lunes, 3 de mayo de 2010

Resurgence

Last night they took my sister.
The night before, they killed my father.
Tonight, they are coming for me.

“Peace” has always been a fleeting word. During the Great Wartime my father fought for peace as a mechanik for the Cygnar army. After surviving the great battles of the time, my father came home to me and my sister, set up shop for 'jack repairs, and hoped to live a nice and peaceful life with their children and the 'jacks he loved to repair. But “Peace” did not last in Immoren, all the great armies where tired and spent, the Iron Kingdoms decimated. Warbands of retired soldiers and unemployed mercenaries roamed the land, the Iron Kingdoms unable to stop them as they didn't have the resources to uphold their Law.

Two nights ago Khrullig - leader of the Magnus' Revengers, a warband that has been harassing my town for the last nine months - blasted my door using the damaged steam cannon of his Mule warjack. Looking for repairs, Khrullig beat my father into repairing it. My father agreed, but when it couldn't be repaired because of a missing part, Khrullig took his sword and killed my father.

In a fit of fury, while restrained by the rest of the Revengers, I felt a connection with our servant 'jack; an old Ironclad left form the Great Wartime, so heavily modified that only an expert could properly identify it. I saw its eyes glow, but I didn't have the connection my father had with it, forged in the middle of the battlefield. Khrullig took his men and left, warning me that I'd better find that piece or me and my sister would suffer the same fate as my father.

Last night Khrullig came again. Even though I frantically looked for the part in the area I could cover in a day, when he appeared I had nothing to give him. Khrullig - standing in the middle of our simple 'jack garage, wearing his heavy armor – draw his sword and grabbed my sister.

“Nice little thing we have here, why didn't I see that last night? I must have been in a hurry. Where is the valve?” he said, while looking at my sister as no man has seen her in her whole life.

“I, I, I don't have it”, I replied, trembling; fearing for the fate of my sister.

“Well, I told you what would happen if you didn't have the piece today”, he said grabbing my sister and smelling her like an animal. “Gladly for me, there is a change of plans. I'm taking your sister here to get her to know my camp”. He said this and turn away, leaving the garage; then he said to his henchmen before entering the night, “Kill him!”

Four men, carrying maces and swords, moved closer to me, about to charge. Even as I saw my sister being dragged into the night, the Fury came upon me once more. This time unrestrained, I felt the Ironclad's cortex coming to life, my father's warjack alive once more for battle. Standing like it was waiting for this time a whole lifetime, the warjack grabbed one of the men and threw him at the other three, knocking them down. Then, its eyes glowing fiery red, used its fists to pound them until they were no more.

That was last night. Haven't' slept since then, managed to calm the Ironclad down and left it sleeping at the garage, keeping its furnace going as well as I could. I hoped I had payed more attention to my father's wartime stories, so I knew how to handle it better. The morning looked grim and gray, so I went for some breakfast at Lucy's, the local tavern, usually empty as no traveler ever passed this town since the iron mines dried up fifty years ago.

But this morning was different. In front of Lucy's stood two carriages, one carrying supplies and food, the other one carrying something hidden under a tent. Inside Lucy's I heard some men eating and telling jokes, saw them through the window, they were not Revengers, but instead carried the colors of the Cygnarian army. Three of them carried heavy armor, the third carried a weird furnace on his back; a fifth one sat behind them working on what I saw was an arm piston for a heavy 'jack.

“A heavy 'jack?” I thought, and turned around looking at the second carriage. Peeking under the tent I could see it. It was a bright and blue Ironclad, wearing army honors and royal seals; beside him, the biggest Quake Hammer I've ever seen.

“Beautiful isn't it?” said someone, surprising me. “It's called Rowdy, but right now its right arm is kind of messed up, do you happen to know any mechaniks in the area?” I could not help but smile, after all I have been through these days being a mechanik is something I'm not currently actually happy to be recognized as. The man that surprised me was a slender man, wearing a longcoat and magnifying glasses; he played with the arm piston all the time he talked to me. I stayed there, looking at the man assembling and disassembling the piece.

“Well? Are you mute?” he asked. I replied, “Well, you're in luck my friend, you happen to be in front of this town best, and only mechanik!” saying it with almost tears coming out of my eyes as I remembered my father saying that same line to everyone who asked for his services. “I'm glad then, I need some supplies for Ol' Rowdy here”. With some relief that someone associated with the army will be around, I led the man to my garage, hoping I could be of some service.

“What in Urcaen happened here?” said the man who identified himself as Cog, the mechanik of the mysterious strangers visiting town. The garage was a mess; the Revengers visited it, looking for their comrades, finding not their bodies – as I disposed them in a nearby trench – but the scene of a brutal fight and the blood associated with it. Going back there made me remember all of the sudden all the horror I've suffered these days. “I... had... visitors...” I said, sitting down in a nearby bench, trying not to fall down. “Well, this is a mess, let me see if I can help you out”, said Cog, leaving the piston aside and moving through the garage as he had been here before.

I tried to regain some strength, I tried to breathe, but the weight of reality fell upon my like a stone so heavy, Morrow couldn't lift it Himself. I don't know how much time I sat there, but when I saw Cog again, the garage was in order again and he was doing something to my father's 'jack. “I knew your father”, Cog said, “He taught me a lot of things. This is a great Ironclad, but is missing something...” His voice was cut by an explosion. Outside the garage's doors were two men, Revengers, ready to claim vengeance for their comrades and to fulfill Khrullig's orders. Cog ducked the shot and unholstered a great quad-iron, blindly shooting two rounds towards the door. “Move out!” he shouted, while I opened the inner door towards the house. More shots came from outside; Cog tried to dodge, but one hit him on the leg, making him unable to escape. I saw the Ironclad and I looked inside of me for the Fury, it was there and so the Ironclad came back to life. “Take them down!” I ordered, and the Ironclad charged the doors, trampling over the Revenger firing squad outside. I grabbed Cog and helped him up. “Let's go back to the tavern” he said.

Cog, me and the Ironclad reached Lucy's after sunset, just in time as a long line of torches could be seen down the town's main road, just outside the outskirts of the town. These were the lights of Magnus' Revengers, and Khrullig could be seen leading them. Now closer, I could see a unit of gunners and another one of swordsmen taking positions at the side of the main road, while Khrullig and other two mounted men fell in the center of the road, near Lucy's.

“Old man, come see this!” shouted Cog into the tavern. During our trip back to Lucy's, Cog demanded to know why he was attacked, so I told him everything. Coming out the tavern, the man with the furnace on its back answered Cog's call “I told you not to call me old man! Did you find the oil for...?” The old man's voice died when he saw the Revenger's forces spread across the road, he walked down the stairs and stared at them as he was assessing them, that was the first time that – lit by torches – I saw his gleaming red hair weaving in the air. The other three men in heavy armor came out the door and saw the situation, quickly taking positions besides the old man, wielding glaives that identified them as Stormblades.

“And who do we have here?” asked Khrullig, seeing the four men standing before him. The old mand replied, “May I ask who you are sir, since you got us surrounded with your mighty force...”, meanwhile Cog made me move him near the second carriage. “Fair then, my name is Khrullig and leader of the Magnus Revengers”, Khrullig replied, showing his mighty army around him. “Magnus? as in Asheth Magnus?” asked the old man; “Yes, exactly, our hero and founder”. Cog laughed, “I hoped he hadn't said that to the old man...”, then he quickly adjusted the piston on the warjack's arm.

The old man's eyes crackled with electricity, its furnace burned brightly, “And why are you here, do you protect this town?” Khrullig replied, “Of course, we protect all this land from bandits and opportunists. Right now we are looking for a young man who murdered at least four of our men using a 'jack, he's a proven criminal and a murderer”.

“Liar!” I screamed walking toward Khrullig, full of the Fury. My Ironclad stood up immediately. “You are the murderer; you killed my father and took my sister!” The old man watched me as I walked in the middle of the road and glimpsed at Cog who had just finished repairing Rowdy. “Well, I guess we'll need to settle this in a Cygnarian tribunal”, said the old man, smiling.

Khrullig replied, furious, “No tribunal, in this land I'm Judge, Jury and Executioner, and I'm here to take this boy!” charging with his horse as he said this.

“I'll see about that”, said the old man, removing its longcoat and clearly showing – even under the dim light of torches – the warcaster armor of a great Commander. Drawing the biggest sword I've ever seen, the old man stood before me and parried Khrulligs cavalry sword attacks. “Cog, is Rowdy repaired?”, asked the old man, while he seemed to focus his sight upon the Revenger gunmen, meanwhile the three Stormblades charged the Revenger swordmen, glaives high in the air crackling with electricity.

Lightning already rising from the old man, an explosion of arcane energy fell upon the gunners, knocking them down. Khrullig charged once again, the old man parrying him again, but this time a shot was heard just outside the area lighted by the torches. “To the ground!” shouted the old man, as a Mule charge exploded next to us. “Cog! is it ready?”, asked the old man, “Yes Coleman, it's ready!”, replied Cog. Then, the mighty Ironclad rose from under the tent, Quake Hammer in hand and ready to protect its warcaster.

Coleman Stryker, could it be him? My father told me endless stories about how Lord Commander Coleman Stryker saved the Cygnar kingdom many, many times. I thought them to be mere exaggerations, but now I'm in front of him, I believed every one of those stories.

The Mule stepped in – the same Mule that needed repairs two nights before – filling the flank left by the downed and routing gunners. Khrullig went for yet another charge, but fell short when the mighty hammer of Rowdy hit the ground and knocked him and the rest of his cavalry down. The Stormblades where defeating the swordmen pretty easily when the shadow of a Nomad warjack fell upon them, its blade high in the air ready to smash. I called my Ironclad, this time focusing the Fury into the Nomad; it responded charging furiously into it and smashing it to the ground. The Stormblades almost did not have time to get out of the way, but the charge gave them time to end the swordmen and attack the now knocked down Nomad.

Stryker looked surprised at me, but we still had to deal with the Mule and Khrullig. In the corner or my eye I saw Cog grab a giant wrench and charge at the Mule, “It's missing the low pressure valve!” I shouted to him, as he easily dodged a couple of punches from the warjack, slid under its chassis, disappeared for a second, and then ran in the opposite direction. Seconds later the Mule prepared for another charged shot, exploding as its pressure systems failed.

Meanwhile, Stryker and Rowdy had already dealt with the cavalry, Khrullig subdued and its men surrendered.

“So, let's talk again about this boy and his sister”, he said, pointing his sword towards Khrullig, “then, I have some lessons about Cygnar justice I need you to learn; and boy” he said looking at me, “I'd like to help you focus some of that Fury”.

That night I left town with the strange men that came to town in two carriages, never to come back.

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