“I saw one last night, I swear it. Big as a bloody dog, with glinting red eyes, slithering down into the sewer grates. Everyone laughed at me. But I know what I saw. The rats are here. They’ve come west.”
— Old Ranik, dockworker in Towton
No one talks much about the Eastern Mountains anymore. Oh, there are stories, of course, there are. Around a fire, with ale thick and cheap, you’ll hear a few brave fools whisper about the Four Summits, about the stone halls swallowed by the fog. About the road that climbs so high it vanishes into the clouds. And what came crawling up it.
I passed through a village once, five years ago or so, on the edge of the Eastern ridges. There was a man there, a scarred hunter with half a jaw, who told me what he'd seen. He said the earth shook for a week straight. That the skies darkened before a single enemy had even appeared. The mountain bells rang without hands to pull them.
Then the rats came.
Not the ones you know. Not the kind that nibble cheese in the cellar. These stood like men. Carried rusted blades and howled like demons. They poured out of the deep tunnels in waves, screaming for blood. Screaming for something worse. The dwarves stood against them, as they always had. Whole families, fathers, daughters, cousins, all from the same clan. One by one, they were pulled down into the dark. They say it began at the city of Tharn-Baraz, built into the mountain's root. No one’s sure what happened there. Only that it burned. The dwarves fled upward, toward the old road. That they were buying time for something… or someone.
And now, with rats slithering through our sewers and shadows moving in the smoke, I think it’s time we remember those stories. Because the Eastern Dwarves may have fallen, but their fire is coming our way.
— Old Ranik, dockworker in Towton
No one talks much about the Eastern Mountains anymore. Oh, there are stories, of course, there are. Around a fire, with ale thick and cheap, you’ll hear a few brave fools whisper about the Four Summits, about the stone halls swallowed by the fog. About the road that climbs so high it vanishes into the clouds. And what came crawling up it.
I passed through a village once, five years ago or so, on the edge of the Eastern ridges. There was a man there, a scarred hunter with half a jaw, who told me what he'd seen. He said the earth shook for a week straight. That the skies darkened before a single enemy had even appeared. The mountain bells rang without hands to pull them.
Then the rats came.
Not the ones you know. Not the kind that nibble cheese in the cellar. These stood like men. Carried rusted blades and howled like demons. They poured out of the deep tunnels in waves, screaming for blood. Screaming for something worse. The dwarves stood against them, as they always had. Whole families, fathers, daughters, cousins, all from the same clan. One by one, they were pulled down into the dark. They say it began at the city of Tharn-Baraz, built into the mountain's root. No one’s sure what happened there. Only that it burned. The dwarves fled upward, toward the old road. That they were buying time for something… or someone.
And now, with rats slithering through our sewers and shadows moving in the smoke, I think it’s time we remember those stories. Because the Eastern Dwarves may have fallen, but their fire is coming our way.