Went looking through my documents folder and found this account of a save I played about two years ago. I’m still proud of it, so I decided to share. No mods, “Shelter in the Wilderness” start, no challenges—I was just having fun with this one.
Ukko of the Seal-Tribe, though small in stature, is a patient fellow.
He began his adventure by finding an abandoned camp, where some other hunter had left a small knife and a wide trident. Though the first bitter days of early spring left him a little frostbitten, he was soon able to construct a cabin to sleep in and bring down an elk to make himself warmer shoes. His first spring was spent fishing and trapping birds, but once the ground thawed enough for pit traps, he dug a few in the woods and was rewarded with three forest reindeer. Their meat, once smoked, sustained him for months to come.
Much of his first summer and autumn as an independent man was spent smoking meat, tanning hides, and clearing land for building. After his first building, a sauna (and smoker), was finished, he moved on to creating a bigger cabin to live in with an adjacent cellar, then a wide space to plant crops and a fence to enclose it. Near the end of his first independent winter he finished his third building, a storage cabin.
When a wounded adventurer gave him the location of a treasure of kiesselais origin buried between three adjacent boulders, Ukko was undeterred by the fact that the ground was frozen at the time. Instead he marked the location well, spent his winter hunting elk and forest reindeer, and returned in the spring. His fortune was made—though the adventurer called it “casual wealth”, to Ukko it has seemed a king’s ransom. After all, it’s not every day one comes into possession of thirteen superior winter furs—seven of them bear furs!
Five of the superior winter bear furs remain in Ukko’s sleeping bunk. Perhaps someday he will find a northern spear of better than rough quality, or possibly mail armor. For now he is content to sleep on the soft pelts, listening to his two reindeer cough to one another in their pen. (The first reindeer he bought was killed by a lone wolf; both pelts still adorn his bunk.)
Twice he has slain robbers who encroached on his tribe’s territory—once vagabonds, then sartolais—and twice he has slain bands of robbers on his travels. Though each time he has been bloodied and battered, he limps back home to make bandages from the clothes of the dead, and spends a few weeks in his cozy courtyard tending to rows of growing barley.
The most recent encounter came in the middle of a long warm summer. The worried inhabitants of a village told Ukko of robbers in the southeast of the Seal-Tribe’s territory. Ukko tracked them down in the woods within two days, wandering in the forest with his spear and arrows jangling on his back to attract attention. The three ruffians who attacked him were dispatched after a bloody fight that left Ukko with many serious cuts and punctures, but also with reassurances to bring to his tribesfolk that they would be able to hunt and wander in peace. The thankful villagers gave him a credit of 100 squirrel hides’ worth of goods, and Ukko left with a masterwork northern bow, three grey seal furs, and a smile on his face.
His next winter will likely be spent traveling. South to the islands, to trade furs or looted weapons for precious salt. North to the coast, hopefully to find seals for the first time. East to meet other cultures and perhaps clash with Njerpez. By spring he may have a sheep, or even a dog to share in his adventures. And he daydreams sometimes that a veteran hunter may take him aside and tell him the secret of how to meet forest maids!
*
One afternoon, wandering through the woods, Ukko came across a traveling fellow tribesman. With envy he noticed that the other seal-tribe hunter carried a northern spear—the very thing he had spent his first year looking for—and would not trade it away.
They were alone in the woods; the other man had no dog. The nearest village was miles away. No one would have known, and seeing as the spirits had looked mildly on his killing robbers, he didn’t really fear spilling blood. Ukko’s own ancestors, from some of the stories he had heard as a little boy, had not been afraid to take what they wanted out in the wilds.
Nevertheless... Ukko felt sick at the thought of killing someone unprovoked. Even if no one else would ever know the truth, there might be someone at a settlement who would miss him, someone who would wonder what happened to their friend or brother. And Ukko would always know that his spear was a trophy of murder. No, he couldn’t kill someone who wasn’t trying to do him harm. He walked away, and the two never saw one another again.
Later that season, Ukko met a vagabond hunter in the stretch of territory north of Sartola. The man had among his possessions something so rare even Ukko had only ever seen one as a child—a hunting horn! Even in the richer towns Ukko had never found one. The hunter gladly parted with his horn in exchange for some tasty smoked meat and a pair of Ukko’s bear fur mittens.
Ukko felt a kind of strange elated relief after this meeting. True, he had chosen not to do things the easy and quick way as his ancestors had, but his patience paid off.
*
As his second real winter settled in, Ukko had a run of strange luck. His settlement was comfortably situated an equal distance away from both Sartolais (to the south) and Seal-Tribe (to the north) territory, and between both territories he was able to trade a few spare weapons and furs for a sheep and a pig. Best of all, though, he now had a dog named Lumi, who soon happily set about devouring the pile of animal bones in Ukko’s courtyard.
While replacing spoiled bait in several pit traps, Ukko came across an elk and killed it—two hundred and eighty pounds of meat just in time for drying, and the first winter fur of the season. However, while he was tanning the elk fur, a lynx attacked him from out of sight, savaging his left elbow with its fangs. Though he lost the beast to the dark of evening, he was able to stop the bleeding.
A few harsher furs, at the bottom of the great plush pile now accumulated on his bunk, would become bandages. He would nurse this wound until the weather fully turned to winter. Once the rivers had frozen over and he could strap on his skis again, he decided, he would set out with his two reindeer and his faithful Lumi. He hoped, as soon as his arm had healed enough, to improve his skill with a bow a little.
Still Ukko dreamed of learning more spells and rituals from the villagers he visited. They were grateful for his help in fighting off robbers, doing chores, and carrying messages, and two of his tribesfolk had taught him about meeting the Old Man of the Waters and the Spirit of the Forest. He had met both of these with a humble and open heart, and both had appeared before him with gentle faces. Both these things filled him with wonder.
And yet... this would be only Ukko’s eighteenth winter, and his second as a man living alone. When he’d lived in his family’s homestead, close to a village, it had always seemed that the true mark of a real adult was their knowledge of the spirit world. Now he lived with only animals and the spirits for regular company, and often felt that there was still a world of knowledge evading him.
As Ukko’s elbow healed, he took the opportunity to trim the thick spruce woods at the edges of his settlement for a fourth cabin. This one would be a proper sauna, with space to sit and relax, free of the overpowering smells of the smoker cabin. True, the smell of smoking meat was a reassurance that he could survive another few months, but it did make him feel a little less refreshed when he tried to use his sauna for its intended purpose. At any rate he had a clear space and enough spare logs for a cabin. Why not make his life a little more comfortable?
By now his lonely settlement looked very cozy. After the fourth cabin was built, Ukko decided, he would let the woods around the settlement begin to creep back in. Already he had a fenced-in garden for vegetables, grains, and herbs; the four animals had their own grazing pen, and there was space to make an enclosure for Lumi as well. His living cabin would now be surrounded by a smoker, a sauna, and a storage shack.
(Sometimes he contemplated teaching himself more complex skills: carving combs, spinning flax and wool, pulling iron from the earth. But there was a kind of contentment in living a simpler life, even if it meant he had to trade for certain things instead of being entirely self-sufficient. Perhaps one day one of his children or grandchildren might learn such skills.)
Cutting trees proved a slow and difficult process with his elbow still badly hurt, so Ukko leashed one of the reindeer and packed it with trade goods. Lumi also trotted along beside him as they set out north into Seal-Tribe territory.
He traded the three grey seal furs he’d bought for a masterwork spear, and his first winter elk fur for some fine broadhead arrows.
Ukko’s luck, it seemed, all came at once—good and bad. He came across a bear and managed to kill it without its claws or fierce fangs ever touching him. Butchering the beast was a difficult job with his left arm still injured, and he had to pause halfway through to sleep.
In the middle of the night Lumi’s frantic barking awakened him. A wolf had snuck into the camp, probably attracted by the smell of fresh meat—and, even as Ukko watched, it snapped the reindeer doe’s neck with its fangs. He rushed at the beast with his new masterwork spear and quickly brought it down, but he had lost one pack animal, and Lumi had been wounded in the skirmish.
As he tanned the thick soft furs of bear, doe, and wolf, he let Lumi eat his fill of the catch before setting all the meat out to dry. It only seemed like a fair reward. Within a day Lumi looked far better, and they set out south for home again.
A brief wander northeast of his home territory—a little round section of spruce forest known as Nightcliff—brought him into the path of wolves again. Though this time he had left Lumi at home to recuperate, he threw himself into the fight, and brought down one of the pack while the rest fled. Though he didn’t mind the abundance of furs, Ukko hoped the rest of the winter would bring him easier hunting, as the wolf had taken a few bites out of him on its way down.