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A Soldier's Life - 296 - Trolls To The Left Of Me, Ogres To The Right…Here I Am, Stuck In The Middle With You (Final edit 7-3-25)

Chapter 296: Trolls To The Left Of Me, Ogres To The Right…Here I Am, Stuck In The Middle With You

“Mynasha, get your lightning ready. There is one troll and two ogres—so far.” I hissed while keeping my sight trained on the troll’s legs.

“There are no ley lines beneath us; I would have to draw mostly on my own aether. I can only form two powerful lightning strikes at the moment.” I looked at her incredulously. She couldn’t see my exasperation in the dark, so I voiced it.

“What happened to you being able to handle six trolls?” I hissed. I looked to ensure my companions were getting ready, but they were at a disadvantage due to the darkness and needed a plan.

“I can still draw aether from the environment, but it takes longer.” She whispered calmly and started shedding all her clothes as I cursed under my breath. At least I could take one troll out myself if needed.

The troll’s calls were answered from both the right, where the ogres went, and behind it, to our left. The only good news was the answering calls sounded the same in the rain, so hopefully, we were only facing one troll and a few ogres. “Prepare to throw your glowstones if they attack. They should have trouble walking on the shale.”

Two of the horses started getting anxious and neighing up a storm, probably smelling the troll or ogres. There was no way we were going undiscovered now. “At least the ogres are bathing before our fight,” Mateo said with a soft chuckle, but no one laughed at his joke.

While the cave was good shelter, it also meant we were cornered. We didn’t have time to saddle up and escape into the night. Grumpily, Benito muttered about the lack of a body shield as he prepared. I didn’t have the heart to tell him that a troll wouldn’t have respected the shield anyway. This was going to be a disaster of epic proportions if the clerics couldn’t hold their own. To my knowledge, only Mynasha had offensive magic.

“Raelia, alert everyone when you start to form a fireball.” It was more so that everyone would be prepared for the flash effects of the explosion. My night vision spell form protected me from the effect, but the others would be blinded.

“I can grease the shale in front of the cave,” Tarnasha said suddenly. “It will only last about a minute but should give them trouble.”

“Throw the oil you have now over there. It doesn’t matter if the rain washes it away,” I said, pointing as I noticed the troll’s legs moving toward us. Branches cracked in the canopy as it pushed through the trees, following its nose and the sound of the horses.

“It is a spell,” Tarnasha replied indignantly. I just waved him to let him do as he may. I didn’t have time for the old orc. As the branches snapped in the canopy, the horses became increasingly agitated. The troll head appeared to me about one hundred yards away, toweringtowering about twenty feet from the ground. I was glad the others couldn’t see the hideous creature in the dark, its eyes going wide with surprise at what it had just found, and its mouth forming a smile with its jagged, crooked teeth.

I could hear ogres returning from the right over the light rain pattering on the stones. “Lightning?” I asked while keeping the spyglass trained on the troll.

“I can’t see it clearly,” Mynasha hissed irritably.

“Well, it can see you clearly,” I spat back. Perhaps I was a bit angry about being in this situation.

Instead of advancing, the troll bellowed into the air again. This time, it was returned with a matching bellow echoing across the woods. “Dragon shit, there is another troll,” Blaze said despondently.

“It has ogres as well,” I said heavily. I looked briefly at Benito. “Benito, cut the horses free if it looks like we will be overrun. It will give them a chance to escape and may distract the enemy. If I order any of you to run, don’t question me and do it.”

The ogres that had been chasing the deer returned, their sucking, muddy, footfalls echoed ominously. They moved out of the tree line ahead of the troll as a screen. I hated smart monsters. “Throw your glowstones!” I commanded. We could not fight in the dark at such a disadvantage. Five stones appeared from their pouches and arched through the air. One sank into a muddy puddle, and another disappeared between two pieces of shale, but the remaining three radiated enough light in the misty rain to see.

Three glowstones now cast shadows outward, and the outline of the ogres was visible at the forest edge. I looked over at Mynasha, who had completely disrobed and had motes of blue aether crackling around her as she wove a spell form in her hands. I think it was my aether-infused eyes that let me see the spell workings more clearly. A benefit I would need to explore if we escaped this mess.

“Mateo! Eyes on the enemy!” I hissed at him. He was distracted by Mynasha’s silhouette. I knew once the battle was joined, he would be focused, but it just felt right to remind him at the moment.

Blaze’s and Maveith’s bows twanged as arrows streaked the forty yards to the ogres. The ogres bellowed in rage and ignored their troll handler’s command to wait. At least, that is what I guessed by the twisted anger on the troll’s face when the ogres rushed us.

Mynasha thrust out her hands, and thick, ragged lightning shot forth and struck the leading ogre. The lightning briefly connected the two before it detached from the cleric, and her end rushed toward the ogre. A thundering boom deafened me as the ogre exploded in a gory mess. Its fellow ogre stumbled from the concussive blast. Even with my ears ringing, I suddenly felt much better about our odds of winning.

“I need two minutes before I can go again,” Mynasha rasped, and I glanced over at her. Her skin was steaming, and her knees looked wobbly from the effort. Using her own aether must be more taxing than channeling it from the ley lines. The other ogre had stumbled but hadn’t stopped its charge, arrows protruding from its chest and belly. The lightning flash had blinded my companions as their arrows were now missing their mark.

“As our ears rang from the thunder, Glasha yelled to us, “Two trolls and two more dark ogres coming—about a mile away.”

“Is that all?” I screamed back, my sarcasm lost in the need to yell so everyone could hear.

“So far! I just searched out to two miles,” she yelled back.”

“Well, three trolls and three ogres means we each get one, right?” I barked at my companions with mock cheerfulness.

Benito didn’t seem thrilled. “I really don’t want one. You can have mine, Eryk.”

I didn’t have time to reply as the ogre had reached the shale sloop, the stone crunching and sliding under its massive feet. I moved to the edge, out into the rain. Unlike the others, I had the amulet and could take one fatal strike. A wave of putrid stench washed over me, and I think the rain made the ogres smell worse.

The ogre’s foot slid out from behind him with a spray of shale, and it crashed face-first. I rushed out of the overhang and brought my blade down on the back of its head. It sunk satisfyingly deeply into the skull. The ogre snapped its head back and howled in pain, its spittle coating me but also ripping Boris’ blade from my hand. Really? Shouldn’t he be dead?

“Troll is coming! I will send my fireball when it is in range!” Raelia shouted behind me. She had prepared a large pyrotechnic for the party and was ready to release it. She had woven other spell forms with it to enhance its destructive capability, but her range was only thirty yards.

“Strike the troll!” I yelled as I pulled the black spear into my hands from my space. It was no time for secrets. The howling ogre presented its chin to me as it tried to reach my blade, and I drove the spear through its mouth and out the back of its head. Before it could fall and trap another weapon, I extracted the spear and returned it to my dimensional space. I would answer the curious and amazed gazes from the others later.

I levered my foot on the now definitely dead ogre and worked out my sword. Raelia’s fireball sped over me toward the approaching troll, who was either reluctant to break the tree line or waiting for its companions. It covered its face as the flaming ball struck it and engulfed it. While everyone else was blinded, my aether sight adapted instantly, and I watched the troll reel, but it didn’t seem to be fazed as the incendiary washed over it.

“Lightning?!” I yelled.

“Not yet!” Mynasha yelled back, annoyed. “I need to focus more aether or it won’t be strong enough!”

“She has time, the other trolls are still a distance away,” Glasha said calmly. I ground my teeth. If we didn’t get rid of this troll now, we would be rushed by three trolls and two ogres at once.

“Marvelous fireball, Raelia! How long till your next?” I asked, watching the angry troll consider his options. I could tell he was furious about losing his ogres and being slapped by the fireball. His skin looked cooked, and I knew fire was the one type of injury they did not heal quickly from.

“That was most of my aether,” Raelia said guiltily. “Maybe one more, half as strong.”

“Save it for the ogres then,” I told her solemnly as I stepped back out into the rain. Maveith and Blaze’s arrows barely penetrated the troll's thick hide. “Hold your arrows for the ogres, too. They are having no effect on the troll.”

I started to hear the other trolls in the distance when the cleric finally announced, “I am ready.” She extended her hands once again, and the lighting flashed and tethered to the troll. Its face formed a hideous look of shock and fear. The lightning snapped to the troll, and its chest exploded. But the creature did not fall. Its flesh was blasted away to reveal ribs and gore leaking from its massive body.

It bellowed in rage and pain, and a howling, angered call answered from the woods. “I hope that isn’t his mother,” Benito said breathlessly.

I was thinking of asking Raelia to fireball the exposed chest cavity, but the troll went to a knee and crawled back into the woods. “Will that kill it?” I asked uncertainly.

“No, but it will not be able to fight for a few days. It lost a lot of muscle in the explosion and has to be in excruciating pain,” Glasha said clinically. “Still no other trolls or ogres out to two miles. We may have gotten lucky.”

“Don’t tempt Fortuna, please,” Benito whined.

The troll let out excruciating, pained cries as it crawled away. The thundering in the woods approached, and it was clear it had reunited with the other trolls and ogres. Perhaps the injured troll was warning them that we were too tough a fight and they should leave us alone. The troll had acted somewhat intelligently so far.

When the cries ended and the forest went silent, I knew we were screwed. I pulled out the spyglass and saw movement among the trees, but it was not heading away from us. Who knew trolls and ogres could sneak? The rain was picking up, adding to the ambient noise, but still, it was clear they were spreading out to rush us, the worst-case scenario.

Glasha confirmed to the others, “The two ogres are moving up the center, and the trolls are on the right and left to flank us.”

Thinking, I asked, “Can you target the head with your lightning?”

Mynasha shook her head. “No, it is more like lassoing the target. Once I lock onto it, I release the destructive aether down the length and cannot control where it lands.”

I laid out my hasty plan. “Well, at least try to explode its head. The troll on the left is yours. I will take the one on the right. Raelia, slow the ogres with your fireball, and everyone else focuses on the ogres as well.”

“You are going to fight a mountain troll alone?” Mynasha asked incredulously.

“Yep,” I said as I moved out into the rain and crossed the shale, pushing earth speak. Benito said something, but I didn’t catch it over the noise of the falling rain. My earth speak feedback was all blurry with the water-soaked ground, and I had to get to the trees before the ogres spotted me. I thought I was successful and waited behind a large trunk just inside the tree line.

My earth speak picked up the troll first. It crouched as it moved under the trees, plodding in the mud as it moved closer. I had estimated its path well, and it was going to pass close to my position. I just had to hope Glasha was not watching me when I did this.

The ogres roared to draw attention to themselves as they broke the tree line and rushed my companions. Scared horses and the sound of bow strings echoed the night with the rain. Raelia’s fireball flashed a distance away.

My troll increased its pace, closing on me, and I stepped out. My sword held high it looked surprised and amused at the tiny human. My sword came down in a faux slash, and its eyes widened as its head tumbled from its body, its neck now secured in my dimensional space. I was surprised it only had a modest aether resistance, but then again, I had raised my space affinity to over one hundred. Of course, my aether bottomed out, and I lost my aether sight. I could see the glowstones through the trees and stumbled to rejoin the fight.

A flash and thunderous explosion told me Mynasha had expended her lightning. Breaking the tree line, I tried to figure out what was going on. I didn’t see the troll, just two ten-foot-tall ogres struggling to reach the group. I broke into a run, hoping to hamstring one of the ogres from behind. The ogre never saw me coming as I sliced into his calf as it scrambled on the greasy shale. I couldn’t get an angle on the Achilles, and the hamstring looked too fatty to ensure a disabling blow.

I shifted clear just in time as the ogre slammed into the shale, howling in pain. Benito and Mateo had confronted the last one, while Maveith dropped his bow and pulled his hammer with practiced ease.

The ogre brought its crude club down hard on Mateo’s shield, slamming him backward a good five feet. He hit the ground with a grunt of pain. Benito moved in from the flank, but the ogre caught him with a sideways swipe that connected against his shield. Benito let out more of a squeak than a cry as he tumbled out of range.

Maveith charged, hammer raised. He brought it down in a wide arc, but the ogre caught most of the blow with its thick forearm. The impact still staggered it—but not enough.

I turned back to finish my own opponent, aiming a clean strike at the base of its neck. The ogre twisted with surprising speed and caught me with a brutal backhand. I couldn’t dodge on the oily shale—my footing gave way.

My aether shield flared to life, absorbing the worst of the blow, but the force still had me sliding down the slope of shale. I slid several feet, and came up disoriented, breath caught in my throat. Still, I forced myself upright, shaking off the stars in my vision. There wasn’t time to hesitate and I rejoined the fight.

It looked like Raelia and Blaze had added some arrows to the ogre Maveith was facing down. Maveith was holding his own, so I looked to finish my crippled ogre and get revenge for the bitch slap he just gave me. My ogre was confused and on one knee. I think he was looking for his troll masters. I could see clerics preparing spells and facing the ogres, so I assumed the other troll had been killed or incapacitated.

As my ogre tried to defend himself from his knees, I removed three of his fingers. Then he lost his entire hand on his other arm. That broke his will, and he began sliding across the shale to try to make it to the forest. Maveith’s hammer came down on the other ogre, the loud crack caving in its head. Blaze and Raelia started targeting the fleeing ogre with arrows. The ogre slowed, fell and soon stopped moving.

The heavy rain hadn’t stopped as I rejoined everyone. “Is the other troll dead?” I asked.

“It fell over there and has not moved. I got a large portion of its neck with the lightning,” she said grinning. Maybe she was looking for praise, but she was the one who had gotten us into this. I nodded and ran back out into the rain to behead the troll she injured, Maveith following me. It took a dozen blows before the head was freed from the body. Mountain trolls couldn’t regenerate limbs. So, it was safe to say it was dead.

“How did you kill your troll?” Mynasha asked, still steaming and mostly nude, when I returned to the shelter.

“Same way.” I indicated the troll I had just hacked its head off of. “I will rest for a bit, and then I will hunt down the last troll with Blaze and Maveith,” I said tiredly. I calmed and rubbed Ginger’s neck to soothe her after all the excitement, and it helped me calm, too. The stench was now our biggest enemy. I doubted anyone would be able to sleep. I would need about another fifteen minutes for my aether to recover to kill the last troll and use the collector on it. I also hoped to get an essence from the troll I had beheaded in the woods.

Mateo had broken ribs and a concussion. Benito had a broken arm—again. Both men, for their injuries, remained stoically quiet while Glasha did what she could to heal them. She could not heal broken bones but would do what she could. I didn’t tell Mynasha to dress, as the distraction helped Mateo and Benito deal with their pain.

I think I got away with my beheading my first troll as Glasha was not eyeing me suspiciously. I sat and leaned against the wall, inhaling the stench of the ogres and letting my adrenaline fade. We were truly Fortuna’s Chosen to have all survived that.

 

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Comments

“As our ears rang from the thunder, Glasha yelled to us, “Two trolls and two more dark ogres coming—about a mile away.” Need to remove the first quotation mark.

Battleborn

Repeating word, "toweringtowering"

Battleborn

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

edited

Erick Thiemke

i edited this passage

Erick Thiemke

I like this line. It explains a divergence of tone in few words without distortion of its meaning. [“Is that all?” I screamed back, intending sarcasm, but yelling so everyone could hear muted the intention.]

Mercutio Montano

Corned! Ha! Lol

Shelby harris

Strike the troll!” I yelled as I pulled the black spear into my hands. It was no time for secrets. The howling ogre [jerked] its chin [up] as it tried to reach my blade, and I drove the spear under its chin, straight up into its brain. Before it could fall and take [my weapon] with it, I extracted the spear and returned it to my dimensional space. I would answer the curious and amazed gazes later. I [braced] my foot on the now definitely dead ogre and worked out my sword. Raelia’s fireball sped over me toward the approaching troll, which was either reluctant to break the tree line or [waiting] for its companions. It covered its face as the flaming ball struck and engulfed it. While everyone else was blinded, my night vision adapted instantly. I watched the troll reel, but it didn’t seem [phased] as the incendiary washed over it.”* Final Edited Version: *“Strike the troll!” I yelled as I pulled the black spear into my hands. It was no time for secrets. The howling ogre jerked its chin up as it tried to reach my blade, and I drove the spear under its chin, straight up into its brain. Before it could fall and take my weapon with it, I extracted the spear and returned it to my dimensional space. I would answer the curious and amazed gazes later. I braced my foot on the now definitely dead ogre and worked out my sword. Raelia’s fireball sped over me toward the approaching troll, which was either reluctant to break the tree line or waiting for its companions. It covered its face as the flaming ball struck and engulfed it. While everyone else was blinded, my night vision adapted instantly. I watched the troll reel, but it didn’t seem phased as the incendiary washed over it.”*

Andrew Crews

As our ears rang from the thunder, Glasha yelled to us, “Two trolls and two more dark ogres coming—about a mile away.” “Is that all?” I screamed back, [my sarcasm lost] in the need to yell so everyone could hear. “So far! I [just] searched out to two miles,” she yelled back.”* Final Edited Version: *“As our ears rang from the thunder, Glasha yelled to us, “Two trolls and two more dark ogres coming—about a mile away.” “Is that all?” I screamed back, my sarcasm lost in the need to yell so everyone could hear. “So far! I just searched out to two miles,” she yelled back.”*

Andrew Crews

The ogres that had been chasing the deer returned, [their] sucking, muddy, echoing footfalls [filling] the air. They moved out of the tree line ahead of the troll. I wouldn’t say I liked smart monsters. “Throw your glowstones!” I commanded. We could not fight in the dark at such a disadvantage. Five stones [flew] from their pouches, arcing through the air. One [sank] into a muddy puddle, and another disappeared between two pieces of shale, but the remaining three radiated enough light in the misty rain to see. Three glowstones now cast shadows outward, [revealing] the outline of the ogres at the forest’s edge. I looked over at Mynasha, who had wholly disrobed, motes of blue aether crackling around her as she wove a spell form in her hands. I [suspected] it was my aether-infused eyes that [allowed] me to see the spell workings more clearly—a benefit I would have to explore if we escaped this mess.”

Andrew Crews

The troll’s head appeared to me about one hundred yards away, [towering] about twenty [feet] from the ground. I was glad the others couldn’t see the hideous creature in the dark—its eyes [went] wide with surprise at what it had just found, and its mouth [formed] a smile, revealing jagged, crooked teeth.” Final Edited Version: “The troll’s head appeared to me about one hundred yards away, towering about twenty feet from the ground. I was glad the others couldn’t see the hideous creature in the dark—its eyes went wide with surprise at what it had just found, and its mouth formed a smile, revealing jagged, crooked teeth.”

Andrew Crews

While the cave was good shelter, it also meant we were [cornered]. We didn’t have time to saddle [up] and flee into the night.” Final Edited Version: “While the cave was good shelter, it also meant we were cornered. We didn’t have time to saddle up and flee into the night.”

Andrew Crews

Nah, gotta remember the air shields aren't actually THAT strong or large. He probably get one to stumble a bit, but it likely wouldn't fall, and would probably break the shield.

Apophixas

But my suggestion doesn't stand up? all right, the troll has almost the same strength as a giant, but if he starts moving his arm and bumps into a wall, shouldn't that stop him? he could easily break it, but wouldn't those seconds be crucial? it seems like a valid tactic to use against large enemies. Analyze the movements and at the first sign of the beginning of a blow, put up 1 or several air shields to hold it up, which normally wouldn't hold up, but would hold up for a few seconds due to the surprise and lack of initial strength, right?

daniel dantas

I think you're right, in my mind this would work, thinking that the troll would attack in an extremely specific way and pulling the arm behind the body, this would allow for an easy blow

daniel dantas

unlikely. the mountain troll's strength is almost that of a storm giant (noted twice in teh chapters). the air shields would not have stopped strikes. the trolls are 20' tall and have long limbs for extreme reach. even with the spear he would have been hard-pressed for a killing blow to reach the head. since it is a troll, a heart strike would not be fatal (noted in chapter)

Erick Thiemke

Great chapter, just one caveat, did he need to use his dimensional pocket to kill the troll? It seemed reckless and ineffective, reckless because anyone who looks at the body will know the lie and ineffective because he has already killed many trolls, he should already be experienced so a combination of air shield with spear should be fatal and fast, it's basic physics, no matter how strong someone is, if you put a wall at the start of a movement, it won't have 1/10 of the real strength and if you combine that with a weapon that cuts through everything like butter, at the first sign of surprise from the troll colliding with an air shield, eryk could pierce the heart or even the neck of the beast. I understand the urgency, but this tactic would be just as quick and wouldn't risk another secret

daniel dantas

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

corrected

Erick Thiemke

Eryk... Do not death flag your group like that final line

PatronTurtle

Me: “Oh, how is he going to kill a troll solo? Air shield trip to spear attack?” “Oh, duh.”

Mason W

Nice chapter. Thx

The Cobra Den

and I watched Troll Real. watched THE troll real

Shane clark

A thundering boom deafened me as the ogre exploded is a gore mess. In a mess of gore.

Shane clark

She started shedding all he clothes as I cursed under my breath. Should read, all HER clothes

NightRider

watch glasha tell eryk “i saw what you did to that troll”

Chachi

Should give some good essences :) really enjoy that he is getting stronger faster now

Dragoon9

and I watched Troll Real Real should be REEL

NightRider

She could heal broken bones but would do what she could. She couldn’t?

Jordan

She" could" heal broken bones but would do what she could. Could -> couldn't

Garrett

Thank you!

Andrew

time of secrets is past... use the collector on all the fallen. Two cents Took too long to sever the 2nd head... if he could have done it with a single swipe it would have been believable that he managed it the first time. Even a cursory inspection of the first decapitated troll will show the straight cut he failed with the 2nd.

Silver Beard

Nice chapter. Might be worth another sentence or two on the troll he kills. It was over so fast I almost missed it. Was a good demonstration of how skilled/powerful/dangerous Erik is that he had no real difficulty killing it but seems like it could use some emphasis given how much time is spent on the rest of the fight.

william wallace

It fellow ogre stumbled from the concussive blast. It -> it’s

Jordan

“A thundering boom deafened me as the ogre exploded is a gore mess.” …ogre exploded ‘in’ a gore….

Jordan

Very few grammar errors, story is lit. Thx

Joel

"She could heal broken bones but would do what she could" is this a typo?

Sean Kauffman

Thank you for the chapter

incognito

shedding all he [her] clothes She could [NOT] heal broken bones but would do what she could.

Silver Beard

1st of 4 for cycle. Had lots of things come up today. Working on next chapter now. I didn't read or edit this one and will do it tomorrow.

Erick Thiemke


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