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17kNovel > The Wandering Inn > Book 1: Chapter 45

Book 1: Chapter 45

    Book 1: Chapter 45


    She ran back. Back, towards the city where her friends were. Perhaps they were her friends or maybe it was just a word. But they called to her. And so she ran.


    -


    [Innkeeper Level 18!]


    [Skill  Immunity: Alcohol obtained!]


    [Skill  Quick Recovery obtained!]


    Erin didnt know that shed slept. She raised her head and realized she was sitting down. Dawn hade, but she had only drifted off for a second.


    The sky was still mostly dark. But light still illuminated the grasnds. Dancing shadows. Twisting mes.


    Fire.


    The Antinium were burning the dead. All of them. They had created a huge pyre of bodies and set it alight. The terrible, suffocating smoke fanned away from the inn, but Erins eyes still burned. Or perhaps it was just her grief.


    The bodies of the Workers were gone. Sometime when she hadnt been watching, the Soldier had taken them away. Erin had asked one of the surviving Workers  Bird  where they had gone. He told her she didnt want to know.


    She was afraid to ask more. Even of Klbkch. He had barely left her side all night. Now he stood on the hill, staring down at arge shape several hundred meters away.


    Erin got up and walked to his side. He turned his head slightly, but continued looking down. Erin stared at the red, elongated form of the creature that had lived in dead flesh and led an army of the dead. It was still surrounded by the Goblins that had felled it.


    But something was different about Skinners body this morning. He seemeddiminished. Erin stared down as the Goblins milled around him, and then she realized what was going on.


    Are they<em>eating</em> it?


    Yes.


    Her stomach roiled. But Klbkch was unmoved and so too were the Goblins. They tore into the red body of Skinner, tearing him apart, drinking the fluids and


    She couldnt watch. Erin went back to her inn and threw up in the outhouse. It was still standing, at least. It needed repairs. Everything needed repairs.


    She sat on the toilet Pawn and the other Antinium had built and rested her head in her hands. She was so tired, still. She would have given everything to sleep. But sleep was a luxury and she owed a debt of pain.


    First things first. Herlevel. Yes, shed leveled up three times. Was that a lot? Probably. And she had new skills.


    They were an [Innkeeper]s skills. And they were worthless. Trash.


    Shit.


    Yes. Erin nced at the wood walls of the outhouse. Less than crap. That was how she felt about her levels and skills at the moment.


    It felt wrong to level when her friends had died. It felt wrong to be stronger in exchange for killing things. But there was nothing Erin could do about it. She felt like vomiting, or punching a hole in the wall of the outhouse. She nearly did, but stopped herself.


    Erin walked back out and stood next to Klbkch. After a while, she had the courage to ask him what she couldntst night.


    How many?


    He looked at her, and Erin wondered if he was going to lie. But after a second he spoke again.


    She listened to the numbers. When they were just numbers, it didnt seem so bad. But when she stared at the bodies, it was too terrible to be counted.


    Twenty seven Goblinsy in the grass. Too many. Even in Skinnersst moments, he had killed with terrible ease.


    Of the thirty two Workers that had chosen to save her, four remained. Bird, Garry, Belgrade, and Anand. Theyy in her inn, or sat propped up, wounds covered by some kind of sticky red substance. The Antinium had little in the way of medicine, but they were tough. They would heal.


    Less than a hundred people had died around Erins inn. Too many, but in the city it had been worse, or so Klbkch told her.


    Over eighty guardsmen and nearly two hundred civilians perished before the Hive was mobilized.


    She hadnt even known there were that many guardsmen in the city. But theyd had healing potions and armor andit was just a number.


    How many Antinium? Your people?


    Sixty five Workers and forty seven Soldiers. Nearly half again as many are wounded, but the losses were quite minimal.


    Really?


    He shrugged.


    It was a small price to pay, and would have been smaller still had my predecessor not erred. Had we fought with the Watch, we would have pushed the undead back without taking nearly so many losses.


    Why didnt you, then?


    A pause.


    Ksmvr believed the Queen had to be protected above all else. He withdrew all Soldiers into the Hive while she finished the Rite of Anastases.


    Whats that? What Rite?


    The process to revive me.


    Oh.


    Klbkch nodded calmly. He went on, listing the things he had to do on one hand.


    There is much that must be done. Reparations must be made to the city. The Antinium did not honor their promise. We must rebuild, put up barriers outside the Ruins.


    And youre going do to it? Youre the new Prognugator? Or does Ksmvr still have that job.


    He does not.


    Klbkch shook his head as he watched a Soldier dragging a body towards the burning heap.


    Ksmvr was a fool. He nearly cost the Hive the city, our position here and status across the continent andother assets. I will deal with him soon enough.


    For a while Erin and the Antinium watched the dead burn. She swayed on her feet. Klbkch watched in silence.


    Yes. Many things.


    Klbkch?


    Yes, Erin?


    How <em>did</em> youe back?


    It is called the Rite of Anastases. It is aprocess which the Queen of the Antinium may undertake. It allows the dead to be reborn into a new body.


    Oh.


    Erin thought about that for a second.


    Okay. I understand. I think. Thendoes that mean you can revive the others who died?


    Others? Ah. You mean the individuals who were once Workers. No.


    Why not?


    He hesitated.


    In truth, only a Prognugator would be consideredworthy of the effort and time required for such an act. Moreover, it is not something done lightly. There are consequences. I have lost ten levels in every ss. A considerable setback, although my new body reduces the impact on my abilities quite significantly. And the time it tookmy Queenbored for nearly three weeks without rest to restore my being.


    Thats a lot of work.


    There were other material costs as well. The Hive would not be able to support such an action more than once or twice. The others


    I get it.


    It nearly didnt hurt. Nearly. But it was just another cut in a heart bleeding from a thousand ces.


    They died well. I would not have expected merethey rose above what they were. For that I honor them.


    Thanks.


    For once, Klbkch didnt seem to know how to reply. Erin looked at him. He was as he had been, but different.


    Whats with the new body? Upgrades?


    He nodded.


    The Prognugator role was never meant for specialized action. Moreover it was thought that the Worker form would allow a Prognugator to blend in to reduce the dangers of assassination during times of war. This new form will greatly improve my abilities.


    Two arms are better than four?


    Yes. I am swifter, more mobile, and possess several changes to my anatomy not incorporated into other Antinium. The older design of four arms was inefficient. This new body will serve me better.


    Harder, better, faster, stronger, huh?


    That is broadly correct, yes.


    Okay.


    Klbkch was watching her. Erin knew, even if he didnt have pupils to follow her. He hadnt really let her leave his sight since that night. She was so tired.


    Thanks for saving me. Really.


    It was nothing.


    It was something.


    Yes.


    She looked at him. Just the same as always. And then she looked at her inn. She looked at the broken wood, at the marks of violence, and at the ce where a Worker named Knight had died. She looked at the dead and the Soldiers. She remembered a half-Elf, a Minotaur, a Drake obsessed with chess, and a bunch of smiling faces.


    Klbkch saw Erin fold up and fall backwards. He tried to catch her, but she thumped back into the soft grass.


    Miss Solstice. Are you alright?


    Erin smiled emptily as Klbkch hovered over her. She raised one hand and let it fall.


    Im just going to lie down for a while.


    Shey in the trampled grass as the Goblins feasted, listening to the dead burn.


    Erin wept.


    -


    On the night of the second day, Ryoka found the dead Gnolls. Theyy where they had fallen, eight warriors holding spears and bows and in one case, a morning star. Each had been beheaded by a single sh.


    She stared at the bodies for a long time. They were already rotting and the green glowing flies were crawling out of the bloody cuts. She could do nothing for them, but still Ryoka lingered for a while before running on.


    She knew she was being followed, but every time she turned her head, she saw nothing.


    -


    Selys sat in the Adventurers Guild, listening to Zevara argue with the guildmaster. She stared dreamily at her bandaged wrist, and felt the healing cuts on her legs and torso burning and itching.


    Even after a day, Liscor was silent. The streets were still busy, and the people still spoke. But it was a different ce. Death and destruction had taken their toll, and people still mourned.


    But they had survived. They had alle out stronger for their ordeals. Selys was now a [Warrior] and had gained several levels in her [Hunter] ss. It was a wonderful thing, especially since she hadnt leveled in a month.


    But she was still tired. And thistest argument that she could hear from her desk bothered her.


    I want those humans responsible for unleashing the undead held ountable!


    That was Zevara, Captain of the Watch. Selys knew her if not in person, then by reputation. She was a good leader, and she had saved countless lives during the battle with the undead. Her voice was raw and she coughed every few words now.


    <em>Throwback. Old blood. Dragons child.</em>


    Selys thought the words, but didnt say them out loud. Zevara had breathed fire to hold the undead back. She was a hero. But she was wrong in this.


    All the adventurers who went in are dead. Only a handful remain, and theyre in no condition to repay anyone for anything. Theyve suffered enough. Leave them alone.


    The Guildmistress of the Adventurers Guild in Liscor, an elderly Drake with dusky purple scales who was also Selyss grandmother shot back when Zevara stopped to breathe. The Drake Captain coughed a few times and red at the old Drake, but she was unmoved.


    They have nothing. Nothing will be gained from ming them, either. The Council was d enough when they volunteered to explore the Ruins. This is on their tails as much as ours.


    The Council wants to hold someone responsible. And if it wont be the adventurers, it will be this Guild. You choose which one.


    Selys winced, but her grandmother just sighed.


    Stubborn child. If you really wish to push thisSelys!


    Selys jumped and tried to shuffle some papers around. Her grandmother raised her voice.


    Take Zevara to the leader of the adventurers she wants to me so badly. Let her make her case there.


    That clearly wasnt what Zevara had been expecting. The taller Drake hesitated when Selys poked her head around the corner.


    Um. Hi. Follow me Watch Captain.


    She led Zevara down the corridor, into a part of the Guild reserved for injured adventurers. Like the rest of the building it was small, onlyrge enough to treat one adventurer at a time. And it was filled to upancy.


    Selys pushed open the door carefully. Zevaras breath caught as the door swung open to reveal the lone upant.


    A human sat in a white bed, staring emptily out one window. It was a bright, day with clear skies in Liscor. A bit chilly given it was winter, but winter had not yet arrived and Yvlon Byres took no notice of the temperature.


    She paid no attention to anything at all, really.


    Half of the skin on her face had been torn away. Her long blonde hair was ragged; her fair skin cut and marred. She stared empty-eyed through the window, sitting and looking at nothing.


    Her armor had been torn to shreds when theyd cut her out of it. Even now Selys could remember the human woman screaming. But now she was silent. It was little better.


    Human.


    Yvlon didnt move. She didnt blink. Zevara called out a few times, but Yvlon was still. The Watch Captain hesitated.


    If youre going to try and shake her, you might as well give up. She doesnt respond.


    Zevara turned towards the elderly drake as Selys rearranged the pillow around Yvlon, trying not to touch the human female. She avoided the empty stare as well as Zevara and her grandmother whispered.


    She has no coin or anything else. Everything she owned was lost in the Ruins. Herrades, her pride, her healthwhat more would you take from her, good Captain?


    Zevara red down at the older Drake, lips tight, tail thrashing.


    Someone must pay.


    Someone must. But I dont believe she or any of the adventurers has enough coin to cover the costs.


    Zevara looked back at Yvlon. The adventurer sat quietly in bed, back straight, hands folded. Face scarred.


    The Watch Captain shook her head. She had a million things to do. Relc was patrolling for any undead while the rest of the guardsmen rebuilt. She had to go through the roster of wounded and dead, focus on rebuilding the city, address the Antinium issue for the Council.


    She turned her heel. It was pointless to waste her time here arguing with a Drake three times as old as she was. Zevara strode away and turned her head only once.


    Yvlon stared into the blue sky, a few feet away and a thousand miles gone. Zevara stared into her empty eyes and left.


    -


    On the third day, Ryoka met a strange woman with arge eye and a curved sword who knew her name. She said nothing and ran on. The strange, smiling adventurer faded into the distance behind her and Ryoka wondered if she had killed the Gnolls.


    She ran on, thinking of things to say and ways to apologize. She slept that night, anxiously. Waiting to return and make things right.


    -


    Toren sat on the roof of the inn, staring at nothing and everything at the same time. Below him Erin pounded away with a hammer, covering up broken windows with boards. Shed banned him from helping the second time hed put a hole in a wall.


    He hadnt meant to. But on the other hand, hed meant to. Some part of Toren knew that was the only way to earn a reprieve. And he wanted one. For the first time he wanted to stop and think.


    The skeleton sat on the roof, staring out at the empty ins. From here he could see Liscor in the distance. The city seemed whole from here, and it was rebuilding quickly, ording to Erin. But much like the area around the inn, marks of the battle still remained.


    The battle. Toren still remembered Skinner, still remembered the countless enemies and only the pure joy of battle coupled with the need to keep Erin safe. It had been glorious, liberating.


    And all too short.


    It was a curious thing. He had leveled, and in doing so, he had be more. Morehimself. He could think, act, feel on a level he had not previously.


    Level 11.


    That was what he was. It waseight levels? Yes, a huge leap. But he had earned each one. And the part of Toren that thought and remembered wondered if it was because he had wounded therge flesh-stealing creature so badly. That, and the countless number of his brethren he had in had done it.


    He wondered how many levels the small Goblin had gained. How many levels her tribe had gained. It was meaningless, and yet it was not. Why should he care what level a Goblin was? Unless she was a threat it was meaningless.


    But some part of Toren wondered. And it was that part which had awakened after the battle, as he had gained those levels. He had begun to think, and that was a mystery in itself. A wee one to be sure, but vexing nheless.


    Now he could ask why he obeyed. Now he could think of Erin as a person, not just as a master. Now he could wonder


    The red gemstone turned in his skeletal hands. Toren could sense the magic contained within. He had taken it from the creature of skin, plucked it away. It had powerful magic. It had fear; he understood that much. But how might he use it? Should he use it? Should he give it to Erin?


    No. yes. Perhaps. It was not so simple anymore. Toren studied the gemstone. It was red, darker red than crimson. The red of dried blood and death. He had taken it from the corpse; he didnt know where its twin had gone. But one was all he needed.


    Neededfor what exactly? Toren wasnt sure. But he was beginning to understand. Something was calling to him. He didnt know what yet, but he would in time. If he had more levels he would understand more. And when he did, perhaps he would think more. Perhaps he would question more. And then when he had levelled enough


    <em>Hey Toren!</em> Get your bony butt down here and help me lift this thing!


    A voice from below. His masters. Or was it mistresses? He had had a master, once. The mage called Pisces. But he was no longer a master. Was Erin a master? Or a mistress? Or was she neither? Another question.


    He had so many. But not enough time to consider them, and Erin was beginning to yell again.


    Toren got up without sighing. Skeletons didnt sigh. But he looked at the red crimson eye in his hand. She would not want it. She would take it away. Therefore, he had thought about what to do.


    Carefully, very carefully, he opened his mouth and ced the gem inside. It was quite simple. A bit of sticky tar used for repairing the inns roof and it could be stored in the hollow of his skull, where brains were normally kept. That way no one would see it.


    It was the [Tactician] part of him that suggested it, and the rest of him agreed. Toren made sure the gemstone was firmly tucked away and stuck in ce before he leapt from the rooftop. He was stronger now, that was clear. Strong enough to help Erin wrestle the nks of wood into ce and hold them there while she hammered nails haphazardly into the wood.


    Stronger, yes, and more aware. But what would that lead to? What would he be?


    For the first time Toren asked these questions. And for the first time, he was curious to find out the answer.


    A bit of crimson light shed in the blue mes of his eyes. Only for a second.


    -


    The day rolled on, and many important things happened. Just like yesterday, and the day before that. They were important things, surely, for each person who experienced them thought of themselves as important.


    In his hiding ce in the ins, Pisces dragged away another body he had managed to save from the purging mes. It was an effort to bring them so far, but worth it. He propped the ghouls headless body against a wall and studied the dead Crypt Lord that upied most of the dirt cave. He smiled gleefully, as a child about to unwrap a present might.


    A human girl, a thief, crouched in an alleyway, debating where to steal next. She wouldnt have cared if the undead had killed all the filthy lizards and furry halfbreeds in the city. She was starving, alone, and desperate.


    Far north Magnolia spoke into the air. She was berating or perhaps arguing with someone invisible. The other speaker growled at her while she castigated him. Teriarch sulked while Magnolia studied a map of the northern continent, and then the world. She thought, tapping her lips with one finger and the ground with her foot.


    Relc patrolled the city; Ksmvr knelt trembling before his wroth Queen. Garia ran her deliveries, wondering all the while where her friend had gone. And more. More people carried out their lives and shaped the world in ways small andrge.


    But one girl ran through the grass, tired, exhausted. She had run for four days, running back through the grass, north along seldom-used roads from the Blood Fields. She had left in anger and despair. And on the fourth day, she came back.


    -


    On the fourth day, Ryoka returned to Liscor. There she stopped and stared a while. She wandered into the city and smelled burnt flesh, walked past destroyed homes, and heard those mourning the dead. She dodged thrown rocks and rubbish hurled at her and the other humans and came to the Adventurers Guild.


    She asked about her friends. She asked about Ceria and Calruz and Gerial and Sostrom. She listened, and felt the world drop away.


    The Drake receptionist took her to a small room with a small bed. She opened the door and Ryoka sat next to Yvlon for a while. The other girls eyes were nk and she scratched at the scarred flesh on her face.


    After a while, Ryoka stood up. Yvlon paid no notice. The girl walked out of the guild and out of the city. She walked towards the Ruins and saw the entrance had been blockaded. Twenty giant ant-men stood in front of a wall of dirt, barring entry.


    She watched them, until it was too much to bear. Ryoka left the ruins and walked through the long grass outside of Liscor. She walked until she was lost among the grass, walking and walking without a purpose.


    Ryoka never noticed the Goblin which rose out of the grass with his fellows, following her. She never noticed therge rock that moved towards her slowly. She walked on, staring at the sky.


    She did not cry. She did not rage. She was empty. Emptiness became her.


    Guilt and sadness was the air she breathed. Death walked next to her and whispered in her ear. Ryoka walked, and scarcely thought.


    When it was all too much, Ryoka stopped. The Goblin drew a sharp knife from his side and the moving stone crept up on both Goblins and humans, unnoticed.


    Ryoka took a deep breath. She stood in the ins and <em>screamed</em>. The Goblins covered their ears. The moving boulder jerked and began to retreat.


    Large, leathery birds rose out of the grass in panic. They flew away as the Goblins ran away and the Rock Crab scuttled away. The sound pierced the air, travelled miles, and made travelers on the road look up at the sky.


    Ryoka screamed until she could bear it no more. She punched at the ground wildly, tore at her own hair. She screamed and screamed until her body was unable to scream any more.


    Then Ryoka stopped.


    Her throat was raw and she coughed and tasted blood. Ryoka had to sip from one of the healing potions shed bought before she could breathe without agony.


    She walked on, despairing. Ryoka tripped over a rock and fell face-first onto the ground. Shey there a while. Empty.


    After a while, her stomach growled. Ryoka ignored it.


    Shey on the ground, cursing it. She cursed the blue sky and the citizens of Liscor and the adventurers. She cursed the undead, the monster that had killed her friends. She cursed the dead gods, the ones she had known, the world she now lived in and the one she hade from. She cursed all things, and especially herself.


    After a while, her stomach growled again. This time Ryoka listened and sat up.


    She scrubbed at her face with handfuls of grass and looked around. Evening. She was starving, and lost. But when she looked towards Liscor, she saw a building on a hill. When Ryoka drew closer, she saw it was an inn.


    Like the city, it had been touched by death and battle. The inn was cracked in ces, broken in others. The ground was churned in ces; the soil upturned and grass trampled. An outhouse around back had been smashed in one part.


    Everything had been hastily patched back up. Ryoka eyed the boards nailed clumsily together. They spoke of life, and she was starving.


    She looked up at the sign above the inn.


    <em>The Wandering Inn.</em> Like the rest of the building, the words were scratched in ces, and green blood had dried on part of the sign.


    Yet still the inn stood. It drew Ryoka towards it, although she couldnt say why. Here was a ce to rest. A ce to eat, perhaps. Or just a ce to wait until the pain went away.


    It would do.


    Ryoka put her hand on the door and hesitated. She stared at the half-ruined building. Then she turned away.


    Not here. Not yet. Her heart still hurt too much for words, much less mundanepany. Ryoka turned, ignoring her stomach. She was empty.


    She walked down the slope, not knowing where she was going. Perhaps north. Perhaps nowhere. She just had to run. Run, and run.


    Because there was nothing left to stop for anymore.


    Ryoka took out her iPhone and turned it on. She began to walk, and then to jog. She made it ten steps before a sound distracted her.


    Her phone began to ring. Ryoka stared at it. Slowly, she hit the glowing green button and raised her phone to her ear.


    Hello?


    <strong>End of Volume 1</strong>


    Thus ends the first part of The Wandering Inn. To all reading, thanks foring this far!


    And thats not to say Im done writing. In fact, the next chapter will be up on Tuesday like normal. I just wanted to take the time to say three important things. One is a request to all you readers. The other is how the story will evolve moving forwards, and the third is to say The Wandering Inn is now an Audiobook. Hows that for drama?


    Firstly, yes, this story is now avable to listen to! Not all at once, but Ive found a talented reader whos willing to sound out my bad writing. Ive put the first three chapter up on Soundcloud, and Ill also upload them to iTunes as a Podcast for you all to listen to, free! Once the entire first volume is read, I may sell all the parts as an audiobook as another way to support the story, but for now, Im very excited about another way for people to hear this story without having to listen to Siri mess up Klbkchs name ten thousand times.


    Heres the link for the audiobook, and Ill keep working and updating you all on that as things progress.


    The second thing you should know is that its my birthday. Yes, somehow I managed to end the first part of The Wandering Inn on my birthday. Id like to say it was all part of the master n, but that would be a lie. Im just telling you this because Id like to make an audacious request.


    Now that the first volume is ended, I would be extremely happy if youd spread the word about this story online and to friends. I know a lot of you do it already, but if you could bear it in mind, Id greatly appreciate it. Patreon donators are great, but even telling one more person about my story is a gift in itself, and not everyone has the money to spare. Regardless, I thank you all for reading my story andmenting.


    Andstly and perhaps most importantly: Patreon. Ive been thinking over suggestions of how to reward people who domit money to me moving towards my goal of self-employment, and Ive hit upon something Im going to try. Every month, Ill write 1+ stories about the world of The Wandering Inn. It might not be a story so much as background lore, or details about a species. It could be Ryokas missing conversation with Gazi, or how Pisces got to bePisces. Ill let everyone who donates a certain amountsay, $10+ on Patreon vote on the topic of what the next story will be, and let all my Patreon users read the story as I write it.


    But fear not! Normal readers will get to read these side stories too, justter. One month after I publish the story, Ill make it avable on the blog. That way people dont miss these stories, but Patreon users get to choose what the focus is and read things first.


    Thats about all I have nned, but let me just say again what fun its been writing so much so far. And how exhausting its been! Thisst chapter might be short, but ites on the heels of around 60 chapters, averaging around 7,000 words per chapter. Its a lot. But I love writing, and I wouldnt be doing this if I didnt enjoy telling this story.


    I hope someday Ill be able to make writing my only job, and perhaps after the next volume ends Ill take a months break to recharge. But for now, Ill keep writing, and I hope you all will enjoy the story as I continue onwards. Thanks everyone so much for reading and


    Ill see you Tuesday. If my flight doesnt crash, that is. Fingers crossed, and see you soon!


    pirateaba
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