The decades passed, and both factions have long forgotten
their attempt at peace. Before the first son of the joined
marriage passed on and his own son inherited the statuette,
the ambitious drow and haughty elves forgotten their past
foolishness and began anew their battles over land, faith
and work force. The ambassadors were killed, the embassies
destroyed and the only thing left to ever remind everyone of
the once noble attempt was the family of the third Lardamn
and the statuette.
As for the man himself, he played the part of an unimportant
neutral trader, and using the special location of his house
which somehow escaped the ruins of war, managed to make
quite a decent amount of richness. He married a beautiful
woman who escaped the drow and brought her up as an
independent woman. She learned the way of rich neutral
families and thrived in it. In time, the figurine had
replaced its location on the mantelpiece in the neutral
house to a barracks outside the elven city, as the fourth
Lardamn had no liking to neutrality, and believing a local
gypsy that he had elven blood, chose to take part in the war
against his darker cousins. He offered the service to his
brothers and moved to their city. The figurine was kept in
his personal luggage, for he had respect for his father's
wishes and to the tradition in his now reputable lineage
(the reputation only gained in the elven city, as they had
made a hero of the son who decided to thwart the silliness
of neutrality).
The hero died in his bed many years later, and as the old
tradition demanded he passed it on to his own son, who
became a solider like him. The father, who died a high
ranking officer, had the figurine standing on his office
table, yet he did not let out the fact it stood for peace.
Instead, he made up a story about how it represented the
power of the elves against the drow, as the figure of Aranos
seemed to be a bit higher and looking down at Tomyra. The
son, now a petty officer in the same army, had kept it with
him always, for he felt it gave his father good luck. For
others, which saw it all too many times for he showed it off
often, he told it was an heirloom he couldn't part with.
The fifth Lardamn did not followed in his father's
footsteps, and died a soldier's death on the battlefield
against a drow ambush. In truth it was due to a conspiracy
made by his own wife, who by chance happened as a child to
be rescued by elves from an orc camp. Little did they know
she was already brainwashed into believing the drow are the
only true rulers. She hired an agent to infiltrate her poor
husband's brigade and on the same time act as a double agent
for the drow who set up the ambush, thus leading the
figurine directly into their hands. Once he was dead and she
was sure she covered all her steps and that the drow managed
to kill the double agent as well, she deserted and moved to
the drow lands, where she brought up their children in a
lie, telling them their father had drow ancestors. She told
them a story about the figurine; that it was made in honor
of Tomyra, who was posed as a crafty assassin about to
strike down the haughty Aranos. She gave the ownership to
her eldest son, who happened to be the youngest for she was
blessed with four daughters before him.
The treacherous wife died an anonymous death by a malevolent
drow priestess, leaving her son to run to the outskirts of
the city to live outside the grasps of those wanting the
erase any remains of the family. He used whatever wealth his
mother managed to steal from her husband's inheritance.
Since it was quite enough to build himself a respectable
house and base himself as a merchant like his ancestor, he
was happy to take on the name of his ancestors as well,
which was forgotten by the drow for decades. The Sixth
Lardamn lived a long, relatively peaceful life.
The seventh and last Lardamn, as far as this writer is
aware, was not as reputable as any of his fathers. He was
neither merchant nor soldier, and was too blunt to be
anything more than a peasant. He lost his entire inheritance
and his father's money in gambling debts, and only managed
to keep a small house and the special figurine away from the
long hands of the tax collectors. Finally, and out of any
means, he sold the figurine to a traveling smuggler.
Somehow, word got out that the famous figurine was found at
the drow lands, and the elves began a campaign to retrieve
their lost artifact. The drow, having heard rumors a Lardamn
cousin managed to slip that the figurine is in the hands of
the seventh Lardamn. They found him, and after getting the
information of where it is, killed him and formed their own
army to retrieve it from the now long gone smuggler.
The poor smuggler, unaware of his coming predicament, was
already halfway to the elven lands to complete his annual
trade route. He was actually quite close to the ruins of the
old praying hall where the ancestors of the one who owned
the figurine were joined in the past attempt of cease fire.
It was now nothing but grey rubble which no one even
bothered to clear, and had been long since robbed of all
forgotten treasures. Rumors said it was haunted by evil
spirits. It was on the exact day the smuggler decided to
camp there for the night that the two armies found him. He
was caught between the two like between the hammer and the
forge. The battle which was fought there, however, did not
make a legend, for no one returned alive from the place. It
is said that a massive natural disaster caused the death and
destruction now lying at the location, which even yours
truly do not know of.
Others, however, whisper of something less natural had
transpired in the now field of death. They even push forward
and mumble that the whole ordeal was caused by the meaning
of the figurine, that Tomyra and Aranos themselves
intervened and slew everyone on the battlefield, for that
the statuette's ancient representation of peace and the more
recent bringing of war angered them greatly, for some reason
I do not understand. And so it is this legend of a simple
statuette lies somewhere in the dirt, in the exact center of
the world where an army of all races fought for its
ownership. It is said it was taken by the gods, and that
none shall have it even if it isn't. But is it? No solid
proof has been given. And perhaps some day we'll see it
again, and its old reason of being shall return and we shall
see peace again.
- Legend of Lardamn Lineage written by an unknown human from
the slave camps of the drow. He was killed for writing it
but the manuscript has long been smuggled out of the pits to
be published. Aiden Kavan