*Magnify*
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/2010957-A-Veterans-Tale
Rated: 18+ · Fiction · Fantasy · #2010957
When veterans speak, the young free-swords would do well to listen.
“You ever seen Goblins sonny?” the grizzled veteran asked, coughing over his pipe as he packed it with tobacco once again,
“It ain't like the Sagas, I'll tell you that! They mostly come at night, and you don't see 'em till they are almost on you, 'cos they can see in the dark you see! What you need is some of them Felixiads with you, cos those cat men can see in the gloaming almost as good as the greens do. Only you ain't no Felixad, and you can't see em coming. You hear em well enough though, hammering them kettle drums like the heralds of doom, the Boom! Boom! Boom! And as the hammerin' gets closer you loose your bladder, believe me you do!” the old man lit the pipe as the youngster titters, mockingly,
“Oh you think it's funny do you son? Let me tell you it ain't. Forty years I served the Emperor, 40 years man and boy. I fought bandits, I fought raiders, I fought river pirates and the odd damn fool that don't know you don't poke a sleeping dragon like the Empire with a sharp stick, lessen you want him to burn you to a crisp, but Goblins..." the old man shuddered, visibly paling as he remembered,
“They are a different matter, much different. They don't think like us you see. They don't feel like us neither”. He took a few more puffs on his pipe as some of the other veterans murmured their agreement.

“You mean they have no mercy?” the youngster asked.
“I mean they have no fear!” the old man barked, “And that is far, far worse. You stand there, trembling as those damn drums get louder, and louder, and you know nothing you do is going to frighten them as much as they frighten you. They are just big balls of hate and aggression. Oh yes, I said big.” The old man nodded, noting the look on the boys face.

“ I heard they were smaller than us?” the youth protested, his protests were met with mocking laughter by the veterans as the old man started again,

“Aye? By some one as has never seen one I'll wager! They look it at first, 'cos they stoop a lot, sort of all hunched up like, but you get one to stand strait and he is as big as me, or even as Trovan over there...” he jerked his thumb at the muscular veteran with the single arm, seeing the youngsters eyes alight on the stump just beneath Trovan's shoulder, the old man smiled grimly,
“It was a Green un' as did that to Trovan, Right Trovan?”

The muscular man nodded,
“Aye, it was. They came at us out of the dark, we knew they were there, we heard em, had been hearing 'em for what seemed like half the night, those bloody drums. Then they came screaming out the darkness, stabbing and hacking. The man next to me went down afore he finished screaming, and the thing as did it came for me next.” he shuddered “I've never fought anyone as fast as him neither, nor as skilled. You see these things don't get old like we do, they don't die unless you kill 'em and they don't do much but kill things and practice how to kill things. I've killed near on 3 score men in battle, and not one of em was half the fighter this Goblin was. Drew me in with a faint he did, then knocked my blade aside with his, and hooked my shield down with his axe before slashing at my body, if I hadn't slipped and fallen he would have gutted me there and then! His axe was still hooked on my shield when I fell, it pulled him off balance; In a flash he hacked off my arm, with the sword in his other hand, just above the shield I was holding. I was helpless as a kitten, and he would have had me then if Zackon hadn't skewered 'im in the kidneys with a spear just that second. The bugger didn't die though! No, he pulled his way up Zackon's spear, right Zackon?”

The old man nodded, then took up the tale again,

“Aye, and all I could do was stare and piss my breaches as he got closer. He hacked off my ear, an inch further over and he would have split my skull!” the old man drew back his long hair to show the ruined mess where his ear had once been. “That snapped me back to it alright, and I let go of the spear and jumped back to get the time to draw my Antari, that was when he made his mistake, too angry to spot it you see! He came forward, half my spear still in him, came just in range of the tip of my blade and I split 'im from cock to crown! I swear he just looked angry as he slipped away!”

“When dawn broke, two thirds of us were dead, and not one of us was unscathed. I tell you lad, you ever have the misfortune to fight Goblins, you better hope the unnamed God is watching, and that he likes you, 'cos those things are meaner than anything has any right to be”
© Copyright 2014 B F Irving (bfirving at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates have been granted non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/2010957-A-Veterans-Tale