These journeys brought the
attention of Ealor, Lord of the Deep and he watched wit amusement as
the tiny crafts scuttled to and fro across his wide realm. Many
foundered and drowned upon the shores, others were taken by storms
and their ships sent to the Deep Quiet. All this Ealor watched. But
Anderoth the first of his kind drew Ealor's attention the most and he
marveled at the determination and strength of that sailor, so that he
challenged him with ever greater storms and ever more powerful
beasts.
Anderoth took all this in
stride and learned in time from where many of his travails
originated, so that he took up the challenge and the two contested
the waters. But never did Ealor unleash his full strength for such
Anderoth could not match and it would mean his doom. But he grew ever
skillful and he learned the moods of Ealor and these are the moods of
the seas. His mastery pitted him against the greatest storms, and
deepest waves and he plied the deeps for many years.
But at last age overtook
Anderoth and his body could not withstand Ealor's challenges. But
Ealor, being of the higher order of the Val-Eahrukun was deathless
and being separated from all of his own kin did not see nor fully
understand the mortality of the dwarves. There came a time where
Ealor spied Anderoth aboard his ship and the joy of his mirth tore
the sea asunder and sent huge waves upon his ship. The Dwarf Lord's
ship rolled to the side and he gripped the wheel but his arms grew
weary before ever Ealor realized it and the dwarf was thrown into the
mast and lost sight of the world. He slid over the side, falling into
the water's madness to vanish into the Deep Quiet.
His helm and axe sank
first and struck the ocean floor near to where Ealor stood and the
god looked up to see his friend sinking to depths no creature could
go. He saw then that his friend was dead and had left the world of
Aihrde. He marveled at death and wondered what it meant.
As Ealor pondered this his
brother Naarheit came to him seeking aid in some wild endeavor of his
and Ealor questioned him about death and what it meant. And Naarheit
told him of it, but he twisted the words and spoke only of Thorax and
the Wretched Plains for he loved to jest with Ealor for that god
always laughed. But he spoke of the listless dead and how they
traveled the Arc of Time and came to the Gegelmesh and there suffered
the nightmare of eternity as a slave to Thorax.
For his part Ealor bore no
ill will toward Thorax, nor had the two ever quarreled, but he knew
that Thorax loved the dark and it grieved him to think that Anderoth
and all the sailers of the world should suffer from his rule. The
more he thought upon it the more it grieved him. Turning to Naarheit
he sought his council and Naarheit saw an opportunity to bedevil
Thorax and Toth, to plague the Arc of Time and hinder the workings of
Corthain and the All Father all at once. He told his brother of the
Arc of Time and bid him rip the world asunder and pull the Arc into
the deep oceans, there to govern who must pass to the lands of the
dead.
Ealor laughd for this
struck him as a good idea and fashioned a great three pointed spear
and thrust it into the belly of the world and speared the Arc of
Time. He pulled upon it though it would not budge. He laughed all the
more and pulled ever harder and Naarhiet laughed as well and bidding
his brother to hold the Arc he swam into the deep places of the world
to hinder many of the creatures of Ealor's manufacture. He warred
upon the mermen, corrupting many into foul fish-like men, the
saughgan and many others besides.
But Ealor for his part
struggled with the Arc of Time until at last he realized that it was
the River of the All Father's thought and he could not move it. But
he could see it and govern its passage for he had torn the world
asunder at the bottom of the ocean.
Before long Ealor spied
the flame of Anderoth passing down the Arc of Time to the Pools of
Eternity there to be judged worthy or unworthy of the Stone Fields.
And Ealor caught him up as a fish in a net and took the flame of him
to the Green Halls. And Anderoth knew the Lord of the Seas and joined
him in death. But Anderoth begged Ealor to look for his fellow
sailors so that they too could join him in the Green Halls. And Ealor
took pity on the Captain and his kind and he saw all the lost sailors
who had passed into the Eternal Pools or beyond and he could not bare
it.
Ealor gave Anderoth a ship
to command, but this ship, unlike any he had sailed in life, plied
the Ocean's depths. And Ealor set it the task to gather the fallen
sailors even before they gathered upon the Arc of Time and bring them
to the Green Halls to join the dead beneath the sea, and thus
Anderoth became a Captain in Death and the Admiral of Ealor's fleet.
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