This next LP will be for the book that received 2 votes in two previous polls. It's been a while since the polls happened, so I hope the interest is still there.
Here's the back cover blurb:
I think this is Allen Sharp's only book where the protagonist is a sword-wielding hero fighting demons.The ice demons have brought eternal winter to your homeland. You can only defeat them by finding the secret of the Stone of Badda. This is now hidden in seven places, kept by the deadly guardians of the Otherworld, the place of the dead. Are you brave enough to face the guardians and win back the stone?
Anyway, if you'd played any of the Storytrails books before (including the few LPs of some of the other books in the series that's been run on this forum), you already know that this series is more or less like a basic CYOA (except written from first person POV instead of second person like most standard gamebooks) with no intricate rules like stats or dice rolling or inventory, so we can proceed right to the story:
Well, we apparently has a talking raven for a friend. With that in mind, I'm not sure why we would be disinclined to believe in the legend of the Old One. It's not like it's less believable than talking ravens.Each year when the spring came to the valley of Leshka, the snows would melt and tiny pink flowers would appear among the new shoots of grass in the meadows. The whole valle6y would glow with their colour, soft and warm in the noonday, shining like red gold at the break of day and the setting of the sun.
It was Ka, the raven, who always brought me the first news of spring. Each morning, I would go down to the pool by the river, for water in the winter and to bathe and fish in the summer. Each morning, Ka would skim across the water to greet me and, once each year, as he settled on my arm, he would place in my hand the first of the pink flowers. This year he had brought none. The time for spring had come and gone, yet still snow lay on the meadows and ice floated in the river.
I had brought to the pool some pf the little grain which still remained from last year's harvest and Ka was eating it, greedily. I pulled the wolf skins closer about my shoulders and wish that spring would come.
"Harath, who has many books and can read messages in the stars, says that spring may never come. He says that an ice demon has come to live in the valley."
If Ka had heard me, he only went on eating.
"Harath says that demons may be driven out, but that first, you must find them. Who could find a demon beneath all this ice and snow?"
Ka had finished the grain and looked up.
"Harath is wise," he said, "but there is one in the valley who is wiser. If you would rid the valley of the ice demon, then you must ask the Old One."
Everyone had heard of the Old One. Mothers used her name to frighten naughty children. It was said that she was a witch who lived deep within the caverns among the high rocks. Some had ventured there to dig for flints, but they said that it was a haunted place, perhaps a door to the Otherworld.
"I might ask the Old One," I said, laughing, "if she were real, and if I know where to find her."
"She is real," said Ka, "and I know where to find her. I will take you to her, if you are not afraid to go to the haunted place."
I was afraid, but I would not show my fear to the raven; so it was, with Ka as my guide, I set off for the place of the high rocks. It was nightfall before we reached the caverns. I had brought rush torches to light our way, but the path into the mountain was steep and difficult, winding down through caves and passages.
Deep within the rock, we reached a great cavern, larger and more wonderful than anything I had ye seen. Rocks like giant icicles hung in curtains from a high, shadowy roof, while others grew from the floor to meet them. A lake of still, dark water stretched away into darkness, a darkness not reached by the light of the fire which burned brightly in the centre of the floor.
As I neared the first, I could see, seated beyond the flames, a small, still figure. With clothes and flesh the colour of stone, it might have been carved from the rock itself.
"Why does my messenger bring you?" the voice was thin and piping.
"Ka, the raven has brought me," I replied.
"The raven is my messenger. Why does he bring you?"
"An ice demon has come to live in the valley of Leshka. The raven tells me that you would know how such a demon may be found and driven out."
"If you would know that, then listen to what I will tell you."
I laid down my rush torches and tinder box and sat by the flames with Ka perched upon my shoulder.
"Once, long ago, these caves were a place of demons," the Old One began, "demons who brought great misery and death to the people of Leshka, demons who soured the milk in the cattle, who blighted the crops, and fouled the river so that no fish would live in its waters. And so it had been for many long years.
"Among those who lived in the valley was a young girl-child, frail as the harebell, pretty as the rose. She had watched her mother die for want of food, and her father of a broken heart. So great was her grief and anger that she took her father's sword and climbed, alone, to these caves, that she might slay the demons. None had the courage to follow her and some fled the valley, fearing the demon's anger."
It was from the lips of one who had fled the valley that the story came to the ears of the great magician, who was called Badda. Touched by the bravery of the child, Badda transported himself by his magic to these caves. By that same magic, he banished the demons, but even Badda's magic could not save the child, for the demons had torn her throat out of her small body.
"To remind the people of the valley of their cowardice, Badda had the body of the the child carried among them and, where each drop of blood fell from her wounds, pink flowers sprang up amongst the grass. And the flowers have come each year, at the time of spring and the coming of new life, each year, until now.
"Before he left the valley, Badda wrote the secret of his power over demons upon a tablet of stone, and hid it so that none might put it to use. He decreed that if ever the demons returned to the valley of Leshka, then one in the valley would be told the secret of the stone."
"Do you know where the stone is hidden?" I asked eagerly.
"No," was the reply. "The stone was hidden, not in one, but in seven places. The first piece, I will give to you, for I am the first of its guardians. To find all seven pieces, you must journey to the Otherworld."
"But how," I asked, "can I reach the Otherworld? The Otherworld is the place of the dead!"
The Old One raised a skinny arm and pointed towards the black waters of the lake.
"By the shore of the lake, you will find a boat. The lake empties into a river. The river flows to the Otherworld. Not all of the guardians are as old or as gentle as I, but all that I can give you for your journey, you will find beside you.
I looked down. At my side was a cloak of fine wool and, laid upon it, a sword of bright steel and a bag of leather. I turned back to the Old One but, suddenly, the light shed by the flames of the fire was gone and the glow from its embers was fading.
The piping voice came from the darkness.
"Your journey is beginning. Beware the keeper of the gate!"
Ninth Horseman? I hope that doesn't mean we have to deal with the other 8 later.I jumped to my feet. The leather bag, I pushed into my belt, the cloak, I slung across my shoulder and the sword, I kept in my hand.
The last glow had gone from the fire, but now, in the blackness, I could see tiny flashes of of light, getting bigger and brighter. Now there was a sound, the sound of horse's hoofs clattering upon stone. As each hoof struck the floor of the cave it cast a shower of sparks. In the fliickering yellow light, I could see the horse, black as the darkness, but gleaming where the muscles rippled beneath its polished coat.
Astride its back was a rider in cloak and hood as black as his mount; a line of light flashed from the sword which he carried in his hand.
I felt Ka fluttering from my shoulder and heard his voice screeching above me.
"It is Zaroth, the ninth Horseman of Darkness, keeper of the gate of the Otherworld!"
The horse was almost upon me. I saw the flash of the rider's sword. I caught the blow on my own blade but, before I could return it, the horse had swung, swiftly, away. Almost at once, it had turned and the rider was upon me again. Again I parried the blow, though my own sword almost twisted from my hand. I could match the best in the valley, but I had met no swordsman like this. The third blow cut my cheek and drew blood. As horse and rider turned away in a shower of sparks, I saw that the rider's hood seemed completely to cover his head.
"His head is covered! How does he see?"
The question was to myself, but Ka's voice answered from the darkness.
"The horse sees!"
Already my sword arm was tiring. "The horse made its own light by some magic in its hoofs, like the striking of flint on steel. Flint and steel do not strike beneath water! Perhaps I could escape his blows by reaching the lake?
Where was the Old One? Was she too in danger from the horseman? Should I stay by the fire to defend her?
How do we deal with the Ringwraith horseman?