The Axe has many names, and hundreds have been forgotten
over that wise hafts long half-life;
"Bears Tongue"
"Hewer of the Word-Hive"
"Feeder on the Iron Flower"
"Axe of the Final Survivor"
"The Last Axe Standing"
"The Tomb of the Bear"
Description
A heavy-headed Greataxe with a single blade.
Every part holds a story, for it is said that this was
once the weapon of a God, and that every piece of it was won by force or cunning
from one who did not wish to give it up.
(Though True Sophonts label this 'tap room talk' and say
no evidence for any of it has come forth.)
The Haft is dense black wood, said to be the limb of an
endlessly-reincarnating Karmic Dryad from the borders of a celestial realm, who
still lives, and still seeks her lost limb.
The pommel claw, it is claimed, is that of a King of
Bears, a lord of Skin-Shifters, first and greatest of the Bear-kind, and that
this King still lives with one paw missing, and likewise, wants the axe.
(Though it’s pretty obvious that the pommel was
constructed from similar materials, and at roughly the same time, as the rest
of the Axe.)
The Amber gem set in the pommel is meant to be the stolen
heart of an Eld-Queen of Margenalia, who, of course, also wants it back.
Even the wrapping on the haft has its own ridiculous
story, that it is the skin of a mad emperor of psychic frogs from a distant
island built on the back of a giant lizard, and that he resents its loss.
The Bit though, truly special, does seem to hold the
imprint of a Deoth hand. Fine, shining steel formed into the head of a bear,
its tongue lashing forth along the bite of the blade as if it seeks to lick
upon the wounds it makes.
In the tap-room tales about the Axe, this part was stolen
from a Deoth master-craftsman without fair payment. This Craft-Master then
dedicated the remainder of their life to building a Worghast, or Golem, of
great intelligence and power, which would repair and renew itself eternally,
and who's only overriding directive was to ensure fair payment for the Axes
head.
So much for the blather of the boozing-hall. All, or none
of it could be true. Academic theory says that stories of the Axes stolen
construction and the many potent beings who seek it out is a fairly recent
popular addition to the tale, only a few hundred years old.
by Ilya Salnikov https://twitter.com/rhunstoryteller |
The Story of Bjorn
There is a simpler, older tale. Of a man, call him 'Bjorn',
or simply 'Bear'.
Bjorn was of the Aboriginal people of what would one day
become Blackwater. This was long before the Grey Cities, before the Fall of
Esh. Who knows, it may even have been before Esh itself. Time fades like
parchment in these long-related legends and one eon passes into another without
too much trouble.
Of his origins, they said Bjorn was found in the ruins of
a village, amidst the ash of burnt homes, a baby, unscarred by fire, the last
survivor of an unknown people.
Those who found Bjorn took pity on him and adopted him,
and they were fortunate to do so, for he was the strongest of his people and he
killed many monsters. A long-lived man, he became first the leader of his
tribe, and then the leader of a great tribe-of-tribes. The People of Bjorn.
Bjorn wanted Sons. This he came to desire more than
anything for he wished to pass on all that he knew. But though he had many
daughters, he never had a son, and people said that this was a curse of a
Monster, or Quileth or an Eld he had killed in the construction of his famous
Axe with the amber gem.
Bjorn truly loved that Axe for had had had great
difficulty in constructing it and had slain many with it.
It came about that Bjorn one day found a boy, a baby
wrapped in leaves floating in the waters of a river which lead down from the
mountain where lived his God, whos name was Fire. The eyes of this child were
fire-bright, like the eyes of that God to whom Bjorn prayed when he made his
war-work.
"It may be", said Bjorn, "that this child
is intended for me and is the answer to my prayers. And in any case, I shall
not abandon him here."
So Bjorn took the boy and called him Reed, for he had
found him among reeds, and he raised Reed as his son, and though the child grew into a young man who
was somewhat wild and dangerous, still Bjorn did what he could to temper the
fires of youth with his wisdom.
Then it came about time for the end of days.
In some versions of the story a horde of Daemons or
Quileth, invade the lands of the Tribes of Bjorn. In others the invasion is
from the first civilised peoples and Bjorn fights against the first of the Grey
Cities during the settlement of Blackwater. In others his war is against
Yggsrathaal and Her Legions.
However it comes, there is war.
Bjorn was old then, and tired of killing, but Reed was
mad for battle and Bjorn knew that the war could not be avoided and that there
was no way he could keep Reed from it. So the old man sat on a stone and
carefully sharpened his axe in the light of the sun and the sound of a stream.
"At least this and I may still serve to protect my
Son", thought Bjorn, "for he is bound to his own doom."
Then a shadow passed across his sight and Bjorn looked
up, for there were few in those days who would dare approach him without
announcing themselves or begging his leave.
The figure before him was cloaked in rags and their face
was shadowed. But Bjorn knew men well and he saw that this was someone strong
and tall. He saw their red beard and sandals with obsidian soles so that their
bare feet did not touch the green earth. He saw the shimmer of heat in the air
above them and the steam rising from the stream where they had crossed. And he
saw the fire-bright eyes in the shadow of the cloak and he knew who this was.
The stranger offered greetings, which Bjorn returned.
Then, unprompted, the stranger said;
"I go to the great war which comes and which will be
the last of this Age."
"Is it so large a thing?" asked Bjorn,
"that it requires your presence also?"
"I am only a wanderer," said the stranger,
"and have no blade to make the war-work."
"That is unfortunate." Said Bjorn.
"I once had a Son," said the stranger, sadly,
"who might have aided me in battle."
"This also is unfortunate," said Bjorn, "I
have but one son myself and he is grown precious to me."
The stranger opened their mouth to speak but, seeing
where this was going, for even in those days the tales of Gods were already
old, Bjorn stood up quickly and said;
"Here," he offered the haft of his axe,
"take this axe, which hews well enough, as compensation for your Son. It
will aid you in battle more than a boy."
And seeing that the strangers hands were very hot he
said;
"First I will wrap it in this frog-skin, which has a
tale behind it."
But the stranger was already grinning with a mouth like
the door of a burning hut and said;
"Thank you Bjorn! Not false are those words which
speak of your greatness!"
And the stranger laughed and stalked away still laughing,
with Bjorns famous Axe over his shoulder.
Then came the End of Days, when all that Bjorn knew and
fought for was destroyed.
Many great battles there were, and each day died heroes
whos’ stories would have choked all the books of Uud, but all are forgotten
now. Bjorn led his people to war and held ever by the side of his Son, using
whatever weapon came to hand. And it came about that the whole of the tribes of
his tribe-of-tribes were laid down in the earth, and on the last day Reed himself
died, and Bjorn was wounded unto death and fell finally in a field of corpses
of enemies and friends with hot blood running from his many wounds over the
body of his son which was cooling in his arms.
"So it is," said Bjorn, "and if I had with
me my Axe, would things have gone so?"
But a shadow passed before his eyes and, with some
effort, Bjorn raised his head and saw the stranger, still with Bjorns axe over
his shoulder, though both man and axe were thick with blood, and the blood
hissed and steamed, and the strangers eyes were fire-bright.
"It was a good Axe Bjorn," said the stranger,
who yawned, "and hews well-enough, as you said. I thank you for it. But
now I am tired and must sleep."
"Give me back my Son," said Bjorn.
"That I cannot do." Said the stranger.
"But rest here for a while."
And he laid the Axe across Bjorns body, and so Bjorn
slept.
The Bears-Tongue
It is known in Blackwater that the artefact, or Curia
called the 'Bears Tongue' is associated with some of the most famous and savage
heroes of Legend. And also with a handful of the most dangerous and murderous
reavers of Civilisation.
Always it is held by a walker of the wilds, one who lives
by their own law.
So it is that many young, dangerous and violent
individuals have at one time or another, sought out the Bears-Tongue, hoping to
become part of its Legend. Usually they find it in the bone-pile in the den of
a great bear.
When they pick it up, they are invariably disappointed
as, due to its reputation, they were expecting something a bit more magically
'smashy' and the axe has few destructive enchantments, though it is eternally
sharp and almost imperishable.
Instead the shaft is noted for its wise advice, most
useful to the stupid man, for the axe carries the tongue of an old man - call
him Bear, one crafty in battle whos’ words are most of aid to those who rush
in. Many wielders of the Tongue have been extremely stupid. But they did not
remain so for long.
Powers
Bear sleeps within the axe - the amber in the pommel is
his eye, it’s how he spots things;
"I'm in here upside down!"
The voice within the Axe aims to help its bearer become a
Man, and a leader of a great tribe.
This is regardless of what gender they are, and
regardless of whether becoming a tribal leader is either feasible or desired in
current circumstances.
Still, those lessons can be pretty useful regardless.
The Axe knows a lot. To hold it is to carry the gift of
knowledge. The voice within has all the knowledge of a great chief, a warrior, a
hero and a survivor.
It has solid political skills and a keen awareness of
human relations. Bear knows what men (he is much better with men than women),
desire, which hearts are true or false, who is more ambitious than they seem
and who is secretly weak.
Bear knows the ways of the wild, stalking and being
stalked, to know where to go and where another is likely to be, and the choices
men make in the wild, how to hide and to find what is hidden. Orienteering,
pathfinding, climbing, hunting, building shelter, making fire, finding food,
appeasing nature spirits, Lifian and Shadow Aeth, all of that Bear knows.
In battle Bear can read well a warrior, spot in their
stance those weaknesses they would rather keep secret.
Bear is calm and knows how to see what is there to be
seen. He has, and can teach, with time, the skills of observation, preservation
and self-control. Wise strategy - when to be calm and how to be so, when to be
still - frozen like ice, and when to push forward like the river in thaw.
Bear knows about most natural animals, and a great deal
about common monster types - powers,
tactics, behaviours, vulnerabilities, treasure and, crucially edibility.
Bear really likes cooking and eating monsters. The voice
is a really excellent cook and will provide recipes, make grandiose promises
and be incredibly happy if monsters are consistently cooked and consumed.
If monsters go uneaten, Bear will become silent and
morose.
Bear can be thrown pretty accurately for quite a long
way, but he does not like this;
"I don't fly back you know!"
And does not magically return to the hand. Instead you
will have to go and get him.
A last curious quality of the Axe is that any enchantment
or thaumaturgy which controls the mind or deludes the senses, if it is aimed at
the wielder, instead affects the Axe itself. It is the personality in the
object which resists the enchantment, and if it fails due to strong magic, it
is that personality, and not that of the wielder, which is deluded.
which can still be bad as instead of freaking out you
have an intelligent Axe in your hand which is freaking out.
Weaknesses
Bear is better with less 'civilised' people, groups and
situations, not that much help with logistics or mathematics, and is
illiterate. Bear cannot read at all, though he knows many major spoken
languages.
Bear does not understand women, and his ability to read
the hearts of men, to tell and to know who is truly strong, who lies with words
or actions and who is false, goes completely out the window when dealing with
women, or more accurately, with anyone who can convincingly pass as a woman.
Bear claims to dislike and distrust 'magic' and says he
can smell a Wizard a hundred paces upwind, though he does not consider the many
rituals he knows to commune with spirits to be 'magic', and the smelling
ability has never been tested.
Bear has enemies. For some the Axe is evil, a force for
destruction, a weapon held over burning cities, a destroyer of order and safety
wielded by criminals, reavers and raiders from the wastes, the Terror from the
Gloom, fire bright in its steel bears face.
Bear also loves honey, and can space out a bit when his
wielder eats some, but fears and hates Bees, considering them an ancestral foe.
He claims to have an enemy, the Bee Blade, a shortsword with the soul or spirit
of some Lifian or Quileth within it named the Queen of Bees.
Since neither this artefact, or soul have ever been
sighted by literate minds, it’s entirely possible their existence is a very
long-term, very dry joke on the part of the Axe.
ALSO (Whoredom mode activate) did you know that you can now buy my version of Gawain and the Green Knight, AND a Night a the Golden Duck from the same store?
"The links lie upon the top of the right rail." |
damn was this more than worth my reading of it
ReplyDeleteThank you Scrap!
DeleteVery nice, the deal with the God and the son is well done. His greedy smile spoke to me of Odin having pulled off one of his schemes, and being unable to contain his almost childlike glee at coming out the victor. I like too, that the power of this ancient weapon is, in D&D terms, fairly low, yet it is undeniably an artifact.
ReplyDelete