Crothian
First Post
The following is four different versions of the same event as told by different races. I try to have give each a little twist on the thread that reflects the writer.
Decade of Storms as told by a Storm Mage
About 6,000 years ago a group of mages known to us as the coven of storms attempted to create a magical barrier around their island. They lived on a large island off the land of the frozen forest. The natives of the forest kept away because of the great natural storms that would contumely roll in. They used magic that they had come up with to control the weather around their island and to keep all but the best weather away so that they could do their work in peace. The island was kept storm free, but the area around it was not. This group of humans, elves, and minataurs spent over a month constantly casting powerful weather control spells. At the end of that time a great storm assaulted their island, but it was never able to approach within a mile of it. For ten years their island was surrounded by these storms, but none could enter. They went on with their magical experiments assuming their magical barrier was a success. At the end of the ten years the storms finally died down. That same day a great light appeared in the sky. The storm mages felt compelled to go to the center of the island where they stood in awe. From the great light a man came down and floated some 50 feet above the island.
“Fools!” he exclaimed, ”while you where so busy protecting your little island from nature, did you not realize that effects to the rest of the world! For ten years you have been protected while countless hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and earthquakes besieged the rest of the planet. Millions of lives have been lost to your short sidedness!”
The mages quickly used their abilities to magically see the rest of the world and they saw destruction everywhere. All over the world two out of every five creatures had died. No civilization was untouched and many had been wiped out completely. After they realized what they had done and learn what the full extent of their mistake was the strange mage cast a spell.
That day, much farther to the south, the elves saw a great, blinding light from the north. They saw it as a sign that the decade of storms was over. Later that year all the maps of the north were redrawn as an island had completely disappeared and now there is just a very deep hole in the ocean.
A Thomas Underhaven, who claims to be the last descendent of the Storm Mages, wrote that. While there is no proof either way of him being related to any of the original Storm Mages, there is no doubt, at least in this historians mind, that Thomas is a Storm Mage. While Storm Mages are not totally unknown, he is the first one that I know of that has publicly admitted to being one. Storm Mages have always had a reputation of being unpredictable and dangerous. Few alive today know about the Decade of Storms, but the Storm Mages haven’t had the best record since then. An important note is that this is the only version of the reason for the Decade of Storms that blames Storm Mages. I’ve read many versions that blame the gods, with the reasoning behind those being that the gods took a hand in defeating the Shadowking in a way that no mortal was aware. The dwarves, who held a lot of distrust for the elves at the time, blame the elves even to this day. I did have a chance to interview Thomas Underhaven before he left. I wish a few of my colleagues could have been there. I would like to point out that Mr. Underhaven, in the interview, described in more detail the stranger who came to the island. Mr. Underhaven said, ”The Stranger appeared in a light that could not be looked at. The light radiated not just from him, but from the earth, the sky, the trees, and even from the mages. The Stranger was dressed in sailor’s clothes, but he also welded a staff. The staff was four feet long and 2 inches thick. On the top of the staff was a gem shaped like a large drop of water. The stranger cast the spell without any arm movements, his voice was the instrument of magic.” Now, I could not get a reasonable answer as to how he knew to this detail the look of the staff and of the spell. As a Historian I must admit that while the facts and proof are ultimately what determines the truth about past events, until the whole picture is known I also use a good bit of gut feeling. Not very professional, as my colleagues point out without delay, but I trust my gut and more often then not, it has been right. So, even though the facts are few and highly questionable, I believed him.
Historian Brandon Markius
Decade of Storms as told by a Storm Mage
About 6,000 years ago a group of mages known to us as the coven of storms attempted to create a magical barrier around their island. They lived on a large island off the land of the frozen forest. The natives of the forest kept away because of the great natural storms that would contumely roll in. They used magic that they had come up with to control the weather around their island and to keep all but the best weather away so that they could do their work in peace. The island was kept storm free, but the area around it was not. This group of humans, elves, and minataurs spent over a month constantly casting powerful weather control spells. At the end of that time a great storm assaulted their island, but it was never able to approach within a mile of it. For ten years their island was surrounded by these storms, but none could enter. They went on with their magical experiments assuming their magical barrier was a success. At the end of the ten years the storms finally died down. That same day a great light appeared in the sky. The storm mages felt compelled to go to the center of the island where they stood in awe. From the great light a man came down and floated some 50 feet above the island.
“Fools!” he exclaimed, ”while you where so busy protecting your little island from nature, did you not realize that effects to the rest of the world! For ten years you have been protected while countless hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and earthquakes besieged the rest of the planet. Millions of lives have been lost to your short sidedness!”
The mages quickly used their abilities to magically see the rest of the world and they saw destruction everywhere. All over the world two out of every five creatures had died. No civilization was untouched and many had been wiped out completely. After they realized what they had done and learn what the full extent of their mistake was the strange mage cast a spell.
That day, much farther to the south, the elves saw a great, blinding light from the north. They saw it as a sign that the decade of storms was over. Later that year all the maps of the north were redrawn as an island had completely disappeared and now there is just a very deep hole in the ocean.
A Thomas Underhaven, who claims to be the last descendent of the Storm Mages, wrote that. While there is no proof either way of him being related to any of the original Storm Mages, there is no doubt, at least in this historians mind, that Thomas is a Storm Mage. While Storm Mages are not totally unknown, he is the first one that I know of that has publicly admitted to being one. Storm Mages have always had a reputation of being unpredictable and dangerous. Few alive today know about the Decade of Storms, but the Storm Mages haven’t had the best record since then. An important note is that this is the only version of the reason for the Decade of Storms that blames Storm Mages. I’ve read many versions that blame the gods, with the reasoning behind those being that the gods took a hand in defeating the Shadowking in a way that no mortal was aware. The dwarves, who held a lot of distrust for the elves at the time, blame the elves even to this day. I did have a chance to interview Thomas Underhaven before he left. I wish a few of my colleagues could have been there. I would like to point out that Mr. Underhaven, in the interview, described in more detail the stranger who came to the island. Mr. Underhaven said, ”The Stranger appeared in a light that could not be looked at. The light radiated not just from him, but from the earth, the sky, the trees, and even from the mages. The Stranger was dressed in sailor’s clothes, but he also welded a staff. The staff was four feet long and 2 inches thick. On the top of the staff was a gem shaped like a large drop of water. The stranger cast the spell without any arm movements, his voice was the instrument of magic.” Now, I could not get a reasonable answer as to how he knew to this detail the look of the staff and of the spell. As a Historian I must admit that while the facts and proof are ultimately what determines the truth about past events, until the whole picture is known I also use a good bit of gut feeling. Not very professional, as my colleagues point out without delay, but I trust my gut and more often then not, it has been right. So, even though the facts are few and highly questionable, I believed him.
Historian Brandon Markius