A - Village Targeted By Barbarians [top]
And the villagers? They fled—not as heroes, but as ghosts. Silent, barefoot, clutching infants and heirlooms, they slipped into the cave mouth hidden by briars. Behind them, the Vale burned. The sky turned the color of a bruise.
Aldric tried to negotiate. He walked out with a sack of silver and a salted ham. Skadi laughed—a dry, barking sound. “Silver is for merchants,” she said. “We are hunger.” She pointed her broken sword at the grain silos, the smokehouse, the blacksmith’s anvil. “These we take. The rest we burn. You have one hour to leave the old, the sick, and the stubborn. The young and the strong may run. We will not chase. We do not need slaves. We need space .”
Until the horns sounded from the north.
It began with a change in the wind. One autumn evening, the familiar scent of woodsmoke and baking bread was overlaid by something acrid: campfires burning damp pine, and the sharp, coppery smell of unwashed hides. Then came the drums. Low, rhythmic, like a heartbeat trying to escape the earth.
The village reeve, a stooped man named Aldric, gathered everyone in the longhall. “They are the Wolf Clan,” he said, his voice steady but pale. “They come not for our land, but for our stores. They will take the grain, the cattle, the iron. And if we resist…” a village targeted by barbarians
That was the worst part. They did not want to conquer the Vale. They wanted it erased—a message painted in cinders for the next valley over.
The Vale had always been a place that time forgot—a scatter of thatched-roof cottages huddled around a stone well, their smoke rising in gentle gray ribbons against a spine of blue hills. To the farmers of the Vale, the worst danger was a late frost or a wolf taking a lamb. They knew of the barbarians, of course. The elders spoke of them in the same breath as bad harvests and winter fevers—as something abstract, a story to frighten children. And the villagers
First, they cut the road. A felled oak and a line of sharpened stakes sealed the Vale off from the king’s garrison two days’ ride away. Then, they took the miller’s daughter. Not killed—taken. They dragged her to the edge of the village green and tied her to the hitching post, a living promise of what would happen if the doors did not open.