Maraud
He stepped into the cold night air just as a torch flared in the distance. The marauders moved with a terrifying, practiced fluidness. They didn't stand and fight the town guard; they split into shadows, darting through alleyways, snatching sacks of grain and livestock before vanishing back into the mist.
"They're here," Kaelen whispered, more to himself than to the sleeping village. maraud
Kaelen sat by the hearth, his hand resting on the hilt of a rusted shortsword. He was only nineteen, but his eyes held the weary weight of someone who had spent every autumn guarding the granaries. When the harvest was high, the "Shadow-Walkers"—a desperate band of outcasts from the northern wastes—would begin their descent. They didn't come to conquer; they came to maraud. He stepped into the cold night air just
The idea of "marauding" appears across various genres and histories: "They're here," Kaelen whispered, more to himself than
As the sun began to bleed over the horizon, Kaelen watched the last of the silhouettes disappear into the mountains. In the light of day, the village would call them villains. But Kaelen knew that when the world turns cold enough, everyone learns how to maraud. Exploring the Concept
The fog didn't just sit in the valley; it prowled. It clung to the damp stone walls of the village of Oakhaven like a living thing, waiting for the moon to dip behind the jagged peaks of the Iron Mountains. In Oakhaven, the word "maraud" wasn't a vocabulary term; it was a season.
: The term has been used to describe the "swashbuckling scallywags" of the Age of Sail, such as pirates and privateers who raided coastal towns. I'd Buy That For A Dollar: SLASH MARAUD #1 (November 1987)