THE FIENDSLAYER COMES (Saga of the Vaasan Knight #14)

 

General Ambrielle en'Teiva

[originally published November 23, 2025]

The battle was already raging for quite some time between her companions and the wicked creatures in the Kensai’s hall when she realized the tides of fortune were not moving in her their favor.

Amalielle the Confessor had become quite familiar with the ebb and flow of armed conflict in the few months of time that she had spent in the prime material plane.  She assumed that the current engagement was what was meant by a desperate battle against impossible odds . . .

The beholder was every bit the dread creature of legend and infamy to which the ancient sagas alluded.  The massive ropers that flanked it made the situation even more dire and the blob of annihilation was but a gratuitous jest sent by the Norns to mock them.  It now fully dawned upon her.

This was a fight they could not win. 

Not alone.

The words of her Lord’s greatest servant returned unbidden to her mind.

Welcome, my children, to the Chapel of Resounding Justice.  Go forth, and bring some part of this place with you, that it may comfort you and lighten your heart in the dark times to come.  May the Lawbringer smile upon you and give you his grace.

“General Ambrielle!” the Aasimar priestess cried aloud. “Lady of Grace! Hear our plea! Shine your light upon us and aid us in this, our darkest hour!”

The priestess’ desperate entreaty traversed the boundless realms of the Nine Worlds in less than a moment.

Ambrielle en’Teiva looked plaintively to her Lord.

The Grimjaws nodded wordlessly in reply.

Faster than the speed of thought, the Fiendslayer, the great General of the Angelic Host of Gladsheim, launched herself though the infinite cosmos.

                                    *                                              *                                              *

Ullethane assessed his surroundings, observing as the orcish paladin and the dragonborn barbarian threw themselves heedlessly into the fray, as the dark elven sorceress marshalled her potent incantations, and even then, as the aasimar priestess cried out to her angelic intercessor.  This wasn’t going well.

Before he could react further, his eyes were beset by a great light, nearly blinding him in its radiant glory.  In that moment, he beheld one of the most amazing sights he was ever to see in all of his life.

Ambrielle en’Teiva had come.

An unearthly, winged woman in gleaming armor had suddenly appeared on the very edge of his perception.  In her hands she bore a fiery greatsword and her fierce countenance was beset by a halo of indescribable glory.  The angelic warrior swung her blade in a wide arc and a great explosion of light filled the chamber, passing in a single instant, almost before it had even occurred.

The others looked around for the source of the flash, yet the General of Gladsheim had come and gone before they could even take note.

It appeared that the intervention had had no effect on the Reavers.  Ullethane quickly scanned the large chamber and noted that the same could not be said for their foes, however.  The beholder’s main eye danced around crazily and when it’s gaze passed over the ranger’s companions, their enchantments were not broken.  The ropers flailed about randomly, where before their attacks had been precise and devastating.  The General’s sudden, blazing appearance had left the Reavers’ foes blinded.

“They are blinded!” he cried out.  “Press the attack! They are blinded!”

The tide of battle had turned.

                                    *                                              *                                              *

Amalielle sank to one knee as the presence of the patron of the Chapel of Resounding Justice washed over her.

The Chapel of Resounding Justice rises as a beacon of hope and truth in the presence of the wicked and the profane.  Whenever evil shall arise, the Chapel shall answer!  Carry this message forth, my child, and proclaim it to all this world!

For a fleeting moment, Amalielle felt the touch of the Solar upon her brow, and with it, a great sense of peace and clarity amidst all the tumult raging around her.  The ranger’s cry suddenly returned her to the material world.

“They are blinded!  Press the attack!  They are blinded!”

Amalielle rose again to her feet, braced for this, and for all the battles to come.

                                    *                                              *                                              *

In the heat of battle, Callista heard Amalielle cry out to her angelic patron only to be taken unawares by a sudden flash of blinding light and a receding echo of words in her mind—

The Chapel of Resounding Justice rises as a beacon of hope and truth in the presence of the wicked and the profane.  Whenever evil shall arise, the Chapel shall answer!  Stand fast against the darkness that is to come, my child, and always remember the Lawbringer's light!

Before she could look about for the speaker of these words, she heard Ullethane also cry out—

“They are blinded!  Press the attack!  They are blinded!”

With a glance at their foes, she confirmed the truth of it.  She grinned maliciously to herself as the old, long-buried red rage rose inside her.

                                    *                                              *                                              *

“I’m not really sure what happened there,” Callista noted, chewing on a large piece of jerky after the fight had ended and the party had set up camp in the Modron’s abandoned quarters in a more secure part of the dungeon. “It sure was pretty awesome, though.”

“Yes, what did happen?” Grend asked in his deep, rolling voice from where he sat against the chamber wall. “We were weighted down under a great assault, and with a burst of light, the battlefield shifted in our favor.”

“Did you not hear Amalielle cry out to the Lady of Grace?”  Ullethane replied bemusedly. “It was Ambrielle en’Teiva herself who interceded on our behalf.  It seems that the Angelic Host of Gladsheim has taken an interest in our endeavors here.”

“Could she have not saved us the trouble and simply obliterated our foes instead of just blinding them?”  Aunrae asked skeptically. “Or better yet, just retrieved the Illrigger’s key without any confrontation at all?”

“It is no small thing for such a being to cross the planes,” Amalielle offered, thoughtfully. “Especially spontaneously and particularly as these confines are warded against such intrusions.  It would be extremely taxing just to intercede as she did.  If she were to attempt something greater, it might cause her great, irreparable harm . . . or . . .”

“Or what?” the drow asked, her silvery-white eyebrows arching.

“Her forced presence in this place might create a small tear in reality.  Likely enough to put an end to all of this,”  she said, gesturing around at their surroundings.  She looked at Ullethane, who nodded in agreement.

For his part, Ullethane was sure Aunrae already knew all of this.  She was a powerful sorceress born and bred in the unforgiving Underdark of Toril.  The interaction of the planes of existence and various forms of warding and restrictive enchantments were part and parcel of everyday life in the deep places of the world from whence she came.  Something else was weighing on her.

In any case, Aunrae responded no further, retreating back into silence, and with it, back into her own thoughts.

                                    *                                              *                                              *

When the others had turned in, Callista and Amalielle stepped away to share a final discussion of the day’s events, as they so often did after a particularly momentous battle.

After some time had passed, and as the conversation drew to a close and they themselves were about to retire for the evening, Amalielle thought to ask her friend a somewhat unrelated question.

“May I ask, veninde,” she began. “I have not seen you wield the heirloom weapon of your people in battle.  Is it not your desire to add to its glorious reputation?”

Callista carefully considered all of her thoughts on the matter before replying.

“Well, fighting with a two-hander of any sort isn’t my best style.  Using a shield has been so much a part of how I move and position myself in a scrap, a greatsword would just leave me too exposed on the front line,”  she started.  “Even so, there’s something else . . . I think the damned blade might be cursed, or something.”

“What makes you say so?” Amalielle asked with some concern.

“The sword needs to . . . eat.”

“I do not understand, veninde.”

I am not sure that I totally understand, either.  It appears to have a hunger for, well, souls.”

“How do you know this?” the aasimar asked with horror.

“It told me.”

“It what?”

“This is not good news, veninde.  Where is the weapon?”

“Not to worry, I’ve shunted it into some kind of magical space.”

“How did you do this?”

“When the sword started bothering me, something scratching at the back of my mind made me realize that I could bind Sivim’ii’kith to my will by reciting some words and doing a little ritual, and then I could drop it into the magic space and bring it back and forth whenever I needed to.  So that’s what I did.”

Amalielle stared blankly at her friend for several moments before speaking again.

“The weapon is in this space now?” she finally asked.

Callista nodded.

“Have you . . . fed it yet?”

Callista shook her head.

“This vexes me.  For the brief moments I was in the presence of your family’s blade I did not sense any evil emanating from it, and yet, eating souls is as wicked a deed as there is.  Not even the most iniquitous denizens of the Nine Hells do such a thing.”

“Well, I guess it doesn’t actually eat them?  Or, maybe not right away?  It seems to be more like it traps them and kind of slowly siphons from them over time?”

Horror one again spread across the aasimar’s face.

“How long will a soul survive such a thing?”

“I don’t know.  It didn’t tell me that yet.”

“How many souls are trapped inside of it right now?”

“Great question.  I’ve only interacted with one so far.”

“Who have you interacted with?”

“My mother.”

Veninde!” Amalielle exclaimed.  “How did this come to pass!?”

“Someone or something used the blade to kill my mother.  She doesn’t know how it happened.  She only knows that she was slain, most likely in her sleep.”

“What base treachery!  We must find some means of finding out how many unfortunate souls are trapped within the accursed blade, of how to undo this!”

“I completely agree!” Callista replied. “I’ve been thinking about that, actually.  Ever since I had to banish the damned sword into its magic box just to make it shut up I’ve been trying to come up with something, some way to free those who are trapped inside it and I think I have an idea.  I am not sure how to find her right now, but if anyone can help us find a way, it’s her.”

“Of whom do you speak, veninde?”

“My cousin, Orlaa the Shaper.”




AT THE VAASAN GATE (Tales of the Armageddons #6)


[originally published September 23, 2025]

Callista was pleasantly surprised at Orlaa’s Armageddon’s sudden appearance earlier in the evening.  She had not seen her distant cousin for quite some time and had never expected to run into her in such a place as Bloodstone Village, so close to the Vaasan frontier.  Their meeting was, she had learned, because Orlaa had specifically sought her out.  After pleasant greetings, they went into the village’s inn and found as quiet a table as they could amongst the gathered throng.

Once they were seated, Orlaa pulled a thin scroll from the folds of her frock coat and unfurled it before her sword-sister.  Callista watched and listened with interest as the sorceror began to read its contents aloud:

Severin and Turbran Armageddon were born in the 1220s by the Reckoning of the Dalelands, in the Vaasan wastes, to a small tribe of mountain orcs.  Their mother was a young human shieldmaiden of the White Wyrm Tribe that had been captured in a raid and subjected to brutal slavery and debasement.  After the birth of her unwished-for children, and before attacking her captors and bringing on her own demise, she cried out to Heimdall for retribution to make her twin offspring the instruments of her vengeance.  The Vigilant One was only too happy to oblige.

The brothers survived into early adulthood, forged into living weapons in the harsh wastelands.  Sharper than steel.  Harder than stone. 

When the appointed time had come, Heimdall filled them with hatred and wrath and a small spark of his divine power.  They took up arms and slew all of the members of their orcish clan, without hesitation or mercy.

It proved to be the auspicious beginning to an infamous career.  The Brothers Armageddon spent the next several years running roughshod over the North.  Thieves. Slayers. Pillagers. 

It was oft whispered that the brothers left their seed behind wherever they marauded, branding the lands of the North with bloodlines that endured long after the memory of their misdeeds had faded into legend.  The price of Heimdall’s momentary favor was that all of he descendants of the brothers would be half-orc, whether the parents be orc, human, or some combination of the two.

It was also said that their path took the brothers even unto the City of Doors, where they forged an alliance with Gith exiles who skulked there in the shadows, concealing themselves from the ever-seeking gaze of their Lich Queen.

In time the brothers returned to the Realms and fell in with a band of ruthless mercenaries who fully lived up to their namesake—the Reavers.  This group of adventurers cut a swath of mayhem and ruin across the Bloodstone Lands before settling into a ringed tower complex meant to set a watch on each other as much as to set a watch on their foes, for it was well-known in the North that the Reavers’ contempt for their many enemies was exceeded only by their contempt for each other.

And so, it was not long before the Reavers’ internal vigilance and distrust proved to be well-founded, for in 1254 DR, the Year of the Fallen Hall, the Reavers turned their warlike natures upon each other.  The dread dark elf priestess and her Ilrigger paramour initiated the final reckoning by tunneling from their own tower stronghold down into the dungeons of their most despised rival, a Reaver whose name remains lost to the mists of time, unleashing a horde of undead monstrosities upon him and his minions.

With this commencement of hostilities, the vile eldritch warrior Alystaire in turn assaulted the tower of his  own despised rival, Loddfafnir Thiassi, a northern barbarian of great mirth and great melancholies.  These two brought their full might to bear against each other, smiting the very air with all their fury and power.

And then, at the height of the conflagration, the Brothers Armageddon appeared suddenly over the skies of Reaver Hall astride powerful Gith-allied red dragons, seizing upon the unleashed chaos and pouring all of their accumulated rage and hatred down upon their companions, attacking all indiscriminately, for no greater purpose than to revel in the destruction.

What ultimately became of the Reavers as a result of this great conflict is unknown.  All that is known is that when the battle concluded, none of them remained.  They had vanished without a trace.  Some legends intimate that their unleashed power had torn reality open and caused their mutual destruction.  Others hold that the gods were so disgusted by the Reavers' senseless and unending bloodshed that they merely allowed them to obliterate each other, thereby ensuring that the world would suffer no more of the adventurers' unbridled aggression.

No matter the cause, the Reavers have never been seen nor heard from again.  Only their Hall remains, unexplored and untouched to this day, seemingly warded by rumors of a great curse that lies over its environs, waiting to be unleashed upon an unsuspecting world.

Orlaa rolled the scroll back up after her recitation and waited for Callista’s response.

“That was . . . SO AWESOME!”  Callista exclaimed breathlessly, clearly smitten with the tale of their mutual ancestors.

“I know, right?” Orlaa agreed.  “My grandfather wrote this particular history.  I found it after I learned that you were joining a group hired to seek out and explore Reaver Hall.  There’s also a genealogy for my family that he added at the end.  I’ve added your family’s line myself, based on your clan’s oral histories.  It seems our people were once feared adventurers and the place you are going to explore was their stronghold.”

“Thanks for letting me know about all this, especially that part about a curse, although I have no idea what it’s supposed to be,” Callista said, truly grateful for her sword-sister’s efforts. “Will you at least stay for a bit this time? It’s been way more than a season since we’ve caught up with each other!“

“I wish I could, but I’ve pressing business awaiting me back home,” she replied.  “I only happened to be visiting at Candlekeep to consult with an old colleague on some of my research when I overheard that you'd been through on your way from Heliogabalus on your way to this Reaver Hall.  That's how I found out.  Pure coincidence, really.  I thought you would want to know all of this about our people before you set out.”

“Who knows?  Maybe it was more than coincidence.  Anyway, we are setting out for a settlement called Reaver’s Rest in the morning.”

“I’ll not hold you up then,” Orlaa remarked ever so slyly.  “After all, I also hear that Sir Rikkard of Kinnery is the Commander of the Vaasan Gate now.  I’m sure you’ll be finding some way to keep each other warm as the cold winter approaches . . . Me Callista, Me big warrior, me mash hooman!

Ugrukh . . .”  the burly warrior  muttered in feigned disgust, shaking her head.

The sword-sisters burst out in laughter and toasted each other before draining their tankards.  They'd stood up together to part ways, when Orlaa suddenly handed the scroll to Callista.

“Keep this token, my sister, and carry it with you into the wastes.  Let something of both Severin and Turbran Armageddon return to their ancient dwelling place.”

The half-orcs embraced warmly, then Orlaa turned to make her leave.  Before she could go, however, Callista put a final query to her—

“Do you have any idea what your ancestor was referring to about that City of Doors or these Gish or Gith or whatever?”

Orlaa turned back to reply, momentarily lost in thought.

“Not exactly . . . no.  I have some suspicions, though.  Well, more like educated guesses, really.  But who knows?  When you get back, let me know what you find out and we can see if we can see what’s what.  I’d especially like to talk to you about your family’s silver sword, should you ever find it.”

“Deal,” Callista agreed, and the two embraced again.

At that moment, Orlaa spied a familiar figure making his way toward them through the evening crowd that filled the common room.  Convinced that she had not yet been spotted, she hastened to make her exit.

“Until next,” the sorceror said.

“Until next,” Callista replied, guessing at the source of Orlaa’s hasty withdrawal.

The sorceror disappeared just as Torvaagh arrived.

“Everything is prepared for tomorrow’s journey,”  the ranger stated.  He looked down at the empty tankards on the rough wooden table, then off into the crowd, uncertainly.

“Wait, was that—”

Cutting him off before he could ask the question, Callista issued a brisk set of orders to be executed before they left at first light for the place called Reaver’s Rest.  Unconvinced by the misdirection, the half-orc ranger nevertheless nodded his assent and moved off to inspect their gear one last time before retiring for the night.

Callista looked down at the scroll in her hand, then at the empty tankards.  She flagged down a serving wench, ordered another tankard and sat back down at the table.  While she waited, she unfurled the scroll and read and reread its contents, reflecting on what secrets might be concealed in its inscriptions until the fires in the common room had burned low.


FALCONCRAG (Preludes #7)


[originally published August 3, 2025]

Orlaa the Shaper looked out on the barren vista and sighed heavily.

A blood debt should only have to go so far . . .

She turned back to the location that Callista had chosen to set up camp.  There were two very old, very decrepit huts that had been crudely constructed from clay and it was there that her sister-in-arms had begun clearing and preparing a fire.

“Did you build those yourself?”  she asked bemusedly.

“No,” the other replied. “I just lived in one of them for almost six years.”

“How delightfully coarse,” Orlaa observed.

“It was fine.  There were goats to herd and a large vegetable garden to tend and horses to ride,” she said, gesturing to the areas where once a small paddock and a larger corral had been.  It was from the remnants of these shelters and fences that Callista had gathered the firewood. “And endless days of fighting and training.  Training and fighting.  All in preparation for the Black Mountain.”

“How delightfully mind-numbing.”

“We also meditated, you ugrukh,” she shot back at the sorceror, laughing as she called her uppity kinswoman an orcish expletive for about the dozenth time today.  “We prayed to the spirits of earth and sky until we became as one and communed with the souls of our ancestors in peace and harmony.”

“How delightfully tribal.  Anyway . . .”

“Anyway.”

“Where do you want the tower to go up?” Orlaa asked.

Until Callista, Orlaa had never met another half-orc named Armageddon who had not come from Mulmaster.  When Callista showed up on the Company training ground one spring, the recruiter had sent her to see Orlaa straightaway, as the new arrival shared the same surname and was also of orcish descent, so the mercenary soldier simply assumed a connection.

It had been quite a surprise for both of them that there was such a connection  Orlaa’s ancient sire had been Turbran Armageddon, and Callista’s had been Severin Armageddon, brothers who together had run roughshod over the north more than a century ago.  Orlaa knew of the broad outline of this lineal history from the archives of her family.  She had just never thought she would ever meet one of her presumably long-lost, distant cousins.  Especially not like that!

It was an auspicious beginning to a long and fruitful partnership.  They had complimented each other quite well. Where Orlaa provided strategic expertise to their endeavors, Callista provided the tactical acumen to implement their plans on the battlefield and elsewhere.  The culmination of their careers had been the campaign waged against the Wailing Tower in 1376 DR.  Six hand-selected mercenaries from the Company of the Broken Blade had made the assault, including Callista and Orlaa Armageddon.

The fighting had been terrible.  And the horrors that dwelt under that place . . . Orlaa shuddered at the recollection.

Her cousin’s broad shield had intercepted more than one fatal blow directed toward the sorceror in battle.  Her commanding presence had also intercepted more than one angry fist directed toward the sorceror from their aggravated companions.  In sum, Callista was well-liked among those in their Company and well-feared by those who were not.

At the Wailing Tower it was Callista who had stepped in front of the Karatoeba without hesitation, taking the full brunt of the creature’s onslaught.  It was Callista who had engaged Ragnard the Oathbreaker in single combat with a wild and reckless abandon. Orlaa knew she would have been eviscerated, obliterated or incinerated ten times over but for the heroics of her cousin.

After a career’s worth of friendship and exploits, all her kinswoman had asked for in return was for Orlaa to raise a tower for her in the middle of the Vaasan wastes.  It wasn’t much to ask for at all, really. Not from her.  She was Orlaa Armageddon.  The Shaper.  It was in fact no challenge at all.

Callista pointed to a carefully chosen spot on a defensible rise. Orlaa nodded. 

And so it began.

*                                                          *                                                          *

Orlaa reached into her enchanted satchel and began drawing forth the most wondrous of items, one after the other, which she laid out neatly before her.

The very first of these were folded and interlocking things of bronze and wood and bone.  She set six of them on the ground, evenly spaced, and began to utter the twisted words of sorcery that had always made Callista particularly uneasy.  The six piles suddenly sprang to life, expanding into large, faceless, humanoid forms.  At a further command, the automatons came to attention, waiting for their mistress’s next instruction. Orlaa nodded to herself agreeably.

A metal armor with bullet holes

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 The next items were small bundles of cut timber in various dimensions, neatly arranged, and which fit comfortably in the palm of her hands.  At a word, they, too, suddenly expanded into their correct sizes.  Then came cut stones that grew into larger proportions.  Then other prepared materials that would also go into the edifice’s construction.

Last of the items to be withdrawn were many intricately made hand tools.  Oddly, none of these had been magically shrunken like the other items.  The sorceror withdrew each reverentially, closely inspecting them before presenting them to her automatons.

After reviewing all of the arrayed things one more time, the arcane engineer closed her eyes, clapped her hands and barked out her order— “Begin!”

The automatons sprang into action and Callista watched in amazement as the animated constructs began the process of moving and placing large blocks of cut stone, or building scaffolding out of the stacked timber, or any of a handful of other tasks.  They moved at speed and with great strength, appearing to perform the work of sixty men, rather than that of the six they numbered.

As they went, Callista noticed that Orlaa would occasionally wave a hand here, another hand there, as if providing directions to her workers even though her eyes were shut tight.  The sorceror otherwise did not move.

After nearly two hours, Callista asked her cousin “Are you okay?  Can I make you a place to sit or something?”

After a moment of silence, the sorceror replied through half-gritted teeth.

“I’m fine.”

“Are you sure?  It’s no problem.”

“This isn’t as easy as I make it look, you know,” Orlaa grumbled, suddenly showing strain on her face with the initiation of their conversation.  “It’s not like ‘orcing’ around swinging an axe all over the place— Me Callista, me big warrior!  Me smash!”

“Oh, yeah?” Callista snapped back in irritation. “I’ll show you ‘orcing’ around— Me Orlaa, me big brain! Me run mouth!”

“Callista!” the sorceror growled.  “Do you want me to finish this or not?!?”

The orcish warrior quieted herself rather than risking truly distracting her cousin as she worked.  The last thing Callista wanted was for the project to literally come tumbling down over a little bit of needling.

In another two hours, the tower was complete.

*                                                          *                                                          *

Orlaa wiped the sweat from her brow and breathed a deep sigh of relief.

In just over four hours Orlaa had completed weeks, if not months, of building.  It had instead taken weeks of careful planning— perfecting the design, calculating the volume and number of building materials, recalibrating and fortifying her automatons for the intensive labor.  It had all been a wild success on the very first attempt.  The sorceror wondered what else she might be able to accomplish, how much grander she might scheme . . .

Thoughts for a different day, perhaps.  The project was completed to her satisfaction, which far exceeded anyone else’s expectations.  She looked at her kinswoman with great self-regard waiting for an assessment.

For her part, Callista Armageddon looked at her cousin with mouth agape, then to the tower, back to her cousin and back to the tower again, unable to find the words to express her astonishment.

“Who’s the ugrukh, now?” Orlaa exclaimed. Ugrukh!”

*                                                          *                                                          *

The half-orcs watched as the automatons cleared away the last of the rubbish, gathered up the tools and replaced them one by one into the satchel and then at last compacted themselves down into their starting forms, whereupon Orlaa herself dropped them into the magical shoulder bag.

She turned to her cousin to say her farewells.

“So, that takes care of that!” the sorceror announced, clapping her hands together back and forth as if wiping away some imaginary dust or dirt. “ We are square, as you have said.  I do not think you received the better part of the bargain, but a deal is a deal.”

“Know this, my sister— the foundations and walls of your tower are shielded by many enchantments.  They are also warded by the very spirits of earth and sky that you revere so highly.  That last touch was the only tricky part of this whole thing.  It was not the name of Orlaa that convinced them to dwell here,” she mused aloud, smirking to herself. “I told them it was the holdfast of Callista, daughter of Dazulka.  I did not need to tell them any more.”

“Won’t you stay any longer, Orlaa.  There are so many memories to share again, so many new stories to tell.”

“I think I’ve enjoyed the Vaasan steppe enough for one lifetime.  I’m not riding and sailing back, either.  I’ll be stepping sideways through space and time to get home.”

Callista gave her a confused look in reply.

“Teleportation.”

The two embraced in a final parting.

“Next time you’re in Mulmaster, look me up,” she said, beginning to cast her teleport spell.  “We can go out and look for some trouble.  I’m often quite bored.  Retirement isn’t all it’s cracked up to be!”

And with a final flourish, the sorceror had departed.

Callista regarded the silence for a moment, then headed toward the tower.  It would be a few more weeks before Gareth would arrive with the wagon train, even with her clan to guide them along the path.  It was too bad that Orlaa would not stay for the long celebration that would christen the newly made tower.  There would be much feasting and dancing and dark Armageddon stout to enjoy.  Of course, Torvaagh would also be there.

Callista sighed.  Orlaa was well known to her clan.  She had come to stay with them for a season to meet all her long-lost kin and record their doings in her journals, but in the end did not last with them for quite so long . . . Orlaa and Torvaagh.  Their passion had burned as briefly and intensely as the Vaasan summer  It had not ended well, and Orlaa took her leave then much as she did now, quickly, and by magic.

“Oh, well,” Callista thought aloud.  “Time for me to get to work, now.”


The half-orc warrior started up the path to the hill where her new holdfast sat waiting to be properly claimed.



AN UNLIKELY GIFT (Saga of the Vaasan Knight #13)


[originally published June 15, 2025]

Callista did not trust the blue-skinned oni any further than she could throw him.  Even with her noteworthy strength, that still was not very far at all.

“Surely, my lass,” he offered in as sibilant a voice as a being such as he could muster, “the price for these wondrous trinkets is not so very much to ask?”

Amalielle glared indignantly at the ogre-mage.  “I am afraid, Estevan,” she replied curtly “that your reputation in the Cage precedes you . . . “

“You wound me, young aasimar!  Never in any of my dealings with the Chapel of Resounding Justice have I ever asked an unfair price!  Why, nearly every exchange has left me close to ruin!  And now you would assault my very reputation, as well?  Preposterous!”

Callista listened to the two natives of the City of Doors continue their verbal dance.  Both participants appeared to be thoroughly enjoying their haggle over the final costs of the new magical equipment that they had ordered only just before their contest with the drow.  After that encounter, their journey to the Chapel of Resounding Justice had been refreshing to the soul.  This, however, was . . . something else entirely . . .

“Done!” The ogre-mage exclaimed at last.

 “. . . Done,” Amalielle nodded in agreement, smiling ever so slightly to herself.

“Nyxara will see you to the next room, where you may pay for your goods and collect them anon!” Estevan grandly announced to the adventurers, shuffling them along in the general direction of his tiefling clerk.  “And Nyxara, please make sure that our most valued customers are served only our finest refreshments while we conclude the days dealings!”

As the adventurers followed the tiefling toward one of the many side hallways, a small glint in the corner of Callista’s eye caught her attention.  She paused to look, and spotted a large, baroquely decorated brooch placed on a wall behind the oni that she had not recalled seeing earlier.

“Ah, you have a fine eye, my noble warrior,”  the ogre mage interjected upon noticing the half-orc in turn noticing one of his wares.  He nimbly plucked it from its resting place and swept it gracefully before her for inspection.  “A fine eye indeed!  This is a most wondrous piece of craftsmanship.  It’s origin is unknown, but it’s function is most ingenious . . .”


Amalielle turned abruptly at the sound of Estevan trying to hawk more of his wares to her friend.  She did not much like the thought of anyone dealing with the scurrilous trader outside of her direct oversight, in fact.  That, and now the halfling had gone missing.  Again.  She sighed loudly to no one in particular.

The aasimar priestess looked at the item that had caught her friend’s attention.  The orcish knight seemed to have taken quite a shine to the trinket, actually.  Amalielle looked at it a bit more closely and whispered the syllables of a minor incantation.  It gave off no aura of significance.  She concluded it was nothing more than a minor arcane focus for those who could utilize such things.  She assumed her friend had been drawn to its fashionable, yet martial, attractiveness.  Visitors to the Cage seemed truly fascinated by the exotic wares her home offered.

“Well, veninde,”  she offered noncommittally, “If you find it that interesting, there is no harm in taking it off the hands of this unscrupulous merchant.”

The eyes of the aasimar and oni once again narrowed in challenge, as a second, pleasantly unexpected opportunity to test their wills against each other emerged.

*                                                  *                                                  *

 Nyx looked at the jewel the half-orc knight had just affixed to her breastplate, then at her employer.

 After the adventurers had walked out of the shop, she decided to raise the issue.

“I do not recall seeing that brooch in any of our inventories.”

Estevan waived off her observation.  “It is nothing, a small bauble of questionable value that I managed to sell off for a price much greater than its worth.”

Nyx shrugged.

“Whatever you say, boss.”

*                                                  *                                                  *

Silvery, eldritch energy crackled between Callista’s fingertips as she held her hand up before herself.

Well, she thought to herself,  THIS is new.

The energy crackles had begun as a slight tingling in her fingers not long after they had left Estevan’s.  The tingling grew and grew until the little sparks of energy began to emerge and dance around her fingers, first on one hand, then the other, without any rhyme or reason.  Without panicking, she suggested to the priestess that they stop and try to figure out what was happening.  Without much difficulty, she quickly learned to control how the energy manifested and now she was playing about as if it were a game.

“Is this some new gift of the Grimjaws meant to further entice me to his cause?” the orcish knight asked of her friend as the two sat and enjoyed a strange drink Amalielle called ‘coffee’ at one of Sigil’s many street cafes.  The others had gone on and agreed to meet them back at their lodging sometime later.

Amalielle carefully watched the tiny, shimmering bolts dance around her friend’s fingers.  After a few moments, she frowned.

“I do not believe this . . . gift . . . comes from my Lord Tyr, veninde,” the aasimar priestess concluded. “It’s origin is not known to me.  It causes you no pain or discomfort?”

“No.”

“It . . . stirs in you no . . . dark thoughts nor any thoughts of mayhem?”

“Amalielle!”

“Apologies, veninde,” she replied. “I meant no insult.  This display of eldritch ability could be related to your sacred oath to the natural spirits of your world or to your people’s ancestors.  A continuing and natural progression for you as you journey on, if you will . . .”

“But?”

“ . . . but, its expression implies something else entirely.”

“Like what, exactly?”

“Like the eldritch gifts of the warlocks.”

What?!?  I consort with no such foul beings!”

“Nor do I imply that you do.  Perhaps there is some other part of your essence that is only now finding its own expression.  The City of Doors has been known to have that effect on strangers from time to time.”

Callista considered her friend’s words for a moment before once again summoning the dancing eldritch energy, carefully directing the sparks to leap between her hands.  It was getting easier and easier.

“Do you think I can whip eldritch blasts at our enemies now?” She suddenly asked aloud, looking about with no small enthusiasm.

“Aaaah . . . ,” the aasimar began, with some trepidation. “Perhaps, but this is neither the time nor place to test this possibility.  We might wish to wait and return to the training ground of the Chapel of Resounding Justice, first.”

Callista pondered this suggestions for a moment before frowning with disappointment.

“Okay.  No reason to draw any unwanted attention in this place, I guess . . .”

The aasimar nodded vigorously and drank deeply from her mug, grateful for having avoided any disturbances.

*                                                  *                                                  *

Druust’ya Olaav’ya watched attentively from across the café as her green-skinned descendant experimented with her newly awakened powers.  Each time her kinswoman summoned the dancing, eldritch sparks the ancient Gith felt the same tingle of power that the half-orc did.  She smiled to herself and sipped from the mug of Zhentish tea she had ordered.  Her favorite refreshment was appropriate for a moment of triumph such as this, no matter how small in the grand scheme of things to come.

The brooch had indeed kindled the latent power in the knight’s bloodline, just as the Githyanki had expected.  The power in her bloodline.  The younger woman was already taking to it, “Like a vin’isk to a jhe’stil,” she said, thinking the last part out loud.  It had only required calling in a small debt from the oni merchant to have it placed within the range of Callista’s notice. 

Her companion, Sa’amasan Saal, watched with considerably less enthusiasm.

“You have awakened a Bhat t’ch’r’ai,” the Gith warrior murmured disapprovingly. “A witch-knight. After all this time, and in this, of all places.”

“Yes, Sa’amasan, a witch-knight.  A champion.  My champion.  Not the spawn of her mother’s barbaric traditions, nor of Tyr Grimjaws' devotion to mindless order.  She is a child of the Infinite Void, and her instinctive acceptance of my gift is indisputable proof of this.”

The Githyanki sorcerer smiled maliciously to herself again, finished her tea and arose.  Sa’amasan Saal looked at her curiously.  “What are you intending to do?”

Without explaining herself, Druust’ya Olaav’ya crossed the length of the café, coming up before the table where Callista Armageddon and Amalielle the Confessor sat, still in the midst of discussing Callista’s current situation.  Sa’amasan Saal followed close behind.

“What a lovely looking jewel,” the Githyanki princess remarked, as the two adventurers looked up in surprise at her sudden appearance before them. “Why, such a treasure could only have been wrought in the very heart of Tu’narath itself,” she said admiringly, leaning down and touching the ruby set in the center of the brooch.

Callista seemed both dumbfounded and flattered at the same time by this gesture, while Amalielle found herself in a high state of alarm two Githyanki had suddenly appeared before them, taking particular notice of what Amalielle had considered to be nothing more than a bauble.  Her eyes narrowed suspiciously.

“Enjoy it, young one,” Druust’ya encouraged her. “With it you are the very image of the Bhat t’ch’r’ai of old, the likes of which have not been seen in an age.”

Callista looked at Amalielle with raised eyebrows, very pleased with herself, and nodded in approval.  Amalielle sat motionlessly, a tension rising in her as if welling up from the very heart of the Chapel of Resounding Justice itself.  The aasimar priestess had no idea what the Gith had meant by Bhat t’ch’r’ai, but the word carried a foreboding aura with it and Amalielle did not like the sound of it at all.

The imposing Githyanki rose to her full, regal height, and before taking her leave, offered Callista the following in parting—

 “Fare thee well, my child.  chraith’kan zharn,”

The strangers nodded to the adventurers in turn and moved off into the City, to attend to whatever business had brought them to the Cage, leaving just as abruptly as they had appeared.

Amalielle stared at her friend, trying to make sense of what had just happened.  Callista simply went back to lustily tearing into the shanks of barely cooked rothe steak the café server had brought them, while mumbling,  “I told you this brooch was gorgeous.  I mean, even random strangers can’t help but notice.”

“Random strangers,” Amalielle weakly repeated.  She had not known the first term the Githyanki had used.  She certainly knew the phrase offered in parting, however.  Every native of the Cage had heard those words at one time or another.  chraith’kan zharn.

May your enemies know agony.

*                                                  *                                                  *

Druust’ya Olaav’ya laughed aloud as the Githyanki moved away from the café and through the busy throughfares of the City.

“Did you see the look of sheer panic on the face of the little k’chakhi aasimar?  How delicious!”

 “Yes, yes, it was enjoyable, I will admit.  It was as enjoyable as it was dangerous, My Lady.”

 My Lady, is it?  It is only ‘My Lady’ when you disapprove of my actions.”

“You have awakened a witch-knight in a place where the wretched ghaik seem to skulk about in every shadow— any illithid that sees that brooch here will take note.  Or worse.  Any of Vlaakith’s servants who may also be here will seek confrontation.”

 “And what of it, Sa’amasan?”  Would any of them risk open warfare in the streets of Sigil?  And risk the ire of the Harmonium, if not the Lady of Pain herself?  I think not.  No,” she said, fondly touching the cheek of her paramour. “Callista Armageddon and her companions will return to the place from whence they came and she will continue on to meet her destiny.”