Pools of Darkness

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Book: Pools of Darkness Read Online Free PDF
Author: James M. Ward
were at least three powerful bands of half-orcs in the valley, heavily armed and well organized. The ranger looked around for any nearby guards. Half-orcs were usually smart enough to post perimeter guards.
    A lengthy scan revealed one guard crouched under a tree about fifty yards away. Hunkered down under its tarp, it wasn’t paying attention to anything but the rain. Ren didn’t have to worry about that one immediately.
    Then the ranger spied a band of hill giants. They were hard to miss, since none stood shorter than twelve feet tall. Hill giants weren’t known to be very bright, but what they lacked in brains, they made up in muscle. They lived by terrorizing communities of humans and other “smaller” people. Primitive in appearance, each sported overly long arms that, combined with their stooped posture, meant their knuckles nearly scraped the ground. Their low foreheads resembled those of apes. Ren had fought a few hill giants in his day. He knew they were slow and not impossible to kill, but taking on this large of a contingent—he counted nearly forty— would be nothing less than suicide.
    The ranger groaned. He had no other choice but to turn back to Glister and form a small army of men and dwarves to take to the valley. But if he left now, the captured dwarves would surely suffer unspeakable horrors at the hands of the orcs. On the other hand, if those forty dwarves with their armor and weapons were on Ren’s side, the story might be different. Forty dwarves and a skilled ranger might conquer the monster army.
    “Now what do I do? You’d better think of something in a hurry, ranger. Hmmm. Now that’s not a bad idea,” Ren muttered under his breath. “I’ll kill the guard, and meanwhile, I’ll think up a typically brilliant plan to kill an army of orcs, half-orcs, and giants all by myself.” The confidence he heard in his voice was greater than the confidence he felt in his gut.
    Crawling through the mud on his belly and then on hands and knees, Ren made his way to the brush near the orc’s tree. He was grateful for the rain and thunder that hid the sound of his movements. Rising to his feet but keeping low, he cautiously approached the guard, planting each foot solidly so as not to slip in the mud.
    The orc had chosen his position well. His post overlooked the north end of the valley and was in view of two other trails leading to the camp. Had it not been for the rain, Ren would have been an easy target.
    The ranger was within thirty yards of the orc when the mud gave way under his feet and he fell with a loud splash. The orc leaped to its feet with bow in hand. It nocked an arrow before Ren could react.
    Too late the orc learned a lesson about soggy bow strings. They behaved a lot like wet noodles; neither hurled killing arrows very far.
    The look of surprise on the orc’s ugly face as his arrow hit the ground at his feet was nothing compared to the expression on his face when, a moment later, Ren’s two-handed sword cut him in half. Ren’s blood was pumping at his brush with death.
    The ranger grabbed the arrows from the orc’s quiver, ran through the mud to his war-horse, and drew out his longbow. Ren wasn’t as skilled with the longbow as other rangers. In contests, he’d seen skilled bowmen hit discs of wood hurled up in the air one hundred and fifty yards away. Ren could never hit such targets from more than seventy-five yards. The orcish arrows he had stolen had to fly only one hundred yards, but their targets were stationary and much larger than a four-inch circle of wood.
    The ranger’s bow strings were coated with beeswax and were safely dry inside a pouch. Ren knew they would be effective for a short time, even in the rain. If his plan failed, the warrior had nothing to lose. He ordered Stolen to follow quietly, then walked to the ridge.
    The storm was at its worst. Lightning shattered the sky, thunder rattled the valley, and rain poured down in sheets. The ranger peered down the
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