![]() ![]() ![]() Together they travel and reach a city-state of merchant-princes where Elric is recognized and honored. More by inclination than intention, he frees a sailor (Smiorgan) and accepts his companionship and service as a debt owed to him. In this “adventure,” he is in the world of humankind (though he is not really ‘human’) and finds himself confronted by a group of slavers. He “seeks solace in isolation, hoping to escape the horrors of his past.” But Elric cannot avoid one or more of his world’s gods nor can he leave behind his sword, Stormbringer, that “hungers for souls.” Thus he can never be free. ![]() This is a story (in two parts) that deals with Elric’s chosen exile from his kingdom on the Dragon Isle. The Elric of the title is Michael Moorcock’s Elric of Melniboné, Michael Moorcock’s classic sword and sorcery creation. ![]()
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