to look for more gems, advise the Captain on
the Tirks and plan defenses once the mine was cleared.
Captain
Brussles dismounted at the mouth of the cave. He went in first and was followed
by a group of his men. A second group was positioned outside the mine to guard
the entrance. Joseph waited outside with the second group.
Joseph was
free to plan the defensive measures for the mine while his group of soldiers
guarded the area. Joseph had to update his original plans for defense to guard
against monkey goblins. The original defenses were planned with humans and
humans on horseback in mind but Joseph was altering the plans to even include
flying creatures just in case the world was even more dangerous than he
originally thought.
Captain
Brussles moved swiftly through the mine with little trouble. As his group
traveled deeper they were surprised by how empty the mine was. No trace of the
missing guards, discarded weapons, signs of fighting or even Tirks alive or
dead could be found.
Time passed
over the land and Joseph was making serious progress unhindered by attacks and
Captain Brussles had been exploring the mine. A single man on horseback rode
across the open field toward the iron mine. Joseph’s group all sprung into high
alert but relaxed when they saw the Chalybs banner above his head. Some of the
soldiers kept their weapons ready just in case it was a trick.
The rider and the horse looked
exhausted. The rider wore light armor and the Kingdom’s colors. He carried a
rolled up parchment in his hand and immediately handed the letter to Joseph.
The message read, “Scouts from the Royal forest found small, shallow burrows
dug in the forest. While the numbers of primitive dwellings were numerous the
original inhabitants were not found. A scout found a lone Tirk creature living
in a burrow and shouted ‘you wont take home’ before charging the scout and then
was slain. After searching further we concluded that the Tirks used to live in
the forest when it was still a Wildwood and before it was used for lumber. If
the Tirks live in dark secluded areas then it is possible they moved to the
area in or around the mine which is the closest location that is both secluded
and dark”
Joseph was
startled at what he read. First that the creatures could talk and second that
they weren’t invading the mine, they made it their home. Which meant there was
a colony of Tirks somewhere very close.
Meanwhile
underground, Hurly Brussles and his soldiers found two large metal doors
blocking their progress. The doors weren’t locked or sealed but Brussles
hesitated to open them, as he knew that his kingdom didn’t build them. He slowly
pushed open one of the large heavy doors. The mine rumbled as the door opened
revealing a large room full of red fire crystals. Captain Brussles froze, he
had been told what one crystal could do and was now standing in a stockpile of
crystals. The crystals were growing from the walls, floor and ceiling, it
wasn’t that the crystals were placed or stored here but that this was the
source of the flame crystals. Anyone with knowledge on how to safely use these
crystals would find such stockpile extremely helpful; the trick was to not die
in a fiery explosion.
Back on the
surface, Joseph and his group began climbing the rocks leading to the top of
the mine. The mine was in an open field but the mine entrance was a cave mouth
and the cave was part of a rocky hillside that went across the grassy field for
almost a mile and rose twenty feet above the ground. The rocky hills were like
a sturdy island in a flat grassy sea. Anyone on the top of the hill could see
around for miles and would be well protected by the difficult climb to the top.
Joseph and
his group reached the top, out of breath and still clinging to the edges of the
cliff. Joseph’s head was barely visible as he peered over the hill’s peek. He
could see mounds like the scout described in the forest and saw some movement.
The Tirks became more active as the night approached.
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