I spent the morning sharpening the darkesworde, getting rid of as much rust from my new sword as I could, and convincing the only surviving hostage from the night before (now a free man, as we hadn't bothered demanding securities again after the attack) to stand guard as I checked for a blood trail in the woods. There was one.
It was a heavy, clear trail, and it seemed to continue as such well after it left the camp and went into the pines and spruce. Satisfied that we had a chance at tracking this thing, I waited at the edge of camp for everybody else.
The chief mounted his wolf, or worg I guess, a big impressive wild dog that seemed hard to control at best. It had a sort of a mane like a horse that crested between its big shoulders, and its eyes kept moving around from one of us to the other like it expected us to try to hurt it. I don't know where the chief's worg had been last night, but the only other two worgs left in camp had been out patrolling for the tyrannosaurus all night. Obviously they had failed to alert us, and the scouts took a serious thrashing from the chief when they came back in the morning. Not only that, the worgs were confiscated from them and given to a pair of much more heavily armoured hobgoblins. Apparently the scouts lost the privelege.
My sense of the hobgoblin band is that it's a mixed bag. The chief, whatever his other vices, is obviously a skilled leader, strong and not worried at all about the superior tactics and resources of the human county. About a dozen of the warriors in the camp fit the same description, obvious veterans of whatever kind of warfare the beastmen fill their time with. Many are related to the chief and each looks more intimidating than the one next to him.
The rest of the hobgoblins in the camp, including most of those I've seen die since we arrived, are a different story. They're pitiful little conscripts, strong but unsteady and undisciplined. Lazy at best, pathetic more often. Hardly the stuff of the nightmare tales I was told when I was little. The chief didn't seem to care much what they did, as long as they raised spears when he gave the order. But he always had to keep well aware of them, because if he blinked for half a second they'd drop his orders and run off. Near as I can tell he's not concerned with whether they live or die, and rather expects the latter. He rules them with as much violence as is needed, and if some of them stay alive and harden up to be like his veterans, that's just a bonus.
What wasn't so clear about the hobgoblin war band is what they were doing in the Snakebacks. When I mentioned the constable the chief sort of shut up. He agreed he'd help us deal with the man after we bag the rex, but he wouldn't answer any questions about how he knew him. Of course, we didn't get a chance to ask many. The guy does have a half-incompetent war band to lead after all. But I figure the bodies in that mine had been slaves, and the hobgoblins must have been involved somehow in procuring them. I'm not sure whether the slaves were brought to that place specifically as mine labour, or if the mine was just a convenient holding place for the slave trade, but either way it made my stomach sour. I understand making a man pay off his debts, but out-and-out slavery is a different thing. It's not like bonded serfdom. Those mines were a death sentence.
So despite my Demon being so cordial in dealing with the beastmen, I'm not one bit happy with the situation. Near as I can tell we're going on a fool mission against a near-unbeatable monster to avenge the honour of some other monsters in exchange for dealing with a monster of a human. It
[Editor's note: there is a gap in the text here, and the rest of the entry seems to have been filled in later in the day. The next sentence is scrawled in large sloppy letters. A small skull and crossbones with a sword through it is scrawled in the margin.]
Gooooods damn it!
Holy shit.
We got underway today with the chief and his worg pals acting as outriders, me and a hobgoblin doing the tracking, and everybody else staying just behind us. The chief alternated between mocking us for having no horses and mocking horses for being no good in dense forest. I'll let you guess how long it took for that to get old.
Anyway, the blood trail got unsurprisingly spotty after a quarter mile, and eventually we stopped seeing more than a drop or two of blood every three hundred yards. Luckily, something the size of a watch tower leaves other signs of its passage. Me and the hobgoblin, although unable to actually talk to each other, had little problem keeping everyone on course.
I like the way the guy tracked. He had this stick with a little piece of string tied loosely to it. He used it to measure prints and then look for other marks of the same size. I had always just tracked with my bare eyes, and I was good at it but even when I was at a loss he could pick up the trail. He would just start measuring every dent and divet in the land until one was the right size, then use that as the next print. At first I thought he was imagining things but sure enough, we'd see more signs in a hundred feet. Little bastard put me to shame.
It took me back. My uncle Horace was a good tracker, and I remember one time he wounded a boar that had wandered onto our lands and then ran right back into the baron's woods. He got me and the two of us tracked the thing, right through the damned royal forest (without telling my dad, of course). When we found it and finished it off we had to haul it on a spruce pole between us and cover our tracks the whole way back. After we dropped off the boar at home Uncle Horace even when back and set up a fake trail to the back door of the Temple of Heironeous. That's just the kind of guy he is, or was. I don't think the warden would've missed the signs of the kill, but no one ever said anything. I'm guessing the Baron kept it quiet so as not to embarrass himself.
Anyway, being out there tracking this big wounded critter, well, it reminded me of that. I don't want to say I was having fun out there, not with those damned creatures for company, but it did take me back. It's not often you get to kill something for food bigger than a hare, unless it's your own sheep or cattle.
So on we went for two hours or so. Fucker could run. Its trail wove around a lot too, like it was trying to throw us off. But it always stayed on about the same bearing. Always until around noon, when we got up from a water rest (that the hobgoblins declined), walked thirty paces and lost the trail. It took us ten minutes to realise it turned a sharp seventy degrees, the biggest change in course so far.
As time bore out, it maintained the new bearing. That meant it had stopped its panicked run, figured it was safe, and turned toward home. It also meant it thought of us as dangerous enough not to run toward home right from the start. That gave me heart, and it seemed to give the beast tracker heart as well. When he explained it to the chief in their language, the veterans' faces didn't change but they sat up a bit straighter.
So that brings me to the den. Gods, the den. Five hours after we set out one of the outriders gave the sign for everyone to halt. The humans didn't waste time in spreading out, with Grens and Junior in the back. The veterans stayed grim and silent while the weak hobgoblins just stood there looking miserable.
We heard a roar.
The one hobgoblin who's a competent archer fell back and got behind a tree. The veterans drew their swords and stared at the weaklings until a shield wall was formed. Spears were pointed forward and the veterans formed two little bunches on the flanks. Me and the tracker didn't interfere with any of this, but we knew the roar was still a ways off. We waited until the outriders confirmed this, and then everyone advanced at a crawl.
Well, half an hour of pissing in our trousers later, we were actually close to the thing. As near as I can tell it was just stomping and roaring and moaning up a hell of a symphony, with the occasional creaking crescendo as it knocked over a tree. The chief trotted past me on his worg and muttered in Common, "He is angry with you, human." I didn't answer.
The land we stood on was near the bottom of the valley, but still had some height. Ahead of us was a low bluff line that dropped sharply into the marshes of the valley floor. It seemed the tyrannosaurus had eked out a sort of a nest in a break in the bluff. It had a partial rock overhang to keep the rain off its head, and a huge heap of downed trees and branches to rest on. It was just above the water line so it could drink but keep dry at night. A good setup for a predator that doesn't mind visitors.
What I didn't expect was its erratic behaviour. It looked like the thing had been ripping down whole trees all morning in rage. Their splintered trunks littered the area beneath the bluff. No other animals could be spotted or heard in the area. I kept my head down and strung my hobgoblin bow as the others got into place.
Grens shuffled up to me, keeping low and looking uncharacteristically friendly. "Good luck," he said. As he spoke he reached out and grabbed the hilt of the sword I found in the mine. "This will help you in battle."
I know he must have loved the look on my face. "No," I whispered sharply. "Get my bow!" But it was too late. I looked to where his hand met my hilt and I could see the sword start to glow ever so slightly.
"I'm not going down there with that!" I chided him. "I'm arching--"
The look on his face was just too gleeful.
"No," I said.
He shrugged.
"No! Tell me we're not--"
"I'm not. Good luck down there."
I gritted my teeth as he walked away. If he was that talkative, he wasn't the one doing the talking. And if his demon thought I was going down, then maybe my demon thought I was going down. If my demon thought that... then it would happen. There's no way around it.
Think, I thought. I pulled my sword out of its sheath, then my other sword, and tossed them in the brush behind me. I nocked an arrow and drew my bow, aiming directly at the dinosaur's heart as it stomped around. I knew I couldn't force the player's hand, but maybe, maybe, if I had a good shot with my own plan it would listen to reason. It had to be reasonable. Right?
I soon got my answer. I don't think all the infantry were in place but I don't think the chief cared. His horn blew loud and clear over the bluff and the tyrannosaurus' head snapped in our direction. His nostrils flared as he looked about the brush. He let out a bellow that actually shook my arrow against my bow. I had no chance to straight the arrow.
Because it disappeared.
I wouldn't say my swords jumped into my hand. But the way time moved in that instant it seemed like it. I scrambled to them, brushed them clean, returned to my position on the bluff and let out a war cry in only a fraction of a second. No sooner did the war cry finish then I started yelling to the gods: "No, no, no, no, no, no, no!"
I must have yelled "no" once each step as I ran-fell-and-leapt down a rocky slope and into the rex's den. Around me I saw only a smattering of hobgoblins doing the same. Gunther at least was there, and the two of us charged from the left flank toward the monster in front of us.
It waited for us. It opened its mouth and hunkered down like we would run right in on our own. But then its big ugly eye caught sight of something else, three somethings else, charging from the right. The worgs. The chief and two of his finest came hollering in, one with a lance, one with an axe and one with a big cavalry sword. Scarves and ladies' dresses billowed from a makeshift standard pole behind one of their saddles. A stream of beast infantry followed behind, running but nowhere near as fast as the giant wolves. Our left side looked significantly undermanned compared to their right flank.
All three worgs slashed past the rex, but the first one didn't make it. The rex lifted it up in his jaws as it hit him, not breaking it in half but almost, and sent the rider flying. It just stood there and took it as the other two rained blows on their ride-by. I would've given my own testicles for a horse just about then. Or a gods-damned ounce of free will.
But me and Gunth, and two of the weaker hobgoblins, continued our charge. The chief shouted something over the fray and the hobgoblin to my left let out a shakey yell. He was dressed all in bright red and had a number of spiked leather collars, belts and bracelets on. I hadn't understood till just now that he looked stupid for a reason. He drew his knife--his knife--with one hand and a polished bronze mirror with the other, and set about attracting attention.
I almost jumped in front of him. Maybe if it was just me I would have. But the reins on me urged me to only one course: hacking and hewing as much dinosaur meat as I could before my inevitable demise. And I did hack and hew, unharassed for the moment as the rex took the bait and snapped up the distraction goblin. He paused mid-swallow as he felt the iron spikes. I locked eyes with him. He swallowed anyway.
The two worgs came back for another run. This time the rex was so bogged down with infantry that he didn't get them. He did, however, pull out a new move.
With no warning his tail whipped around, not just the agile balancing rod it had been the night before but now a whip with the force of a carriage behind it. It bowled over hobgoblins and cleared an area round the rex as he snapped up another victim. An arrow hit him in the next and he just kept going.
That was when our cavalry showed up. I didn't know we had any. But in the empty space cleared out beside me, a glimmer of light took shape as a new monster appeared.
I didn't know what sorcery had set upon us. I didn't recognise it at first: an insect, to be sure, but bigger than a horse. Its hundred legs found purchase on the branches and rock of the den and it reared up, clicking vicious mandibles. Smoke poured from its mouth and all along its underside. The thing surged into motion and I recognised it at last: a centipede, or a vile caricature of one. I thought I was going to have to fight that thing too until it clamped those sideways jaws onto the leg of the dinosaur.
Now, I've talked about more than one fight in this journal so far, and I'm not bad with a sword, but if my kids ever read this--if I live to have kids--I want you to know I don't think my blade did a damn thing against that monster. There were so many of us there, and the arrows and the worgs and the magic bug horror, that I think I was extraneous. But like an enslaved idiot I just kept on swinging, and I knew I was unlikely to be missed by those jaws a second time.
It wasn't the jaws I had to worry about. As the battle raged on, it became clear we were going to take the monster down. It was just a question of how long and who would live. But as the rex took more and more wounds it got more and more desperate. Spears found flesh and swords found blood, but helmets met great crushing feet and ribs met fast-sweeping tail. As I hacked harder into its leg and belly I saw it raising its tail for another sweep, but with the centipede between us I thought I was okay.
The centipede disappeared.
And the tail came at me hard, very hard, knocking one sword out of my hand and sending me easily thirty feet to a hard meeting with the ground. I wasn't sure I could stand up, but before I could even try I felt the ground rumble under me. It seemed so slow, with each rock digging harder into my injured back as the footsteps came closer. I couldn't raise my head, but I could tilt it enough to see: a foot, sky; a foot, sky; sky... blackness.
I lost my sight before my breath, but my breath went quick. It was pounded out of me as the tyrannosaurus twisted its heel into my guts. That was where I ended.
I woke up to a new sort of pain. I stared straight up at the sky and felt something twisting around in my innards. Grens' face appeared over me.
"You'll live."
I tried to speak, sputtered and coughed blood, and took a breath to speak again. "I... tho you din hab ay more those."
The wizard shrugged. "I thought maybe I should prepare a few extra today. Call it a hunch." I felt his hand pull out of my stomach and he wrinkled his brow. "That feel better?"
I coughed again. "Yeah, sort of."
"Then try this." Pain wracked me as my stomach burst open again and entrails bubbled out of me. "You like that? You like fucking little skeleton heads? You like fucking the dead, huh? I'm gonna fuck you up the ass, Roger. From the front, through your liver."
"Ahhhh!" The pain was so bad that I would've paid to have my eye gouged out just to experience a lesser pain.
"Aww, here." A calm peace exuded from his hand through my whole body and I felt my wounds close up a second time. I actually felt the skin seal. It was, well, uncomfortable.
He smiled a truly sincere smile at my pain. "Don't fuck with my Junior, Roger. Don't ever bother him again. You got me?"
I steeled my face but nodded slightly.
"Life and death, Rog. That's what I do."
He left.