…Many battles were raged, and many casualties borne. The result of this “great war” was unresolved, as no clear victor was ever established. And still the feelings of rage and hatred boiled and festered beneath the surface. During the war, one of the casualties was different. Unassuming in the difference, but different nonetheless. This casualty shaped the time to come. Randorn was a great general of the wolves, and the leader of the Wolven armies and he was able to win considerable battles against the foxes. He was also purported to be the greatest wizard in many a lifetime. All of these things were true, but he was not the casualty. He had two sons: Sabre and Dagger. One fateful battle took the life of his eldest son, Dagger; and filled with grief, Randorn left his tribe to live alone. The older brother, Dagger, fought in his Father’s Division as all sons whose father is of rank are compelled to do. Upon hearing news of his death, Randorn broke down into sobs, and collapsed. And then he began to tear his fur out as a sign of mourning. This is the price of war. The next evening, Randorn and his extensive family made a midnight ceremony for his son’s spirit. This was a tradition for all Wolven warriors. Randorn left in the middle of this. Skulking away in the middle of the night. Filled with grief and guilt, he ensured that his other son did not bear the same fate. Now he would not be drafted. The next morning, his disappearance was discovered. A note had been left of his stationery announcing his immediate resignation, and his disappearance. As the war was still raging at this point, an act such as this, resignation, would have had execution levied upon his head. Cases such as that, and now heightened more so due to his position, were treated as harshly as treason, cowardice, and desertion. His act of desertion made Randorn deemed disloyal to the cause of wolves. The law of the pack dictated death. But as he was not to be found, it was to be his family that suffered the fate of the ax. Likely, it was to be just Randorn’s wife and remaining ten-year-old son to be executed. Randorn knew this, but there were countless precedents of mercy on the family. The magistrate presiding on the matter reluctantly ruled to spare them. He was one of Randorn’s friends, but his superiors in the justice system, and the generals in the military, were calling for blood. Randorn’s disappearance had left them in the lurch and now they were in a major discoordination, and were losing much of their hard-fought efforts. The magistrate, Diniel, in compensation for mercy, ruled Randorn banished and to face the penalty of death if he ever returned. For a general, his family would technically pay the price for a single incompetency by the former, but this was rarely enforced, but that is what was being cited for revenge. Some even were wanting to order a mission to track him down and put him to death. But luckily, the verdict stood. What his note said was that he escaped to avoid death, seek revenge on the vixons, (what they preferred to be called) and to prevent his other son from being forced to participate on the drafted slaughter that would’ve been imposed upon him once he came of age. As mentioned before, due to his father being an officer. Now the conflict of the wolves and vixens, was due to the difference in governing. The wolves, as could be guessed, were a patriarchal society. The main focuses were combat and the trades. The vixens were a matriarchal society. The vixons’ focus were on the arts and literature. And as for the trades, agriculture and carpentry were the most common. Carpentry was popular for the art form of it, and agriculture was good for hard workers with skills in the field of arithmetics. This difference in society and culture was what stemmed the many wars and estranged the two species. With this bit cleared up, let us return to Randorn. The Wizard, as many called him, spent night and day in the woods. Living off of roots and berries as well as the occasional kill of venison...