The Legend

100 Human Paladin
11395
Gentyl had been there for it all. All except the very end. She had sat in Southshore in the council with Lyra and Paks when they discussed how the rescue the human girl held by the horde. Creator, the Modas, Grim Maws, they had amassed an army that would send fear into any sane man or woman. Ehlina was young, headstrong and determined. While she argued with passion for her plan. Lyra and Paks, of Sisters Of Mercy tried to temper their firebrand.

The fire burned brightly in the hearth taking he bit off the chill in the air. In the kitchen sh heard the occasional pop and sizzle of fat falling into the fire from the hog roasting on the spit. There was a pot os stewed apples cooking also, heavy with spices and dabs of he local honey that had a peculiar bite to it. Gentyl had no doubts there was also a hot of potatoes roasting with bits of bacon, onion, peppers and chopped carrots. It was a favorite dish of the tavern owner's wife. She had suffered nerve damage with their last child and was most bed ridden with pain. Her husband, in some sort of penance often cooked her favorite dishes, but Gentyl noticed she was missing from the cot he had set up for her next to the great fire. The three laughing youngsters were also absent. He had them quietly removed when the war council first walked into the tavern.

His wife abhorred drinking so he had long ago stopped serving anything alcoholic, but he kept the council supplied with forced smiles and spiced cider, coffee and tea. Gentyl almost felt sorry for him, but she knew the people of Southshore were terrified of the growing horde forced. They welcome the alliance armies, but they feared the reprisal if it fell.

Three of the local patrons slipped out the door quietly. At another time Gentyl would have worried they might be taking overheard snippets of the conference to the horde, but their faces were etched with fear.

Outside she heard the creaking wagons of residents once again moving to the hills in preparation for another battle. Inside she heard the bickering that often attended a war council. Barely. The arguments going back and forth had already been tossed around for days, in every street corner and every tavern. Every option had been explored.

The horde had a young priestess captured from heaven knew where. There were confirmed reports of seeing her with the Modas. They were willing to exchange her for a permanent prisoner. Gentyl fought vehemently against the exchange. They could send in a small, well-trained strike force and extract her. It was foolish to risk another life.

Tery, Prophyt and Dhaymon stood behind Gentyl and agreed. Dhaymon was the head of the silent guard. He had already sent his men to scout the horde and confirm where the woman was being kept. Pia was convinced we could extract the woman. We were also convinced the priestess being held was a trap of one kind or another. There were rumors the horde planned to snatch the bodies of fallen alliance soldiers in the battle and raise them as forsaken. In a way, it was a bizarre recruiting program.
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100 Human Paladin
11395
Ehlina insisted she be allowed to be exchanged for the priestess. Once the exchange was made, the horde expected them to try and rescue Ehlina. If they failed she would stay with them willingly and they would turn her forsaken

"And if we can't get you?" Gentyl asked.

"Then at least an innocent woman is free," Ehlina responded. "I make this choice freely. She didn't."

"I'm not so sure she's innocent.," Gentyl responded. There was something not quite right about this whole situation. The woman could be a spy or, Light forbid, even be a plague carrier.

Prophyt agreed. He had an uncanny knack for nosing out things. His gut feeling was seldom wrong and he had stated several times they should leave the woman with the horde or at the most rescue her and quarantine her.

The other guilds present caved to Ehlina's impassioned arguments. Lyra looked at Gentyl, the question in her eyes. "Lady Gentyl?"

"No, I think it's a trap and we should not be riding willingly into it. Wait, send in a strike force and rescue he woman."

Other voices rose to shout her down and Gentyl raised her hand. "Please let me finish. If you insist on riding into their waiting arms be prepared. If this turns into a battle, and it will, be prepared. If someone falls get them off the field immediately. Do not let the horde raise your friends as forsaken. Once the woman is exchanged, put her in quarantine immediately." She turned to Lyra and Paks. "You have a very real chance of losing your young warrior."

"I'm willing to take that chance," Ehlina snapped.

"Aye, we are aware," Gentyl responded. "If you all have decided then do you worst to them. Get the woman out and then make sure they don't keep Ehlina."

And so the legend of Ehlina was born. She was a firebrand, a leader and a fighter. The leadership of Sisters Of Mercy retired not long after that and their young hero assumed the mantle of leadership.

Gentyl mourned the passing of the gentle ladies who had befriended her from the start. They were true friends and in her heart, she had longed to be a Sister Of Mercy, but while they might overlook her proclivity for accidental bombings and her love of cherry grog, Gentyl refused to dishonor them and steadfastly refused to join.

When the leaders left, so did most of the order. She was left with a very few loyal members. Thus began the second level of the legend. She single handedly rebuilt Sisters Of Mercy into a thriving, successful power. The Sisters Of Mercy Turned from a mostly defensive order to one never shy on the battlefield. She took the fight to the enemy fearlessly and with the pure joy of battle.
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100 Human Paladin
11395
The third level of the legend came with Pillar Of Honor. Pillar was strictly her guild. She left Sisters Of Mercy in other capable hands and build the war machine. If there was a description for Ehlina, it was, "never fearful."

Pillar Of Honor rode into battle fearlessly. They worried not about what people thought of their warriors. Their legend was secured on the battlefield. They were, indeed, one of the great forces in the land.

Legendary.

With the loss of Ehlina, they also lost most of their members. Gentyl remembered talking to Ehlina the day after she assumed leadership of Sisters Of Mercy. She had doubts the guild would survive. Who wouldn't? People had left the order by the droves.

"Stick it out," Gentyl said. "You have friends. You can rebuild."

When Ehlina left Pillar Of Honor, it was history repeating itself. Gentyl hoped the order would rebuild, but there was an air of despair. Then Tyr took the reins or at least became the face of Pillar. Gods knew Gentyl didn't like her anymore than the elf liked Gentyl, but she was actively recruiting. She wasn't giving up. There was a chance they could rebuild, given time and a tremendous amount of work. Then more people showed up with the tabard. Tyr and Time were always quick to respond to defense. Once on the battlefield the staircase elf forgot the animosity and turned into a loyal, battle-hardened ally. Tim was always there, quick with quip, but one of those rare gnomes with an unusually deep grasp of life.

Pillar had a real chance to survive. Cray talk to one of their members behind the scenes. He encouraged them to stay and help rebuild.

Gentyl had hope for them. They needed to survive. It was too hard to let the legends die.

Modas has erased that last vestige of hope.

Belpha had been there for the attack. The remainder of Pia arrived after the massacre to help with the wounded.

Modas attacked Pillar in their headquarters fully intent on completely destroying the order. Belpha had lost a finger. That was acceptable. A man could easily live without a finger. Unfortunately, the blade had been poisoned. The hand turned black and began to wither. Mira fought valiantly to reverse the poison. Gentyl had arrived with two bags full of medical supplies. One of the kits was an amputation set. The choice had finally been made. The poison was spreading. If the hand wasn't removed, Belpha would die.

"Get the kit out of my bag, Mira. You have to take his hand off. Be sure and cut a flap of skin below the cut so you have something to fold over the stump."

Mira was still praying and calling on every element at her disposal to avoid the grim task, but at last Gentyl heard the grind of the bone saw at work.
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100 Human Paladin
11395
Gentyl was occupied with Timeus. He had a severe gut would. It would be a long, and delicate operation. Izzy was young, but she never flinched at the pink ropes of gut spilled on the sheet beside the gnome.

"Izzy, get in my bag and find a bottle label ether. Drip some on a cloth and hold it near his face. Turn your head away so you don't pass out." She turned to Tim. "I need you to count backwards from ten."

He made it to seven. Now was the time to get serious. Izzy sterilized the equipment with whiskey while Gentyl began washing the guts like a person might wash sausages that had fallen into the dirt while stuffing. They were dried in places where they'd been exposed to the air too long and she irrigated them with water, trying to keep them alive. The wound was bad, but none of he guts had been severed. She finished cleaning them and carefully rearranged them so none of them were crimped or twisted. Dying from a twisted gut would be a painful and horrific way to die. Gods knew she had put down enough horses with twisted guts. She didn't even want to think of Tim enduring that pain.

Gentyl glanced up at Izzy, she was wan, but holding. "Izzy, once the guts are in place, we need to sew the muscles back up. You'll have to get that instrument and hold the muscles together so I can stitch them properly.

She nodded, rinsed more whiskey over the clamps and pulled the muscle walls together. Gentyl threaded a needle with a special suture and began taking stitched through the healthy muscle, knotting after each stitch. With he muscles done, she stitched the skin. He would have a nasty scar, but he would live.

"Okay, prop something under the foot of the stretcher to keep the blood flowing to his brain, He's lost a lot of blood."

Gentyl looked around and saw another warrior on the hill sloughed over, holding his stomach. "Let me look at that."

"I'm fine, tend to others."

"The others are being tended to. Let me look at it."

He had been sliced across the stomach and chest. "Cripes, lay down so I can tend to this."

"I'm fine."

"Mind if I ask a question?"

He nodded slowly, with more than a little suspicion.

"What do you want your tombstone to say? Wait, let me get some paper so I don't get it wrong."

"That's not really funny."

"I didn't mean it to be. Either let me treat you or figure out what you want on your tombstone. Now lay back so I can take care of you. You're no good to your order dead."
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100 Human Paladin
11395
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11395
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11395
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