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17kNovel > The Wandering Inn > Book 8: Chapter 9

Book 8: Chapter 9

    Book 8: Chapter 9


    <strong>The Wandering Inn is going to be working with editors and holding a contest for paid, professional editors to apply! Please spread the word and find out more details here!</strong>


    The great king raised his hand and spoke a single word.


    Advance.


    Legions moved. Tens of thousands of bodies, pouring forwards across the ground, heedless of arrows and spells raining down around them.


    The Golden Ranks of Medain along with the army proper unleashed enough spell and firepower to vaporize the ground itself. Plumes of smoke rose from volleys of [Fireballs], bolts of lightning which crisscrossed the sky and left afterimages.


    They charged through smoke, towards the walls glowing with magic. A thousand must have died in the first volley alone.


    But they feared nothing. And their king ruled beyond death itself.


    Even so, the undead wave of Khelt looked as though it would break on the walls, for siegedders or more sophisticated gear was missing. Would they, like undead, simply climb on top of each other until they reached the top? But the walls were twenty feet high and filled with strong defenders on every foot of space.


    Now. Swarm the gap. Commanders of Khelt, lead your forces in only after the ranged defenses are down. I shall join the vanguard.


    The living members of Khelts army looked at Fetohep of Khelt, not understanding. Each one had a semi-autonomous force; Fetohepmanded the army as a whole, but he entrusted the living with their own forces that they might level and handle events he could not foresee. But they were young and did not have the undeads intrinsic connection with their ruler.


    <em>What</em> gap? The walls of Medains border fortress were unyielding. What <em>g</em>


    The Jaw of Zeikhal, the great beast, <em>charged.</em> The defenders, who had confidently seen the first wave of undead disappear, began to fire spells at it. Trying to stop it. They had known they had to bring down the great beast.


    But it had stayed well clear of the undead. They would let the creatures mass to destroy this one titan. They were Gold-rank adventurers. They knew their business. And besides. The thing had so far to run, into spells and projectiles. It couldnt dodge; it was arguablyrger than the fort itself!


    Few living beings had ever seen one of the Jaws of the Great Desert move. The giant creature of chitin and bone began to move as fast as someone jogged. Thenthe speed of a horse. Thenthe air itself left a vacuum in its wake.


    It hit the wall and broke through enchanted masonry in an explosion of sound and debris. Fetohep motioned it back; he was already riding at the gap with the undead massing. Screams from the living, confusion.


    The construct was already pulling back. The spells had damaged its armor, but it would be repaired. And the undead


    Skeletal warriors charged through the gap. The stunned forces of Medain found themselves locking des and shields with a force that fought with <em>skill,</em> unlike mundane skeletons that knew only to attack and defend. They fought in ranks! They <em>ran</em>they had actual armor


    Then a golden light, among the glowing mes in the eye sockets. The King of Khelt rode through the lines of undead. An adventurer raised a bow and aimed an arrow.


    [Seeking Shots]! [Double Shot]! <em>[Sonic Arrow]</em>


    The arrows cut the air and exploded, too fast for the naked eye to fully track.


    They missed.


    Fetohep had leaned out of the way of the arrows before they had been shot. They tried to curve, even so; he twisted <em>around</em> them and they were unable to hit him and detonated in the ranks of the undead.


    Fetohep lifted his halberd. The group of Golden Ranks presented a wall of shields and weapons. He raised the halberd high and brought it down.


    [Chosen Blow].


    He was probably thirty feet away. The Golden Ranks braced for the enchanted halberd to activate.


    The halberds de descended through the [Archer]s head and helmet. The Golden Ranks turned their heads and saw the weapon appear from behind them. A chosen angle, and location.


    Fetohep rode down on them in the moment of distraction. He was grinning, the light of battle in his glowing eyes. And several undead followed him. An [Archer] put an arrow into one of the Golden Ranks; another followed Fetohep with a single-edged de, curved, and a buckler.


    Hispanions of old. The King of Khelt broke the lines of the border fort. Where he fought, battle was abination of incredible artifacts, levels, Skills that the Revenant undead possessed in life, unmatchable.


    Where his army fought, Medains forces found themselves surrounded, hemmed in by undead. They saw undead swarm around them, until they could not even clear space to swing a sword. [Pikemen] looked up and saw undead giants crashing towards them.


    Those that did not surrender died. Those that surrendered were spared, and the undead flowed past them.


    The border fort fell within the hour. Morale broke before the soldiers; they surrendered, rather than fight the undead and fall back into the keep.


    Fetoheps army marched on almost without pause. His disy of personal battle prowess, his army, seldom-seen in battle, the giant and unique undead his kingdom possessedfor many it was the first time seeing such war. And Khelts name was repeated.


    -


    I had always known such a ce existed, I suppose. Nothere are many nations in this world. I amaware necromancy is practiced by Rhir, for example, but I do not like to think often of it. It is a mark of their desperation, and the situation that we have seldom raised the issue. But this?


    The Summers Champion watched the live coverage of the battle and aftermath with a look of disgust on his face.


    It was mirrored across all of the [Knights] present, even the [Squires]. A horror for the continent of Terandria, not just historically, but culturally.


    Necromancy. A kingdom <em>ruled</em> by undead? To say they were horrified was an understatement.


    That anyone could suffer such isincredible.


    One of the [Summer Knights] remarked. The Summers Champion nodded. He clenched a fist.


    I know there have been crusades against such evil before. Not just <em>Khelt</em>but to see such brazen abhorrenceif it were not for Ailendamus, I would petition the Knight-Commander to consider such a thing! But watch, then, even if naught can be done at this hour. Look upon how such things fight. As long as your stomach holds.


    The members of the Order of Seasons gathered in this room nodded grimly. Foes came and went and could be of any species or nationbut here was a certain one. They looked at Fetohep with disdain, horror, contempt, even fear.


    Undead! Revenant, worst of all! A horror pretending to still have true thought and emotion. A pestilence upon the living, a threat made more cunning by its intelligence


    <em>A sexy beast of war.</em>


    That thought came from a certain Ser Solstice in the room. Rabbiteater was watching the King of Khelt fight. He thought that the King of Khelt had all the Redfang qualities of attractiveness. Imagine how good he must have been when he was <em>alive?</em> Wellyou didnt have to.


    Hed vouchsafe that to Meisa,ter. This didnt seem like the time to air such thoughts. But the Goblin approved. That undead king was handling the halberd like a true weapons-expert. Frankly, better than the Summers Champion was with <em>his</em> weapons. Rabbiteater decided that if he ever had to choose another ce to go after Terandria, maybe Chandrar would be on the list.


    It seemed like a fun ce to be. But Fetohep had appeared on television and there was no unseeing the King of Khelt. Many did react as the [Knights]. Somelike Rabbiteater.


    -


    After repeat viewings of the highlight rend nearly 17 hours of watching Fetohep of Khelt being amazing, Toren decided he wanted to be Fetohep when he grew up.


    That statement was soinuratethat Azkerash actually had to process it for a few seconds. The Necromancer blinked at Toren, tried to figure out where to start, and then let Toren go.


    He had enough teaching problems to try to untangle <em>that</em> one.


    However, if enemies or people with a morbid fascination or love of war were watching Fetohep many hours of the day, Azkerash watched them <em>all</em> the hours.


    Literally. He did not sleep, and the Necromancer had actually used the various scrying devices and enchanted eight mirrors, that the broadcast of Pass News Network would be ying throughout the castle.


    Also, to say he was in a a good mood after seeing Khelt and Fetohep was to be as inurate as Torens beliefs. Azkerash, the Necromancer of Terandria, Perril Chandler, Archmage Chandler, was in a <em>disgustingly</em> exuberant mood. If there was merchandise of Fetohep, he would have bought a thousand copies.


    As it was, he had been smiling all day, and his Chosen were very much rmed when the Necromancer walked about, humming, orplimenting mundane actionsor dispensing Khelt-facts at random.


    It was so obnoxious, that Bvierr had actually left the castle rather than be around Azkerash after the second day. The Stitch Witch could handle threats, bodily harm, extreme passive-aggressiveness and the pallor of undeath. Azkerash being jovial was the step too far, apparently.


    That suited Toren just fine. He hated and feared the Stitch Witch. <em>He</em> was just happy there was something to watch.


    For instance, after the meeting where the rulers had argued about killing one person for hours, a shift in understandings had taken ce. A fad, a trend


    Copying. To limited degrees of sess.


    <em>Hello, hello, are we live? I am King Ahrmal of</em>


    <em>Excuse us, but we believe </em>we<em> were first. We, the Radiance of Lomal, deign to join this judgment of</em>


    <em>IS THIS THING WORKING? </em>Hello? <em>Hello</em>


    Monarchs, apologies for the volume, I believe the King of Taimaguros is ah, having connection issues. If we can introduce ourselves in order of arrival.


    <em>Quite so. I am King Ahrmal of</em>


    <em>We will not be introduced after a </em>Chandrarian [King]!


    <em>Excuse me</em>


    The ensuing argument took up the entire hour timeslot. Noass never even got to introduce the criminal case of a murder; the four monarchs who had applied bickered the entire time about who would be introduced first; with the exception of Taimaguros [King], who had to be muted due to issues with connection.


    He didnt care for that. But Azkerash kept all of Pass News Network on, despite some sections being boring.


    It was for his enjoyment, but alsofor the Chosen. Because here was somethinginterestingthat separated Torens reaction from that of the now seven-strong Chosen.


    Kerash the Gnoll Draugr.


    Bea, the gue Zombie.


    Ijvani the Skeleton [Mage].


    Venitra, the Armored Bone [Warrior].


    They had been the original four, along with Oom who had died. Now, more joined their number. Three Chosen had been created.


    Toren saw them wandering about. He was less likely to run from them than the original four; they didnt smash him in an instant for being there.


    Devail had been first of the new. Ameat undead? All sinew, no bone. No flesh, so you couldnt call him a Flesh Golem; he carried a rapier and could slither through cracks in a wall.


    <em>And perform inhuman stunts while fencing.</em> Azkerash was teaching him, personally.


    Next had been a unique creation, even for Azkerash. Born out ofconversations, or so Toren understood. Conversation with who? The skeleton didnt ask. He just swept up and had heard Azkerash mention this while looking for rats to feed Healing Slime. Not that Toren was sure the slime really liked rats, but he was always looking for more foods for his friend.


    The second undead was called Wesixa; she was abination of two creators. Bvierr <em>and</em> Azkerash, as per their deal. But she was the Necromancers. And she was


    <em>Chitinous.</em> Not spider-like, although Toren understood she waspounded out of that; she was ratherunique. Toren understood that Azkerash had told Wesixa that she would have to upgrade herself.


    You are based on this skeleton, Wesixa, in theory. Your chitin was not the sublime material I forged Venitra out of, for example. I have not stockpiled such; I did not animate arachnids or insects as a rule.


    Then, am I inferior, father?


    The undead creature had appeared distressed. She had <em>lots</em> of eyes in her body. Which were more likeempty holes from which a kind of light shone. And uh, she was held together with threadconnecting her individual parts. Bvierrs magic, but Wesixa produced her own thread.


    She rearranged herself, that more eyes might track Azkerash. He reached out and gently touched herToren noted that her head could move from midsection upwards. That, at least, was somewhat insectile.


    Puppet-Arachnid Golem thing. Toren edged away and put some Sages Grass into his skull cavity as Azkerash addressed his child.


    You are inferior to nothing, Wesixa. Rather, I hope you will <em>grow</em> in more than just level. You will create yourself, and I hope you will be one of the proudest of my creations.


    Then I will try, father.


    The new Chosen called Azkerash father. Welltwo of them did. The old ones had trouble with it. And all of them had trouble withwell, it was Fetohep who had revealed it.


    After the revtion of Jecrass deal, Fetoheps appearance, Azkerash had looked at Toren. The skeleton had flinched; hed crept out of hiding because hed been so entranced.


    But the Necromancer read his thoughts. He could find Toren anywhere, even the time Toren had stolen an [Invisibility] scroll. And he could read Torens thoughts.


    You approve?


    Toren had nodded repeatedly. The Necromancer smiled.


    The Chosen did not. Wesixa and Devail looked confused. The Chosen


    I do not understand, Master. That undead is not your creation. It was once living and has the mind of the living thing it was. Why do you approve?


    Azkerashs brow furrowed. He turned to the bone woman, who had stomped Torens skull in yesterday. Toren hid behind him and made gestures at Venitra, despite knowing she didnt understand what they meant and would hunt himter. He was getting better at running away.


    I admire Fetohep of Khelt greatly, Venitra. I have always done so. To see him thus liberated isrewarding. Do you see nothing to admire? Ijvani, Bea, Kerash, Wesixa, Devail?


    Venitra, the Chosen, stared at Fetohep. The six Chosen out of the seven all hesitated. The four originals stared at Toren.


    usingly. He flinched; now they were angry at <em>him</em> becausethey couldnt make him tell them what to say that would earn their masters approval.


    <em>Is it because he is undead, master? And thus more undead means more enemies of the living?</em>


    After a long thought, Ijvani raised one hand. Azkerash was dismayed.


    Not just that, Ijvani. That is theleast urate of the answers, although it is one. Do you see nothing grand? Nothing?


    He looked at their nk faces and sighed.


    -


    The Necromancer was no fool. Toren had been helping the Chosen to impress him, but Azkerash was intelligent. Oblivious at times, changed by death and immortality, yes.


    But he began picking up aw in his children.


    It might have been time. Toren was the oldest leveling undead by <em>far</em>. They were newborns if you ranked them that way, and they had been created and raised in different conditions.


    Nature <em>and</em> nurture. Azkerash had confirmed his hunches by reying something that he also had watched on repeat.


    The King of Duels first match with the King of Destruction. Toren liked that one too. That plucky Human [King], being thrown around but stabbing that other onehe liked the agile Human, having a lot of sympathy for Raelts dilemma versus the tougher, stronger, King of Destruction.


    Toren saw the point. Azkerash hopefully turned to Ijvani this time.


    Ijvani. Let us not talk about whether you enjoyed the duel. But give me your honest opinion. In that battle, whono, what would be your preferred oue?


    Clever. Toren watched as Ijvani thought, her eyes glowing with uncertainty. <em>He</em> would have preferred if Raelt won. Azkerash too, it seemed, because he smiled when Ijvani began with that.


    <em>I would have preferred at thest exchange, Master, if the de had struck true and the other [King] died.</em>


    Ah! Yes! A victory for the King of Duels?


    Ijvani, encouraged, smiled. Her eyes lit up.


    <em>Yes, at first, master! </em>And then<em>the King of Destruction, with hisst breath, smashes the King of Duels skull in.</em>


    Toren and Azkerash stopped getting excited. Ijvani wasnt even done, though. She began gesturing.


    <em>And at that moment, a fissure opens and all of the armies fall into it! Then a volcano erupts and the city is destroyed!</em>


    That is a good ending!


    Venitra pounded a fist into her palm, excitedly. Toren had suggested the more animated gesture, and she kept employing it, hoping Azkerash would keep praising her.


    The Necromancer stared at his creations.


    Isee.


    He looked at Toren. And the skeleton saw his eyes flicker to his creations; even Wesixa and Devail seemed more enthused by Ijvanis ending.


    That he had work to do did not fill the Necromancer with dread, but a kind of resolve. He locked himself in his study, pondering the issue.


    Andtrying to figure out a conundrum.


    -


    Toren cared not for Azkerash. He was willing to admit the Necromancer wasinteresting. He was really good with the pointy, flexy-swords. Rapiers and such. Better than Toren, actually.


    And Azkerash knew what Toren thought. He, unlike every other person, could understand Toren, sometimes asked what the skeleton thought.


    The problem was his damn kids, four of whom delighted in bullying and breaking Torens bones. He would have put Azkerash squarely in the sort of nice to have around camp, otherwise.


    That was one new thing about Toren. He no longer had two states of mind abouteverythingwhich had been kill and not-kill. And most things had been in the kill category, even if it was killter.


    Now, he thought about Liscor. He missed Liscor. It would be so nice if he could go back. Start over, not stab Erin


    Because Liscor was better than this. He wanted more than this. But he could not leave the castle.


    The reason he felt so different wasnt because hede to an epiphany about his actions. The reason washe had a friend. And his friend thought nicer things, so Toren stopped vouchsafing that it was better to kill Mrsha and so on because it made his friend, Healing Slime, upset.


    He fed Healing Slime the stolen Sages Grass and the little slime plopped in Torens chest cavity. It felt safe behind his ribs. And it was a bit bigger thanks to Toren finding food for it; it had been tiny due to Ijvanis neglect.


    Toren liked being in their secret hideaway rooms from the Chosen. He only came out when they or Azkerash went looking for him; they could not discover Healing Slime.


    Healing Slime was the only good thing in this castle. Healing Slime was a friend. Toren had found Healing Slime when they were bothdespairing. And that was why he had purpose, now. He was going to do all the things Erin did for her weird guests. Feed, protect


    He was a skeleton with a mission.


    A Level 7 [Carer].


    -


    One of his Skills was [Enriched Recipes]. It meant that if Toren found the right ingredients, he could make Healing Slime a meal better than just theponent parts.


    So he kept one of the Sage Grass leaves, and tried to find something else for the mishmash of alchemical ingredients that made the Healing Slime light <em>up.</em> That, or a potionbut the Potion of Frenzy hed stolen for Healing Slime hadntreactedas well as either of them hoped.


    Healing Slime could be Speed Slime if it wanted to. Both from potions. But when Toren had tried to give it the third potion, the Healing Slime had greedily sucked it up


    <em>Then exploded. </em>Toren had barely saved its life, putting the mana core in a jar of water with as much of it as he could gather.


    Something was wrongand neither he nor Healing Slime wanted to try that again. Toren had a hunch Healing Slime hadnt been able to contain all three potions effects, much like his skeleton couldnt contain all the magic sometimes, especially without the Archmages bones which were going to a <em>new</em> Chosen.


    So he was feeding Healing Slime back up. Some rat bones here, Sages Grass there, glowing mold scraped off the walls, and you had a right proper meal. For a slime.


    Toren was busy doing that when Venitra came to exact her revenge.


    <em>Stay still, skeleton!</em>


    She wanted to smash him to powder. Toren fled, arms waving in the air. This was <em>dangerous</em>. He could die! Only Azkerashs castle steeped in death magic saved him from the bad beatings; if he was crushed to powder, especially his skull, he feared without the Archmages boneshe would die a skeletons death.


    If he was lucky, Venitra would give up or get bored after doing less damageor hed find Azkerash. Or Bvierr, if she had been here. Neither suffered the Chosens wrath upon Toren.


    Azkerash because he respected Toren or something weird like that. Bvierr because she wanted Toren alive for reasons that made the skeleton think it might be better to be dead.


    He was rounding a corner when Ijvani caught him with a spell. Toren iled in the air as Venitra stopped.


    <em>Master always prefers your thoughts. Stop thinking them!</em>


    The skeleton held a burning hand near Torens skull. He struggled as Venitra smiled.


    This time burn his skull until it turns to ash, Ijvani.


    <em>I will. I</em>


    The two stopped. Toren stopped struggling in the holding spell.


    <em>Something was walking towards them.</em> Both Chosen and Toren stopped. Ijvani dropped Toren, abruptly.


    Thest of the new Chosen stopped and stared. Itshesmiled.


    Hello. I am Mavi. Do you know where my mother, Bvierr, is?


    Toren slowly got up. Ijvani, Venitra, both stared at Bvierrs price for her work. They slowly shook their heads.


    Yourcreatorhas left the castle.


    She has? I did not know that.


    Mavi lookedToren slowly got up and backed down the corridor. He kept facing thest Chosen. Ijvani, Venitra, hesitated, but they were loath to go after them.


    Even the Chosen felt uneasy in the presence of what Bvierr had wanted. Toren fled. Bvierr had a few steps on Azkerash in some ways.


    Her creation called her mother. And she called itherher beloved <em>daughter.</em>


    Toren had never called himself evil. He just liked killing things. He had admired the [Lady] of me when he saw herand shortly before her death. Braveryhe had never thought himself as bad, until the end with Erin.


    But the Stitch Witch had shown him evil.


    -


    Azkerash himself did not like to think ofwhat had been done by Bvierr. But they were allies of convenience. Then she would leave.


    The issue of her was temporary. The issue of teaching his Chosenless so. He had time. But now he worried about them. After allhe would never uncreate his children. Not now they were people.


    You only got one chance. What had all the parents hed met said? He tried to recall a lifetimes memories in death.


    Hispanions had been little help. Archmages made for poor parental units, what few of them had children. [Mages]well, some were decent.


    But Perril Chandlers immediate friends hadnt been parents, by andrge. One or twohe clenched a hand as anger, even a hundred and fifty yearster, struck him.


    Forget that. His thoughts went searching and found another applicable parent, especially to this situation.


    But had Zelkyr been a good father?


    No. If they had been flesh and bloodno. Far from it. I will not do what he did, not part or the whole of it.


    The Necromancer sat there. It was hard to parent alone.


    Also, he had so many things to do. A working parent with undead children. His servants and puppets moved, he had dealings in the world, he needed to watch his enemies like Reinhart and Teriarch


    And he had promised that young [Necromancer]. For some reason, that ate most at Azkerash, driving his thoughts. Of all the thingshe did not want to be found out to have lied to Pisces.


    He was still stymied. Althoughit wasnt his field. Healing and ice magic. Not exactly high on his areas of expertise. In truth, Azkerash was moving into searching his collection and the world for spells or artifacts to aid the conundrum he was facing.


    Stasisa kind of enhanced stasis? I need an artifact not from the [Mage]-schools of magic. Something different. Perhaps


    As he sat in his rooms, an rm-thought began pulsing. One of his split minds had detected something; any number of things he monitored for.


    [Messages] with Azkerash in them, not encrypted.


    People inquiring into undead extermination.


    Key phrases with any of the localndmarks or geographical locations in them.


    Tier 7, Tier 8, Tier 9, Death of Magic, Named Adventurer, Relic-ss artifactoh, the list went on.


    In this case, the reason his mind had picked up on it was because of the connections made. Content. He devoted two more selves to analyzing it as he read a book and tried to alter a [Preservation] spell.


    <em>Hoarding and Hostility: How to Deal With Negative Traits, by Kassi the [Carer].</em>


    It was a Drake book, but it was surprisingly hard to get ahold of literature for adults raising children. Books werent <em>that</em>monce.


    More mini-Azs came back with a trace of the first [Message] spell in this chain of conversation and all asides. They reviewed the findings to see if it actually mattered, then began <em>kicking</em> his mind, so to speak. Azkerash focused his full mind on


    (Delivery Details)  <em>To Lyte du Marquin of The Wandering Inn, from Wall Lord Ilvriss of Szsar, copy to Ceria Springwalker, Horns of Hammerad.</em>


    (Content)  <em>Miss Marquin, I have obtained a partial Potion of Regeneration and am sending it to Liscor with all haste. I have hired my own security and escort with Szsars transport rather than entrusting it to a Courier; they will arrive at Liscor in three days or less unless there are dys in changing mounts. I hope that it will aid Miss Solstice. </em>


    <em>Wall Lord Ilvriss of Szsar, sent by Alrric, [Administrator].</em>


    (Additional Notes)  <em>1<sup>st</sup>-rate delivery requested, City Runner for immediate delivery, replies paid in full, unlimited content. Maximum confidentiality.</em>


    The Necromancer blinked. He stripped the superfluous details and checkedyes, there was a reply! What was the date on this?


    <em>Two days ago.</em> Azkerash frowned. There were two replies. One from the norththe other from coordinates precise enough that he could almost be certain it wasing from <em>Oteslia.</em>


    Not Liscor.


    <em>Ceria to Lyte and Ilvriss, did you really get it? Were holding off on the Vige of the Dead. Please tell us if theres anything we can do. I can arrive if you need ice-magic!</em>


    <em></em>


    <em>Lyte to all, I am not at Liscor. However, I have sent immediate word to the inn and [Mages] Palt, Bezale, or Montressa will be there to receive the potion. Thank you, Wall Lord Ilvriss. Ceria, I will tell you if you are needed. I am preparing to return home if news is good. Thank you again.</em>


    <em></em>


    He went over and confirmedyes, a [Message] spell to Paltthe Necromancer kept blinking.


    A few thoughts ran through his head.


    <em></em>


    <em>Ilvriss, a Wall Lord of Szsar paid for a Potion of Regeneration?</em>


    <em> Calcting the cost, even at market value would be exorbitant, even for a Wall Lord</em>


    <em> He was with Zel Shivertail. Danger?</em>


    <em> None shown; under scrutiny. Remember this.</em>


    <em></em>


    <em>Oteslia? Why would that young woman</em>


    <em> Ah, antidotes, logical.</em>


    <em> Odds of antidote low, however.</em>


    <em> Reinhart is at Oteslia.</em>


    <em> I wonder if there are good books on child rearing in Oteslia? Manus and Pass markets have not been as useful.</em>


    <em> Manus does not surprise me.</em>


    <em></em>


    <em>The Vige of the Dead is dangerous.</em>


    His eyes snapped open. Azkerash terminated the parallel thoughts speaking and refining themselves before he was caught in a thought-trap. Left alone, theyd list every salient fact until he was recalling market figures in Oteslia from decades ago.


    A Potion of Regeneration.


    The Necromancer sat there. He began to stretch his magical connections and mental ones out. Monitoring Liscors [Message] spells. Extrapting. Was there a chance a potion might?


    Awaken.


    In a cave, bones assembled. Something crept out, ignoring the remainder of the Shield Spiders, betrayers of the ancient alliance of oaths, now replenishing their numbers in treachery. It left the Defenders of the Caves broken sanctuary.


    Two Shield Spiders objected to the creation of death. They tried to kill the bone-beaver. The glowing, green eyes in the sockets shed.


    Azkerash had no time to waste on pests. His creation rapidly raced past the fragments of chitin and twisted legs. It zipped across the Floodins, invisible, camouged.


    To see.


    It was just in time to witness the Drakes arriving via door from Pass. The Wall Lords representative; it kept well clear of three Drakes armed in <em>full gemstone te</em>the Rubirel Guard? It watched as the potion was delivered. The people clustered around.


    They were going to try to use it. Azkerash observed, listening to thementary abouta [Doctor]? A multi-phase processyes. He wished he could steal whatever notes they were discussing. But the debate was about using the potion <em>now.</em> It was a Potion of Regeneration! If they warmed her around the frozen bolts


    Desperation and hope. The magical bottleAzkerash frowned. There were a <em>lot </em>of powerful auras in this inn. People had gathered. Master Pelt of Passno, Esthelm. Hedault the [Enchanter] of Invrisil, a strange young woman who had noappraisable level


    The beaver crept around the outside of the inn, watching, as a group of [Mages] talked with friends. They decided it must be done. Attempted, at least.


    They brought the frozen girl out into the inn. A little, white Gnoll was kept back, but clung to a Drakes w. She watched as they all did. Ice began to melt. Azkerash watched.


    They failed.


    He knew it before they began, in truth. But even so, they all watched the potion drip onto woundsfail to react, and stter onto the floor. Only a few drops; but what a <em>waste.</em>


    Grief a second time. Sorrow. The Necromancer knew it had been desperation that drove them to that. The young woman was refrozen. The Drake delivered the news.


    His magic could not heal frozen flesh; simrly, this potion was incapable of it. All that had been done was to waste


    Well, the bone beaver disintegrated then and there. Azkerash opened his eyes. He wondered, perhaps, if they had done more damage unfreezing and refreezingalthough the [Enchanter] leading them had used the ice magic fairly well.


    To no effect, the Wall Lord had spent all this effort and time. To no point.


    Except one. The [Message] spell went out. The Necromancer read it, as it was sent to multiple sources.


    <em></em>


    <em>We tried it. The potion failed.</em>


    Replies, from the Wall Lord, Lyteformality hiding true emotion, resolve to <em>find an antidote</em> and way of


    And one that mattered to him.


    <em>Ceria to Palt. We understand. Were assaulting the Vige of the Dead in two days time. Wish us luck.</em>


    <em>Wall Lord Ilvriss to the Horns of Hammerad. Will you wait for a week or two for additional adventurers from Szsar?</em>


    <em>Ceria to Wall Lord Ilvriss. No, thank you, Wall Lord.</em>


    Foolishness.


    Azkerash whispered. Youth and haste and mortality anddesperation. The kind of madness he had once known. To defy an army by himself. To do battle against any odds.


    But the Vige of the Dead? He closed his eyes.


    When he had firste to Izril, he had tried to im them.


    <em>He</em> had failed and declined to press further than the true interior. He wanted to tell the young man to stop his team.


    But would they? The Necromancer remembered the Crelers. He hesitated.


    Such moments made legends.


    After a long pause of racing thoughtshe turned to the frozen corpses. And got back to work.


    -


    The Wandering Inn was a mix of emotions that day. As it usually was.


    First there had been a kind ofpeace. Not happiness. Not exactly. But a bit of something.


    The [Shaman] did not mourn someone she had never known. So, she had danced around theptop in the secret rooms, excited.


    Watching a movie. She pped her wed hands, delighted,ughing, scarfing down snacks. Shed raided the inns pantry liberally.


    Mrsha ate a loaded baked potato skin, filled with an assortment of toppings. Was she <em>happy?</em> No. But she was a kind of satisfied, watching the Hobgoblins face.


    She and Ulvama had made peace. Even an alliance of sorts, to look after Numbtongue. Mostly because Ulvama was willing to treat Mrsha like a sort of equal.


    <em>You scratch my back, Ill smack you. </em>Simrlyyou help me, I help you. The Hobgoblin [Shaman] was interesting. She had little power like Palt did.


    The Centaur had enchanted somethingthe air, not exactly theptop itself since no one wanted to risk the deviceto <em>magnify</em> the screen to berger than the tinyptop screen itself. Thus, Mrsha didnt have to crowd around it. He could also do the same for the speakers.


    Simple magnification spells, hed called them. Ulvama couldnt do that. She was a [Shaman], and her magic was less<em>technical</em> than a [Mage]s.


    Too much think magic. Stupid. Youyou have magic like mine. Magic thates from here, not here.


    She poked Mrshas heart rather than her head. <em>Her</em> magic was different. For instance, Ulvama had not been able to do much with the device of metal and electricity and stic beyond use it, much to her disappointment.


    But she could reignite Erins fire. And, crucially?


    Five faerie flowers were blooming in a bowl of water. Theyy dead in vast patches in the [Garden of Sanctuary]. Mrsha had wept about her hard work when shed had the thought to look for them.


    But Ulvama had brought them back. She put some in water, mashed up some Sages Grass and mixed it in, and cast some spells, muttering, when she saw how sad Mrsha was.


    A fraction had bloomed yellow the next day. The smug [Shaman] had shown Mrsha.


    [Renew nts]. You give more good things, I teach.


    Thus, movies. Mrsha thought Ulvama would be nicer for a while. She thought the Hobgoblin was <em>stingy</em> though; shed only brought back five flowers! What she didnt know was that Ulvama had nearly burnt her <em>entire</em> mana supply on five and was seriously debating burning the flowers the Gnoll prized so much.


    <em>She </em>knew a dangerous nt when she saw it. Although it was debatable what kind of danger it wasperhaps, like Sages Grass, it was more of a danger to itself and those who grew it. Either way, she was watching Humans on the silver screen and really enjoying it. The little Gnoll-child seemed happy too.


    And then hade the Drakes. People flooded into the inn. Hedault, Pelt, SelysMrsha saw them all, and hoped. They brought Erin into the inn, fearing the [Garden of Sanctuary] might interfere in some wayand Ilvriss representative refused to give the Potion of Regeneration to anyone, even for a second.


    They failed.


    Mrsha hid in the basement, crawling under a sack of potatoes to be nothing-Mrsha. The others, above, left, rebroken by the moment. Some stayed; Ulvama let the Selys-Drake try tofort Mrsha. Since she did a bad job, the Hobgoblin grabbed Mrsha, dragged her out, and gave her to the Fortress Beavers. The beaver gang cuddled her, at least.


    And thenwell, Ulvama went back to watching movies for the rest of the day. <em>She</em> had her priorities straight. Let everyone else worry about how to fix the frozen Human. It looked annoying andplicated to her.


    -


    The failed Potion of Regeneration had nosting effect whatsoever. No, none at all.


    It wasnt as if the image of the frozen young woman was traumatizing, or hope, reignited and then snuffed out, affected someone.


    <em>The Horns were marching on the Vige of the Dead.</em> They had told everyone who was able to make it to hurry.


    Some would not make it. Wall Lord Ilvriss, exasperated, argued with Ceria. But she did not budge on the timeline.


    Even so, it caused arguments. Not least because the Silver Swords were ready to turn around.


    We are two days from the port! wes, we will not make it. Believe methere is something going on at Wistram.


    Is it worth more than our friends lives? My <em>sister</em> is taking part in that raid. And that threat is Named-rank, Falene!


    wes Byres and Falene Skystrall were arguing fiercely; they had stopped in the road. It was an unusual sight. Normally they were quite able to resolve all differences.


    But Falene was dragging them to Wistram. And wes wanted to go to the Vige of the Dead.


    The call had been put out, but they were <em>far</em> from the Vige of the Dead, having gone west to a port-city, rather than northeast, past Invrisil to thendmark of death.


    We need to be there.


    We will not make it. If Ceria has any sense, she wont try that ceor if she does, she is capable of retreating, as is your sister, wes. And unless you have a Scroll of Greater Teleport


    Dawil Ironbreaker tugged at his beard. The [Knight] and [Battlemage] were ring at each other. wes and Falene turned to him, almost at the same time.


    Dawil, help me convince Falene we <em>must</em> go back!


    Dawil, tell wes he is being unreasonable.


    The Dwarf sighed. He scratched at his chin and spoke.


    We wont make it to the Vige of the Dead before the Horns go in,d. If Cerias willing to wait, well turn back, sure enough. Ask her, Falene. You too,d. Otherwise, were Wistram-bound.


    The [Knight] and half-Elf looked at each other. Neither was pleased, but both nodded.


    Let mepose the [Message] to Ceria, Falene.


    Ohvery well.


    Exasperated, the half-Elf acquiesced. Dawil got off his pony to stretch his legs. They were probably camped for the day.


    He sat by himself. Erin Solstice remained dead, then. He wondered if it was all futile.


    Dawil tugged hard at his beard. It wasnt for him to decide. They were bound in Falenes ns. They could go questing for a curebut Wistram was good as anywhere else for that, actually.


    And she had a hunch Wistram rted to Erin andDawil had agreed, which was why he was expecting to continue on his journey after wes failed to convince his sister.


    She, he, and the Horns in general were as stubborn as wes could be. Which meant no one was shifting the other. The Dwarf sat back. Unconsciously, he pulled out a little axe.


    He was an [Axe Champion], after all. Despite favoring the hammer he used. But the little throwing axe glinted in the light. He never touched the edge, and the sheath itself was designed not to rub against the de.


    A beautiful tool. He wondered how much it was <em>worth</em> to an Archmage. He had never considered selling it. Not once. He knew some of his people would actually hunt him down and murder him if he did.


    He had met one such in Liscor. Briefly.


    -


    <em>Then.</em>


    Master Pelt? I was hoping we couldmission some armor or weapons for


    The Dwarf mmed the door in wes face.


    Im not epting orders! Begone!


    The [Knight] turned to his team. They had stopped here, after returning to see Erin. The moment had shaken the Silver Swords.


    Pelt, likewise, was in no mood for anything. wes would have left it there and gone to Falene, but Dawil nudged him.


    Why dont you let me take over,d? Maybe I can talk to Master Pelt, between Dwarves. You find Pointy Ears.


    The [Knight] eyed Dawil, but nodded. He had reason to doubt Dawil would get to Pelt with the bonds of species; Dasha of Vuliel Drae, among other Dwarves or part-Dwarves, had tried to coax Master Pelt into giving them a discount or taking their orders.


    He treated Dwarves with more disdain than other species and threw them out. But Dawil was confident, so wes left him to find Falene.


    Master Pelt?


    If you dont leave, I will break your feet.


    The voice inside was thick with emotion. Dawil couldnt credit it; hed heard Pelt had gone to Pass, but from what hed understood, the Dwarf was a drunk, a shadow of himself.


    Someone had brought him back. Given him his pride. And she was dead.


    No wonder


    Dawil knew Pelt. Hah! Any Dwarf raised in Derthal-Vel, the home of Dwarves, knew Pelts infamous story. DisgracedDawil spoke up.


    Im Dawil Ironbreaker, from home, Master Pelt. I hope we can talk


    I said <em>begone! </em>You


    Pelts roar ended abruptly. Dawil heard a scuffling sound.


    Dawil Ironbreaker?


    The name registered. Dawil had been poised on the balls of his feetto run like spit if Pelt came after him with a hammer. The Dwarf had been an <em>amazing</em> [Smith] and they had swings that could kill even Gold-rank adventurers.


    But Pelt knew his name, too. The door abruptly opened. Pelt wasnt red-eyed; but he <em>was</em> drunk. He looked at Dawil. His eyes passed over the Dwarfs face, and right to his side.


    It is you. Get in if you want to speak.


    He jerked the door open. Dawil eyed Pelt.


    To say he had mixed feelings about the [Smith] was an understatement. Dawil had heard the story; it had happened oh, what, over two decades ago? Hed been a boy, so it had shaken him; he wasnt as old as Falene.


    But Dwarves still aged slower. Pelt, to Dawil, was <em>older</em> by far. Still strong, but he would have been venerated, and Dawil respectful.


    If his failure wasnt known. Dawil nodded and stepped into the Dwarfs home.


    Show me.


    That was all Pelt demanded. He didnt offer Dawil anything; the [Axe Champion] hesitated. And then slowly unhooked the axe he treasured and carried everywhere and ced it on the table.


    Ah.


    Pelt gently removed it from the sheath. His breath caught in his throat as he beheld the beautiful metal de, a single, bnced piece of metal.


    He bnced it on one finger; Dawil had known how perfect it was to throw. If you put too much oil on one spot, or got enough blood on the tip, it actually changed the bnce ever-so-slightly. He had once ascertained the perfect spot of bnce and put it on a little wedge in his room overnight.


    When he woke up, it had stayed there; only a <em>thump</em> from wes dropping his armor had unbnced it.


    The de of the axe was ornate. Oh, the edge was straight, but it had some ornamentation; Derthal-Vel insignia, old runes of hearth and home on the head where it met the metal handle. The metal wasodd. A jasper color, amid the tint of coral blue and brass, rather than gold.


    But it was not brass, or any other metal Dawil could name. And he was a Dwarf who could at least identify Mithril from fake silver-alloys with alchemical treatments.


    <em>Ah.</em>


    Pelt sounded like a Dwarf drinking after decades of thirst. He held the de, running his fingers along it, inspecting it for


    wless as the day it was forged.


    Dawil volunteered when the silence grew long and he was fidgeting from minutes of silence.


    Of course it is!


    Pelt snapped at him. He stopped lovingly admiring it and fixed the throwing axe with a more critical eye.


    A w? A crack, or dulled edge? Watch your tongue, <em>boy.</em> Do you even know what an honor it is to have won the right to carry this? Its not even the best workwhich one made this?


    I dont know, Master Pelt. About mypanions request. Would you find the time to take an armor or de order? We neednt have it now, but upon our return. It can even be sent


    The younger Dwarf held his temper. Pelt nced at him.


    For a [Knight]? <em>Pah. </em>I dont feel like making armor good enough to do the fighting for fools who dont deserve it.


    He actually spat. Dawil glowered.


    That man is wes Byres, my friend and team captain. Do you think Id travel with an amateur, Master Pelt? I won this axe. Does the craftsmanship not inspire you? Isnt it worth <em>your</em> smithing?


    Pelt brought his fist down, upsetting the five bottles on his tables.


    <em>Craftsmanship?</em> You want to talk craft? <em>You?</em> You won this in a tournamentyou dont know how it was made! Hah! This isnt even fine worknot by their standards. Not by far. I could <em>crack</em> this myself! They put adamantium into itbut its not made <em>that</em> strong. I could


    He raised the axe and Dawil tensed. But then Pelt slowly lowered it and ced it almost reverentially on the table. He looked at it. And Dawil saw tears in his eyes.


    Get out.


    Dawil took the axe, carefully putting it in the sheath.


    Master Pelt


    Leave your order and get out. Dont you dare lose that axe, Dawil Ironbreaker.


    I wont.


    -


    Dawil hadnt told wes how hed secured the order. Now, he looked at the axe.


    Oh yes. Pelt would murder him. ButDawil flipped it up and caught it. A risky maneuver; you could lose all the fingers on your hand. He broke off reminiscing and saw wes throwing up his hands and cursing. Another rare sight.


    Wistram, then.


    If it came to it, would Pelt be happier Erin livedor the axe was gone? Dawil sighed. The Horns were on the move. And so were the Silver Swords.


    -


    The other Dwarf thought of the axe then.


    Probably because he had replicated the conditions under how Dawil had met him. Drunk, Pelt wasughing.


    Potions of Regeneration. Ignorant bastards. Getting hopes up


    He threw a bottle at a wall and cracked the wall. The ss <em>sprayed</em> across the room, but much of it powdered on impact.


    Pelt was a [Smith]. He knew there was a <em>process!</em> Thisthis was like beating on unheated metal. Theyd crack Erins body, thawing and freezing her.


    Or would they? He was no [Healer]. Pelt sat.


    Just like this, when hedid eyes on another masterpiece. He recalled that bratDawnd the way hed looked at Pelt. Contempt and awe.


    Well, Pelt deserved both! He would never deny it! Pelt looked for more alcohol and wobbled around his home.


    Esthelm. Esthelm had built this ce and it was far from being as nice as Pass apartment. But hed trashed the one in Pass, so Esthelm still won.


    Petty mining city. No skill here. No craft, but for me. Goblins sacked it. Not as damned bad as the ces some of us went into exile, but


    Far from where Taxus had gone. Pelt snorted to himself. He hadnt believed in penance. They would never recover their honor, or so hed thought.


    But he had his pride. Somehow. The Dwarf stumbled out of Esthelm to find more drink.


    He came upon the statue of the [Florist] amid people nodding to him. The drunk Dwarf stared up at it.


    Flowers. They put flowers here. Grew them, rather, in a little garden around the [Florist]s feet. Someone had worked hard on this, recing Skills with effort.


    The hero of Esthelm, who had apparently saved the city. Along with Goblins. Even the sculptor hadnt added Goblins in. But the names were here. Somehow, found.


    Thatthose ones had been here. Pelt saw the connection.


    Numbtongue.


    His fingers touched carven stone. There was the name. And he recalled the de hed made.


    Fat lot of good it did. Should have made <em>armor.</em> Beautiful stuff. Scale mailno, something lighter. Mithril woven fibers. An apron of the stuff. Hah! Hahahashe would have worn <em>that.</em> Now thatthat would have been a masterpiece.


    His Drake apprentice, Emessa, found the old Dwarf giggling to himself, lying amid the flowers.


    Master PeltMaster Pelt, people are staring. This is a statue


    Im just resting. Why are you here? The forge is empty!


    The Dwarf swiped at her. The apprentice carefully dodged; he was fearsomely strong and wouldnt hurt her on purpose, but he forgot his strength. He could probably uproot the statue by himself.


    Master Pelt, lets get you home. Ill get you whatever you want. But please, have some water? Something to eat? Have you eaten?


    Mithril apron. No, something more subtle. Dye it. Infuse a flexible alloy so it looks like a damned apron. Miniature runes on the inside. Thats what youd need. And it wouldnt stop an arrow to the face. That would be craft, though. Beyond me. Im not a damn [Seamstress]. But it would be something, eh?


    She didnt know what he was babbling about.


    Yes, Master Pelt. Master Pelt


    He sat in the kitchen as she ran to get food from an inn. Pelt sat there.


    Wasnt even a great de for the Hobgoblin. Goodsolid Dragonblood crystal. Cuts beautifully, but it wontst a decade. Weapon for a Goblin, really. Itll keep cutting as it breaks off. But I could do better.


    Yes, Master Pelt.


    He was still babbling when she came back. <em>Extremely</em> drunkshe offered him some soup. He gulped it down and exhaled.


    I used to make great des.


    You <em>are</em>, Master Pelt. Tomorrow we have to get to work.


    Yes. Tomorrow. But I used to make even <em>better</em> des. Im teaching you the secrets of Mithril. Dwarfsteel, you fools call it. What did that boy, Kevin, call it? Titanium? He knew some metalsbut there is craft beyond that.


    The Drake stopped. She looked at him. He grinned at her hungry expression.


    Yes. There is. Is the adamantium here?


    Slowly, Emessa put down the food.


    The Drakes from Szsar actually brought some, Master Pelt. But youre drunk


    The Dwarf wasnt listening. His eyes were far away.


    There was a time I never touched drink. When I aspired to best what that brat, Dawil, held. But it wasnt just <em>me.</em> Passis Maughin still working?


    Hes done good work, Master Pelt. But he misses you.


    Emessa had visited her home quite often thanks to the door. Pelt shook his head.


    Hes young. Good, but alone. Nopetition. The best in Pass without me. They must be looking for another smith.


    They are, Master Pelt. Will you have some fries? You do like them


    She offered the snack food. Pelt munched, talking as she plied him with water.


    Maughin now. He has potential. But Id never make him my apprentice. Even though he asked. Four times.


    Emessas ws nearly slipped as she handled a knife, cutting up some fresh vegetables. Dangerous in Pelts home; everything he owned hed made and they were all <em>sharp.</em>


    He did?


    Yes. But why would I teach someone like him? <em>He</em> has ambition. Pushes himself. Not like you.


    Emessas head sank.


    But youre the expert, Master. Itsterrifying, not knowing how to improve yourself. Smithing mithril, Dwarfsteeltheres so much weve lost.


    Yes. I did learn from my masters, didnt I? Reminds medamn idiots with that potion. Wasting my


    He was drifting off to sleep. Emessa wavered, with fresh vegetables, more food. Should she let him sleep? Drag him into a bed, or just put him on the floor and put a nket over him?


    She slowly put down the bowl of vegetables and began to nibble on them, wondering if this would set back their work tomorrow. If it caused him to spiral back to his old selfcould she handle that, seeing him at his best, now?


    She munched on a carrot. Crunch, <em>crunch</em>


    <em>Pelts eyes opened. </em>The Dwarf snapped upright.


    <em>Craftsmanship!</em>


    He screamed in Emessas face. The Drake apprentice fell out of her chair. Pelt was out the door before she could blink.


    -


    Master Pelt! Master Pelt, please! Go back and rest!


    Emessa and the Dwarf smith attracted his apprentices, the new [Smiths] learning from the Dwarf. They had understood that the potionthe [Innkeeper]had meant a surprise vacation, which wasnt that unpleasant.


    Pelt worked them <em>hard.</em> He made them do 95% of all work, which meant they did level and learn the craft by his excruciating standardsbut it wasnt fun. He intended to wear them down for a year, maybe two. He got their hard work, and when it was done, they would be far better [Smiths] than when they started.


    A fair exchange. An ideal apprenticeship, in some ways. The Dwarf knew how to run a team, which was the thing. Not all [Smiths] were team yers, but to everyones surprise, Pelt was good at itor rather, he had been part of one and knew theponents.


    Wheres the adamantium?


    Here, Master. But you told me once that our anvils couldnt even handle the force to shape them


    Of course they cant. Neither heat norgood stuff.


    He was sniffing it. The Dwarf stared at the powdery rock; strata mixed in with stone. No solid lumps; you could mistake adamantium for <em>weak</em> rock. Unless you noticed that some of the dust youd get from breaking it up was the hardest stuff in


    Ah. Teaching. This reminds me of how it was. Apprenticeisnt there a good, open space somewhere outside of Esthelm? Find me one. A thousand feet of cleared space. Nothing woody or even nts around. Stone. I dont care if its high-up.


    Outside the city?


    <em>Go!</em> Youwheres our worst anvil with a t surface?


    Pelt pointed at a [Smith]. The man jumped.


    Erthe worn ones?


    Yes. Grab it ande with me. <em>Apprentice, wheres my spot?</em>


    Pelt was not a fun master. Perhaps because he had learned that if you kept shouting, you got results. Niceness was not only optional, but detrimental to <em>getting things done as fast as possible.</em>


    Master, theres a good spot down the road. Butwhat are wedoing?


    The Dwarf was lifting one half of the anvil while a team of [Smiths] dragged the other half of the insanely heavy object. He grunted, still drunk. Still


    Teaching. Come. <em>Come!</em>


    Hed brought some of his canisters of materials. From her understanding, Emessa recognized the <em>mithril</em> canister, some actual billets they were supposed to be using for swords tomorrowand to her great surprise, an amulet.


    Shed always wondered why Pelt had enchanted items like the amulet in his possession. She knew it was magical, but the Dwarf never used it. He tossed it all on the road, then looked around.


    A damned road, apprentice? Well, fine. Youyou lot, stand there. A thousand paces that way. Youthat way. No one goes past. This wont take more than an hour. If they have to, they can climb all the way


    He indicated a vast circle around him. The [Smiths] exchanged looks. Some of Esthelms residents wereing out, watching.


    <em>What was he doing?</em> The Dwarf had half of the adamantium sample with him. Was he actually going to? Emessa looked at him.


    Master? What is this for?


    Teaching. Apprenticeyou can watch, I suppose. Hands help. But when I tell you togo with the others.


    The [Smith] didnt mean teaching <em>her,</em> Emessa realized. He was setting up. Anvil. His personal hammertongs


    Few toolspared to what he normally used. No forge, nothing. Just the worst anvil, with a stress-fracture already in it, in the middle of the road. Some people were standing closer.


    Pelt <em>threw</em> his hammer and missed an onlooker by a foot. He called it back to him as the woman fled.


    <em>Anyonees closer than a thousand feet and I will break their toes! And it will be a kindness!</em>


    He bellowed. The audience moved back; even Emessa hadnt been sure that had been an intentional miss. The [Smith] beganying out the materials.


    Master? What <em>are</em> you making? A de?


    The Dwarf looked up. He stared at Emessa until she turned red.


    Apprentice, do I look like I have a crucible of metal? Do I look like I have any <em>material? </em>What is this?


    He pointed. She squirmed.


    Adamantium, master. I just meant


    <em>Adamantium ore! Adamantium </em>dust! What, are you expecting me to <em>squeeze</em> it into a metal? Put some water in it and make a brick out of it? What do we do, apprentice?


    Smelt, then forge.


    <em>And what is the basis of any tool?</em>


    He screamed at her.


    <em>The quality of the metal, Master Pelt! I apologize!</em>


    She screamed back, exasperated despite knowing him. He calmed down.


    Good. Then what we are making is a teaching tool. Pass me the mithril. Werecing this with the followingwatch. Because I cannot do this twice if I fail.


    He brought out the billets. Pure mithril, without impurity. And thenEmessa saw the otherponentse out of the canisters.


    <em>Grasgil.</em> The cold metal. Andher eyes spotted one of the conductive metals of magic. <em>Vetil, </em>an ore used in artifacts.


    Master. Do you need a fire?


    Fire. Were constructing the big forge. But even theneven with Hedaultit wouldnt be enough, you know. Because were using me spells. Burning damned <em>charcoal.</em> You know adamantium is one of the greatest metals of [Smiths]?


    Yes, Master. An achievement that makes you world-renowned.


    The young Drakes eyes were hungrily set on the stuff. Pelt snorted.


    And you can forge it. But its easier to forge it with tools. Thats why artifacts for the stuff are fought over by [Smiths]. But thats not craft. The craft is knowing every moment of it. Adamantium. You know, when they teach us this, the best of usthey make us forge a little bit. A ring. A cup, a fork or dagger. Something trivial. And then you know what they do?


    No, master.


    He was spreading it all out. Pelt was ready. He left the adamantium in a pile next to the anvil; it was theponents, the mithril, Grasgil and such that he was staring at.


    They toss it into a volcano. Or burning rock. <em>Magma.</em> You know the stuff? They toss it inand then retrieve it. If its whole, you did your job right. Any weakness and the adamantium wasnt forged right. You think you can get hotter than <em>that</em> in a forge?


    Thenhow? You dont even have a forge fire, Master Pelt.


    He looked at her. His eyes shimmeredno, was the air around him? Emessa felt the heat first. It radiated outwards, as the mithril began to glow in his grip.


    I am the great [Smith] of Derthal-vel, my apprentice Emessa. Did you think you had seen my Skills? Now, watch. Those Human women are not the only ones who know <em>me.</em> And mine burns hotter still.


    The metal was <em>hot. </em>His hands alone might have melted it, but Emessa realized he was holding something. He put it at the end of his anvil. The iron began to catch <em>fire</em> and deform from the heatthen stopped. Pelt put the first glowing mithril bars on the anvil and hammered them down.


    An alloy of mithril. Grasgil! Vetilstand <em>back.</em> Toss me what I demand.


    She did. It was already growing hot. But she had felt the heat to cook mithril on her scales. She had [Resistance to Fire], as many [Smiths] did.


    First mithril! Into every inch of it, the Grasgil must be infused! Until it practically <em>melts</em>


    He was taking the mithril to that temperature. <em>Undoing</em> the metal to turn it into an alloy. Mithril was no steel; it was a pure metal. Then, letting it rapidly cool away from the fire. Turning it into a billet. Then


    It was going to be a single thing. Made in two pieces, she realized. But this was no sword. Mithril, Grasgil, and Vetil went together. The clear metal of Vetil along one side; the bottom?


    No, top. The two sides came up. The fire roared, and Emessa felt it begin to sting her, despite her Skill.


    <em>Now toss me the amulet!</em>


    Pelt was roaring as his hammer sang. Like all his work, he moved so fast that even mithril flowed around the way he wanted it. Emessa did.


    What is it, master? Do you need it?


    <em>Me?</em>


    He looked at her. The Dwarf beganughing.


    I already have what it does. Dont you know, apprentice? Thisis an artifact I bought from Gold-ranks too stupid to realize what it was. What it could be. This is an <em>Amulet of Greater Fire Resistance.</em>


    He held up the glowing locket, forged like a burning me itself, bright red. He tore the chain off the amulet. And thenpressed it <em>into</em> the Vetil heart of the glowing


    Emessa saw what it was as the smith took his hand away.


    Two parts. Both like bowlsbut identical, save for one with the amulet buried in what would be the top. And both sides had grooves carved into the mithril alloy. Put them together and <em>twist</em> and they would lock.


    A canister. A container. Pelt did so now, as the metal cooled. He had createda mithril box.


    <em>Or, the Drake realized, the most meproof container she had ever seen.</em> The glowing amulet fixed in the mithril containerthe Grasgil forged into mithril


    Apprentice. You must know what this is. Tell me now, or throw away your hammer.


    Pelt looked at her. Emessa gulped. But she spoke, almost without thinking.


    Itsa crucible, master?


    He smiled. And it was a rare smile from master to student.


    A [Smith] without my Skills will make his own forge. Make his own anvil. Even his tools. Lookdid you know I made this hammer myself?


    He held it out to her. She studied the dull metal, covered by soot. And she saw Pelt shake his head.


    When they cast me out, I broke every hammer I had owned myself. We all did. They took my anvil and cast it in lead, then buried it so deep it would never be found. But I never <em>forgot.</em> Every tool I used to first make new metal, I made <em>myself.</em> But I was given one thing when I learned to make adamantium. This. From one [Smith] to anotherthe great challenge. A first step. Because we work on the foundations of those before us. Nowapprentice. Put the canisters into your bag of holding. All the tools. I only need the hammer, the tongs, and this.


    He hefted the mithril crucible. Emessa scrambled to put away his materials. There was just the anvil, the roadpeople were watching from a distance. An impatient caravan had pulled up, but even they were watching.


    Pelt was piling the adamantium ore into the crucible. She knew what was happening now. And if the fire he had called was hot beforeit had gone now. Emessa was trembling.


    The Dwarf had all the crucible could fit. He looked up at her. And smiled again. With the joy of creation in his eyes, Pelt spoke.


    Emessa. You may watch for the first ten seconds. Listen. Learn. Some day you may pick up this hammer. Ten seconds. Then<em>run.</em> Understand?


    She nodded. The [Smith] picked up his hammer. A strange tool for smelting. But then


    The air caught fire.


    The st of me was like a [me Geyser] spell. Emessa threw her arms up with a cry. The air ignited.


    The dirt of the road cracked. Sand turned to ss; dirt scorched itself away.


    The wave of fire cooked Emessas scales in an instant. Her resistance to fireshe felt her clothes catch fire.


    Apprentice! Run! Look upon me once and <em>run!</em>


    Pelt wasughing. Something was burning around the smith. me. Not the me of memory. But pure heat. Emessa looked at him, at the culmination of her desire and craft. Then she ran.


    Behind her, the crucible was heating up. The lesser rock mixed with the adamantium was turning molten. Pelts hammer <em>struck</em> the glowing mass of liquid stone. He <em>hammered</em> down the liquid and forced the heaviest metal to the bottom.


    Molten stone sshed his beard and sprayed into the air. Worthless to Pelt; he waited as it heated up. He just wanted the most precious metal of all. It wasnt even <em>glowing</em> yet. He added more ore, repeated the process. Separating that which felt the heat from that which did not.


    The road was catching fire around him; weeds and the few nts incinerating. And the heat was spreading in moments. Emessa ran arms and legs pumping as those at the thousand-yard circle ran back <em>further</em>, all those except the [Smiths] or with Skills like her.


    She heard him roar atst. His great Skills. The exiled [Smith].


    Noshe had heard his true ss once before. She looked over her shoulder as he sang.


    [Hammer of a Hundred Metals].


    The Dwarf roared. And his voice was triumphant. He hammered and sang. His Skills were more than words. They were


    [I Forged in the Greatest Fire I Have Known]!


    It was melting the ground around him. He was sinking amid molten stone, a pir of smoke and steam. Yet the anvil remained. His hammer, the tongs by which he was holding the crucible as he forced more adamantium <em>down</em>all held.


    <em>[My Tools Were Unbroken].</em>


    Liquid rock struck Pelt. And he wiped it away. Thest of the adamantium shed the lesser rock; powder and fragments. Nowit began to heat up.


    And the Dwarf himself began to burn. His clothes, like Emessas, were catching fire. Emessa turned back, staring as the heat baked her a thousand feet away. She heard thest Skill, with the other two. Advanced, a culmination of ability. A song, a boast.


    [I Forged in the Greatest Fire I Have Known]<em>/</em>[My Tools Were Unbroken]/<em>[I Fear No me].</em>


    The Skill that Dragons had once feared, but a [Smith]s Skill. Now, the Dwarf sang. The adamantium was<em>melting.</em> He was breaking the impurity away with hammer blows that shook the world. The onlookers could <em>feel</em> the vibrations.


    ThenPelt took the crucible and <em>closed</em> it. He held it, in the burning pit, as the anvil melted away. He held his hammer as the tongs evaporated. He let the burning fire engulf it, and him,pleting the smelting. Then he just sang. And Emessa heard the only song the Dwarf had ever sung, from his craft, from his home.


    When he had been legend.


    <em>Look, now, and recall my tale! </em>


    <em>I forged in the greatest fire I have known.</em>


    <em>Yet my tools were unbroken! </em>


    <em>I feared no me! Remember that, metal! </em>


    <em>Know who made you, who wrought you</em>


    <em>For there is no substance I cannot tame!</em>


    <em>As I turn you into purity, by my hammer, by my craft,</em>


    Remember my name!<em></em>


    He was lost amid the smoke. Emessa and the others retreated as it grew too toxic to breathe. The people of Esthelm stared from their walls.


    It was a long time before the Dwarf reappeared. When he didEmessa saw the road was gone.


    A huge pit had formed where the dirt road had been. A depression formed as if a meteor or object had struck it.


    All was ash and fire around the area Pelt had forged.


    Yet two things remained.


    The first was the Dwarf. He was naked. Not that you could see anything out of the ash and grit caking his body. He climbed out, coughing, the stuff king off him.


    The second was the crucible he had made. It was glowing hot, even now. But it was done. And insidewas a billet of dark red and brown. A glorious color though, a color unto itself. The great metal


    <em>Adamantium.</em> Pelt looked at it. He smiled at her, wearily.


    This was the story of Pelt in his mastery. It did not end there, though.


    For the very hour as word spread, as Wistrammented not having <em>been there</em>for Pelt had not told them! As if he cared nothing for their fame!and the [Smiths] of Pass stopped working, wondering at the tale, someone appeared on the 9<sup>th</sup> floor.


    Emessa. She walked past the forges. Past [Smiths]. Her arms burned from the short journey. Her scales were singed. The [Smiths] stopped talking to stare after her.


    Thenfollowed. Because they saw what she held.


    Maughin the [Armorer] stood at his forge, staring down at the armor he was working on for a Duhan. All he had made in inspiration, even loveand his worry over seeing off Jquahad been erased temporarily from his mind by the tale of craft.


    What is this I am working on? What paltry


    He was about to toss the armor aside, for all it had his own, patented alloy with yes, some mithril in it. The Duhan turned in disgust.


    And there was Emessa.


    He stopped. The huge [Armorer] looked down.


    Maughin. I have something for you.


    The Drake apprentices voice trembled. Slowly, she stepped forwards. Maughins fellow [Smiths], his teamlooked and recoiled in shock.


    For she held the crucible. Andwith ita single, perfectly solid, incredibly <em>dense</em> metal. She ced both on an unused anvil and bowed.


    What? What is th


    Maughin didnt believe it at first, for all the story was fresh in his ears. He looked down at the adamantium. The crucible.


    Master Pelt sends it.


    There was no note. No instructions. No tools beyond the crucible and metal. That was the point.


    Teaching. A cksmiths Puzzle to end all puzzles. And the reward was


    Maughin dropped his hammer. And he had not done so since he was a boy learning his craft. The great Dwarf [Smith] had passed down a challenge.


    To a worthy smith. He saw Emessa turning away. He called out after her. But then she was running,ughing, giddy.


    It was the day a potion had failed to do a thing for Erin Solstice. And had no consequences. Whatsoever.


    -


    Pelt, the Hammer of Derthal-Vel. His name echoed for a moment. Adamantium smith. Master craftsman.


    A passed era of greatness. But one that might see a second dawning, if not so brilliant. A [Smith] did not lose their talents with time.


    Less so for those in professions that took harsher tolls.


    The Couriers of Izril had diminished over the events of the spring and summer. <em>Four </em>had died, a harsh number. In other times, it might be taken as a sign that the Runners Guild was lowering its standards.


    Some people did say that. For, Miha Godfrey had been bested by the Assassins Guild and Lacel the Leaper had perished, as well as the Firedrake. The Courier of the Antinium Wars had lost her <em>edge.</em> She was a Guildmistress, no longer the Courier to inspire.


    So some people said. For proof, why not look at her son, Valceif Godfrey, who had perished at the hands ofmon [Bandits]?


    Of course, they did not say this around other Couriers or anywhere near First Landing. But that was three.


    And thest, Tritel, the Moonlight Riderwell, he had made the Couriers mistake of thinking he was an adventurer, hadnt he? Three Couriers versus three [Assassins] of high, possibly roughly-equal levels. What did you think would happen?


    Four dead, when it was rare for two Couriers to be certified in a year. Was this a referendum on the Runners Guild? A sign of Izrilscency?


    Or was it just talk from people who had no idea what they were saying? Courierstry running the ces they went and thenin.


    The truth was simply that running deliveries was not a job for the old. That change happened all too quickly. Couriers rose and fell. Andchanged.


    They said two new Couriers had emerged from the deaths of the old. One was familiarbut different.


    Smani, the Mage Runner, had inherited Tritelsst will and legacy. His partner, Ci, rather. They called him the Mage Riderand whether it was a partnership that wouldst was unknown.


    Andthere was one new Courier whose name people still remembered. The Wind Runner of Reizmelt.


    Ryoka Griffin.


    -


    A [Bandit] group waiting in ambush was looking for a juicy target. They were watching caravans, passing up the heavily-guarded [Merchant] with thirty [Mercenaries]. A lone [Trader], a City Runner who might be carrying something goodthey had a [Stalker] with an arrow trained on the road.


    Anything? What about that one?


    Im lining up a shot. Shut up.


    He was sighting down the arrow at a carriage. The [Bandit Leader] was a former [Warrior], a hard fighter who ruled the group by force.


    What do you see?


    The man grumbled.


    [Marks Eye] says theyre as poor as shit. We could still take the horses


    We go after someone and the roads dead all day. Wait. Theres a Runner. That one?


    They saw a young woman running down the road at a good clip. The [Stalker] brightened.


    <em>Theres</em> something nice on her. Might be jewelry. Not the best mark, but


    Its better than anything weve got. Get readywe get her <em>and</em> the horses.


    The [Bandit Leader] called to the others in the underbrush. The group of twelve readied themselves. The [Stalker] grumbled as he changed the position of his bow, tracking the possible City Runner.


    Well? Hurry up!


    One of the [Raiders] whispered loudly, already on horseback with a spear. He scratched at his hair; he had lice to the [Stalker]s keen eyes. Disgusted, the man snapped back.


    Give me a moment! Its not easy hitting a moving target! I just need


    He drew back, calcting range, the environment. He felt a moment of regret, but he aimed for her chest, not legs. No taking chances. He held his breath for a moment


    And the wind changed. The [Stalker] cursed and shifted his aim. Just a bithe felt the wind growing stronger. Stronger


    Dead gods damn it, is this a gale or what?


    He snapped. The [Stalker] rxed slightly. And he heard a muffled curse.


    What?


    Its<em>above</em>


    The man with the bow looked up as the [Bandits] stared up. He saw a strange thing in the sky. A triangle? His first reaction was to fear a wild Griffin. But nonot a bird or monster. It wasa person. She flew overhead.


    Thats


    And she was looking at <em>him.</em> The [Stalker] and the woman holding onto the glider locked eyes. He cursed, swinging his bow up


    The dust cloud sted over the [Bandits]. The Courierthe Wind Runner of Reizmelt tilted her glider and spun down.


    <em>Bandits in the brush! Run!</em>


    She shouted over the scream of the wind and curses of the ambush group. The City Runner did a double-take. She turned and sprinted back the way shede. So did the couple in the carriage and people on the road.


    <em>That bitch!</em>


    Sand and grit was whipping around the [Bandits], sting them in the eyes. The [Stalker] cursed, but he was aiming at the shape as she swooped up.


    Ill kill her. Ill


    A vice of iron pulled his arms down. The [Stalker]s shot went wide.


    Boss!


    Are you mad? Thats a <em>Courier!</em> We have minutes before someones on us. Get moving! Everyone in the saddle! Were running!


    The [Bandit Leader] bellowed. Cursing, the [Stalker] shouted an insult at the Wind Runner, already flying past them. He went running for his horse as the [Bandit Leader] shielded her face with her arm.


    To herself, she watched Ryoka Griffin soar off. The former [Warrior] grinned.


    Besides. I saw her on the scrying orb. And it was a damn good run.


    She watched as the Wind Runner flew on.


    Ryoka Griffin had weird fans.


    -


    The Wind Runner, the <em>Courier</em>, flew her first delivery as an actual Courier and it was the strangest feeling ever.


    For one thing, she <em>flew</em>. Ryoka was still amazed she could actually do that.


    But it had been a <em>smooth </em>flight. Shed taken off from Riverfarm, and found the right breeze in the sky, going the right way. Wellshed had the sense of where the wind was blowing from the start.


    She <em>could</em> have burned her own mana for her personal wind, and she did twice when the wind changed, going up or down to find the right breeze, but Ryoka found that her travel was nowholding onto the glider and watching the world go by.


    Was this less taxing, less athletic, than running? Was it cool as all heck? Yes to both ounts. Ryoka covered the distance from Riverfarm to her destination ina <em>fifth</em> of the time it would take on foot? And that was taking regr shots of stamina potion with the wind at her back already. Even with Boots of Speed or whatevernoparison.


    And that was with hernding twice to stretch out her arms; they got tired, as did her body in the gliding position for such a long time. She wondered if she could just strap herself into the glider and not have to hold it.


    Well, it was an uneventful first leg of the journey aside from the [Bandits]. Ryoka had wavered when she saw them, but who else sat in a thicket near the road? Shed dumped sand out of her bag of holding and warned the City Runner.


    Ryoka circled twice, but saw the [Bandits] break towards the hills rather than the road. So she flew on, andnded at one of the towns along her route.


    Not <em>in</em> the city, but just outside the gates. Ryoka shook out her arms, hopped up and down to pump some blood into her legs, and then stowed the glider in her bag of holding. She had to disassemble parts of it; it didnt fit in one go, but it was rtively painless. She jogged up to the gates.


    City Runner on delivery!


    The [Guards] stared at her. Ryoka Griffin waved her seal. After a second, one of the [Town Guards] leaned down.


    Isnt that <em>Courier? </em>Dead gods, Miss! You just <em>flew</em> here? Yourethe Wind Runner of Reizmelt!


    Ryoka blinked. Shed forgotten her new designation. And she saw the [Town Guards] all abandon their gates.


    That was amazing! Whats that thing you were flying?


    I saw you on the scrying orb! Couldcould I try flying with that thing?


    Hey, will you sign my helmet? An <em>auto-graph?</em> Heresomeone get some parchment!


    It was not the first such encounter shed have that day. Indeed, Ryoka took almost as long getting to the Runners Guild in the small town as she had flying there; everyone wanted to see the Wind Runner.


    The adults were caught between amazement, the thrill of seeing a Courier, and horrified fascination at the idea of <em>flying.</em> Some wanted to try it, others just wanted to ask how Ryoka did it.


    But Ryokas real, hardcore fans, the ones whod been there from the start, flocked around her without reservation, <em>begging</em> for just <em>one</em> flight.


    Children. Ryokas biggest fans were either children or types like adventurers, thrill-seekers, teens who had been like her. The Wind Runner, overwhelmed by it all, refused everyone a turn on the glider. The wind liked her, but even she couldnt guarantee it wouldnt try to <em>flip</em> her in the air for fun. She could survive that; a random person, no.


    However, she did provide some amusement. A spare parachute and children were taking turns being flown in a little basket. They screamed with delight and the adults looked on, some trying to hide their jealousy; they were too heavy, by andrge. And it was beneath their dignity or something.


    Ryoka smiled at that, as the [Mayor]s son went screaming past her, pursued by the anxious woman herself, who wasnt convinced he was <em>quite</em> safe. She stayed nearly two hours, then practically begged to deliver the sheaf of letters and several parcels from Riverfarm.


    I really must go. Im sorry, but Im trying to get to Reizmelt by eveningexcuse me, Ill take any correspondence that way.


    All of it, Miss? Weve got a lot you could take if your bag of holdings big enough


    Ryoka saw the [Receptionist] at the Runners Guild hesitate. Some of the City Runners and Street Runners whod queued up to shake her hand and say what an <em>amazing</em> run theyd seen looked dismayed.


    So, Ryoka caught herself and, mindful of the other Couriers shed met, amended her statement.


    Er, sorry. I mean, any <em>priority</em> mail or packages. Nothing local. Anything over two or three towns or which needs to get there fast.


    Ah, very good, Miss Griffin. Weve gotseven items.


    The Runners rxed.


    Thanks, Miss Wind Runner.


    One nodded gratefully at Ryoka and she nodded back.


    Runners etiquette, like Fals had taught her one time. It was all there. Lessons past and present. The Wind Runner collected her packages, assembled her glider as the crowd watched in the street, and, intensely embarrassed, flew up into the air to wild cheering.


    -


    The next city Ryoka came to she ran into the gatesand had run all the way there afternding while out of sight of the town.


    She did it to avoid causing another sceneand to try out her second mode of transport. She could glide or wingsuit fly to her destinationsbut the wingsuit was scary as hell, and less controble than the glider. Also, frankly, a bit more embarrassing since people would stare up at <em>Flying Squirrel Ryoka</em> as she sped past them.


    That was what she felt like. But Ryoka had an alternate use for the wingsuitwhich people kept thinking was windsuit, since they had no reference for it.


    She ran across the ground and <em>leapt</em> over a hill. Ryokas jump carried her forty feet; shended lightly and ran past a [Farmer]s son in the fields. He stared at her, hoe raised.


    Hi!


    H-hi?


    The young man of about fifteen waved back. He stared at Ryoka as she leapt again, a fifteen foot <em>jump</em> which shattered all world records on Earth. How was she <em>doing</em> that?


    <em>Windsuit!</em> Ryoka was barely even running; the wind was picking up the loose cloth in her wingsuit and blowing her forwards. It was like when the wind was so strong you could barely fight against itbut it was all behind her. She could <em>leap</em> like a frog, and she was running almost as fast as the wind was blowing.


    <em>This is so cool!</em>


    Ryoka actually enjoyed the sensation of effortlessly leaping around more than flying for a bit. Because thisthis was like having super powers.


    The city of Onononnohad a weird name. Ryoka had chosen it on her route just to see why it was named that.


    Well, there was a confusing statue in the square. Ryoka stared at the [Slime Rider] for a long time; the man riding a giant slime, which had been called Onononno, and the founder of the city.


    It just went to show there was something unique everywhere you went. [Slime Riders].


    She had thought her running into the city would attract less attention, but one look at her garb and her features and the same thing happened again. The [City Watch] turned out, people wanted to talk to her, children flew about


    And so did their pets. Onononno had few cats or dogs or any other regr pet. Rather, they owned slimes. Ryoka saw one gtinous blob and girl flying past her in the parachute-ride and decided this was a cool ce.


    The parachute ride was a good idea to let kids y with. Sammial and Hethon had been the ones to suggest making it, and they had both been crushed when Ryoka said she had to leave.


    Butit was inevitable, surely. It had been a strange goodbye.


    Laken had beenoff. Hed refused to talk about the future, only talking about what <em>he</em> would do. Hed refused to hear Ryoka outwhy? Either his ego as an [Emperor] was finally inting or


    What had been stranger was Tyrion Veltras. He hadnt shaken her hand like Prost and some of the others, but his family had been one of thest to leave Riverfarm. The nobles were going back home, the Solstice party done with.


    But he had remained, perhaps because his two sons had enjoyed Riverfarm too much. They <em>both</em> threw tantrums, although Hethons was moreining. Sammial had demanded Ryoka <em>stay and be fun.</em>


    I trust this event has aided you in some way, Miss Griffin. I still owe you a debt for your service to House Veltras.


    Oh, noyouve done more than enough.


    That is not what I believe.


    Lord Tyrion was a strange [Lord]. He refused to settle their debt, and he had done so much already. Pride and stiff honor. Ryoka wished she could have actually disliked him. She knew what he had done to Liscor. But she couldnt help but feel like they were a bit simr.


    A bit. She wished she didnt, though, honestly. But Lord Tyrion had raced her while flying, even suggested seeing who was faster. It turned out he was, unless there was a faster wind. Hedughed and


    <em>Well, its just a connection of Runner and client. Perhaps Ill meet him again.</em> Ryoka thought of all the Veltras group, Jericha was somewhat d to see her back. Shed kept asking about Eldavin after the call.


    He had promised to help Erin. Ryoka tried to run, leaving Onononno behind. Wait. There was no better way than the Dragon. Even distant Ailendamus which had a surefire thing or the best thing ording to Ivolethe and the powers of the fae, wasnt as good as a Dragon.


    He had promised. So Ryoka went back to her job, if only to see how flying worked. She ran out of Onononnowell, slipped, really, the streets were a bit <em>slimey</em>and continued on her way.


    -


    If Ryoka Griffin got used to the attention her arrival caused after the fifth Runners Guild delivery, she still tried not to let it get to her head.


    She wasnt a <em>real</em> Courier yet. She had the speednot the Skills. She still remembered how fast Miha could go, or Smani being able to conjure arrow-swarms of attack spells, cast [Haste], [Invisibility] as a matter of course


    She was a new, low-level Courier. Even so, she resigned herself to being famous until the novelty wore out. She visited eight Runners Guilds on her route north over two days; she kept losing hours to people, rather than the road.


    And she was still unprepared for Reizmelt. The entire city threw her a <em>celebration</em> when they saw her flying in.


    Miss Wind Runner, Miss Griffin, youve put Reizmelt <em>on the map</em>, even more than it was! Youre a credit to our city. It is an honorplease, ept this honorary citizenship. A key to your new home, and


    Ryoka Griffin shook hands with each of the Councilmembers in turn. She smiled as people cheered, looked at her new,plimentary home as well as a citizenship in Reizmeltand decided <em>not</em> to tell anyone she had been nning on getting Wind Runner of Reizmelt changed to a different title. Wind Runner of Liscor, maybe.


    Imso honored. I feel like I havent been in Reizmelt long, but youve taken me in and Im just


    <em>Super overwhelmed. </em>Ryoka gave a speech, shook hands, let kids y with the parachute-basket, and then hid inside her home until they left.


    Theyd decorated it with <em>flowers.</em> Furniture! Ryoka stared at the house theyd given her.


    Oh no. How was she going to tell them thatshe was <em>not</em> staying in Reizmelt? Shed rather stay in Liscor. She had to go there. To The Wandering Inn. To Mrsha andsee Erin.


    Dont worry. No one expects you to stay. But if you can just keep letting us call you the Wind Runner of <em>Reizmelt?</em> It means something.


    Alime, the [Receptionist] at the Runners Guild, actually hugged Ryoka when she came in. But she was the most reassuring. Ryoka exhaled.


    Thats good to know. I umthis is a lot.


    Everything was different. She had done a <em>two day run</em> to Reizmelt from Riverfarm. Wind speed? Alime was over the moon about it.


    Youre one of the <em>faster</em> Couriers in Izril based on those speeds, Ryoka. I imagine there are limits.


    Yeah. Like flying monsters. Im not taking deliveries anywhere with Wyverns or Griffins.


    Ryoka shuddered. Shed ran afoul of some damn geese on the second day. They were <em>aggressive</em>, pecking bastards.


    I imagine youre also grounded when its raining or thundering?


    Yep. On foot for that.


    I can actually add a note for prospective clients. Have you taken any private orders?


    No. Why?


    Alimes eyes glittered with mirth.


    Has anyone told you there are people asking for you?


    Ryoka stared. Couriers did get private orders; City Runners were rarer, but Couriers would get private requests all the time. And she had <em>sixty eight</em>


    <em>Sixty eight?</em>


    You dont have to answer any of them. Youre popr and your name is out there, so everyone wants you. Would you like to see them?


    Isure.


    Ill have to get them[Receptionists] will have to request the details, for privacys sake. I wont even be able to open them; youll get it from our in-house [Mage] or the Mages Guild for your eyes only. Also, there <em>is</em> a fee to have all of them scribed. Sixty eight would be a bit.


    Isee. UmuhIll tell you what. Can you write outsix? And Ill look at them. Im going to visit a friend.


    -


    Lupp the [Corn Farmer] was arguably one of Ryokas few friends. An interesting friendship, to be sure. But one that had helped both.


    Ryoka had gotten corn that hadimpressedeven the fae. Lupp? Well, hed gotten famous.


    Literally.


    <em>[Famed Sweetcorn Farmer]?</em>


    Ryoka Griffin eximed in the mans homey kitchen. Lupp tried to keep from smiling too much. He modestly scratched at his head.


    Not my doing. I owe it all to you, Miss Ryoka. And to Eldert. You two kept talking me up, and I suppose it was why I was leveling out of nowhere. Got some nice Skills too.


    Such as? Thank you <em>so much</em>, by the way, Miss Ryoka. Father, show her your new <em>corn!</em>


    Lupps daughter was present. She had visited her father, perhaps because of the news, and Ryoka found Lupps farmhouse more crowded than it had ever been.


    As in, there were about six people present. Lupp looked overwhelmed at the number of people, frankly. But two of the House of Els security forces were still watching his farm for trouble. Ryoka had been aghast to learn about the close call on his life and apologizedLupp seemed to take it in stride.


    Or at least, he hadnt said anything with his daughter and the two [Soldiers] around. As for thest memberLupps daughter, Kamine, and Ryoka, <em>and</em> the House of Els guards, were all trading nces at


    Eldertuin the Fortress. The Named Adventurer had visited Lupp and Ryoka had knocked to find him opening the door.


    <em>Named Adventurer! Eldertuin Tend! In service to Ulva Tend herself as a [Bodyguard]!</em>


    Ryoka kept those screaming thoughts inside. She smiled at the veteran adventurer.


    Eldert. You arrived an hour before RyokaI was going to show youfancy digging a bit and see if your Skills still work?


    Lupp smiled at his former neighbor-turned-adventurer. Kamine was scandalized.


    Father! Adventurer Eldertuin isa <em>Named Adventurer!</em> You cant say that!


    He was Eldert to me. Fancy names dont change who he was. Used to be able to hoe a section of ground in half the time I did. What about it?


    Argh. And I thought Id never hold a hoe again. Fine, Lupp. But only for you.


    Eldert, in thepany of Lupp, was almost as down-to-earth as Lupp. Although Ryoka had a sense it was himing back to his roots; he had been more official as Ulvas bodyguard.


    But she saw how he had been a [Farmer]. He had a cologne, <em>amazing</em> armor and the tower shield and mace, both enchanted, emzoned with the Tend family sigils, and someone even styled his hair, by the looks of it. He wasnt as old as Lupp, so instead of white hair, he had a magnificent blonde-green, perhaps natural, but definitely augmented with alchemical items.


    Lupp had the right idea, though, and it was treating Eldert like an old friend. The two talked and Ryoka found herself hovering awkwardly as they caught up. In truth, she didnt mind; it was the first time the two had seen each other in a long time.


    You stopped writing.


    You never seemed interested to get my letters. And I feltodd, sending them to you.


    I liked them. I never said? Well, they were hard years, after you left.


    I know. I should havee by for thefuneral. Im sorry. May I visit her grave?


    Course. You have to tell me too, how you met Miss Ryoka. Strange meetings, and that you both came by.


    Eldert nced at Ryoka. She ducked her head.


    He helped me in a tough spot, Lupp. Actually fought someone for my sake.


    Really?


    Lupp hadnt heard about the Solstice party. Eldert just waved it off.


    It wasnt easybut I dont think I was in danger. But that [Knight] or whomever it wasI havent felt my arm shake like that in a long time.


    He flexed it, and looked at Ryoka. She preempted his question.


    Theyreoutsiders. Strong ones. If you went toe-to-toe with themwell, theyre the best in the world.


    <em>Their world.</em> Eldert nodded slowly.


    I felt like it was a test. And I havent felt that young since I became an adventurer.


    Started at thirty. Old! But you were never a good [Farmer]for all you grew things well. Im d. But whats with the name? <em>Eldertuin Tend.</em>


    Lupp teased the man as he handed him a hoe. The Named Adventurer sighed as he hefted it.


    I married into the Tend family for my service to Ulva Tend, Lupp. I have a family.


    Really? You never said!


    Itplicated.


    The Named Adventurer looked troubled for a moment. Ryoka and Lupp exchanged a look. Perhaps a former [Farmer] didnt enjoy being a Tendwell, they dropped the subject.


    Just cut a new furrow, there, and there. Now, if youve forgotten how it goes, you swing your hoe up and


    [Channel Strike].


    Eldert swung the hoe down and a <em>rift</em> of dirt, straight as an arrow, exploded up from the ground. Ryoka and Lupp blinked in the downpour of soil.


    [Farmer] Skills can be a [Warrior]s Skills. You want me to do it again?


    The Named Adventurer hefted the hoe. He looked at Lupp. After a second, the [Corn Farmer] spat out some dirt andughed. He pped Eldert on the back, and he and Ryoka stood back as the Named Adventurer did it again. Then they looked at his new corn.


    -


    [Pepper Corn]? Seriously?


    You get fancy Skills like swinging a sword and cutting the air, or new spells. I get new corn. I can even grow em in patterns, see? This ones just for fun. Mind you, even Ill take a week or two more till the first harvest, but look!


    Lupp proudly showed them his new Skills. Ryoka stared at a corn that had a weird checkered pattern.


    <em>Red, </em>brilliant carmine kernels, mixed with a slight blue tint to them.


    Whats the blue part taste like?


    Sugarsweet. So thatd be a hot mouthful and sweet one. Not sure whod buy it, but I want to taste it first. These new ones take a bit more richness in the soil, and water, or so it feels. But theyll be good. Lady Bethal is already asking to have the first harvest sent to her.


    Have you considered selling to another family? Lady Ulva herselfplimented the corn. And she ispeculiar about trusting food. She might offer you a better deal.


    Lupp looked worried. He actually had to sit down and have some calming tea.


    Idont do business decisions like that, Eldert. I just sell my corn. Thinking about moneyI cant refuse Lady Bethal after shes been so generous.


    She wouldnt mind. Well, she might, but she knows its business.


    But Ryoka knew it was Lupps personality that made the thought of negotiating the sale of his corn so nerve-wracking. Eldert didnt push the matter, although he did ask Lupp to send him some corn when it was done. Ryoka, likewise.


    If you had any of the sweet-corn, Id take it with me. Im going to Liscor so I might not see you for a while


    Ah, you can always fly by. Just visit me in a month or twoIm busy enough. And I have something for you. Nothing full-grown, butits another Skill. Here, take these.


    Lupp was understanding. And he handed Ryokashe blinked at the <em>baby-corn</em>, all blue, and sweet as candy. He grinned at her expression.


    You have a sweet tooth for the stuff?


    I know a little Gnoll girl who might change her tune about corn. Wellshe likes it anyways, but shed <em>gobble</em> this. Thanks, Lupp.


    He also handed her some baby corn of the spice variety. It was like eating a hot pepper spice on cornexcept it was <em>all</em> hot. Ryokas eyes watered.


    <em>Damn</em>. Fuck, thats spicyitd be good if you mixed it with regr corn.


    Thats what I thought. Good for the children, though. They love it. The viges kids came begging for it; Ive been giving it out, the little ones at least.


    Lupp smiled as his daughter fussed around, scolding him for giving out his hard work as always. Ryoka wondered, honestly, if shed done him a disservice.


    His farm was crowded and he looked a bit overwhelmed by thepany. But as Eldert bade her farewell for the night, she saw he and Lupp were going to sit, perhaps on the porch, with a drink.


    That was nostalgic. And Ryoka thought that made up for any inconvenience of fame. Lupps house didnt seem so empty. The old [Farmer] looked at Ryoka and their conversations about bad days were unspoken.


    Hard to sit by yourself when there are so many people you like about, right?


    Ah, just so long as you like them. Stop on by again if youre staying longer. Thank you, Ryoka.


    He winked at her. She grinned and left, spirits light.


    -


    Ironically, it was Ryoka who was down after meeting Lupp. He was doing well. But was this life?


    Was she going to forget Erin was dead and do deliveries? Visit Liscor and tell Mrsha and the others to wait?


    That was the sensible thing to do which normal-Ryoka would not do. And was thus the thing Ryoka <em>should</em> do.


    But she wanted to fly to First Landing, get on a ship, and raid Ailendamus vaults. She wanted to move <em>now.</em>


    And she knew she shouldnt risk herself. She was not immortal. She had thought Erin might be, but Ryoka would never assume she could survive


    She stared at her missing fingers when she needed a reminder of that. Or felt at the scars on her back where crossbow bolts had nearly ended her for good.


    Crossbows. Ryoka was starting to develop a thing about them.


    She was nning on making onest visit before she slept and headed south. She wasnt even actually nning on staying the night at Reizmeltshe was pretty sure the Lischelle-Drakle household would be up all night and theyd give her some space.


    <em>She hadnt checked in on Fierre.</em> Ryoka went back, took the six sample requests shed asked to see, and got a list of names for the others. She went through them, and to the Mages Guild.


    You have eight hundred and twenty one [Messages]. Would you like them all printed?


    The [Scribe] gave Ryoka a sunshine smile, behind which lurked the suggestion that if Ryoka said yes, thiste at night, she would get a quill stuck in her forehead.


    After a while, he stared at Ryokas open mouth and went on.


    The Mages Guild does offer a service to ah, individuals of note to screen unnecessary [Message] spells. We only refer you to established clients such as [Merchants] of good repute, and so on. It cuts down on this. Its a small, yearly feequite affordable for a Courier. Oh, and we can also take a list of people who should always be included.


    Yes, please. Can we do that now?


    <em>Certainly,</em> Miss Griffin. Who would you like to include? I can take names or cities as well


    Liscor. Um, Lyte, Paltno, wait, thats all Liscor. Liscor, Celum, yers of Celum, Lupp


    Ryoka spent the next thirty minutes setting up a spam filter for [Messages], paying the fee for the service, and collected a lot <em>fewer</em> [Messages].


    The first was from Fierre. Ryoka read, anxiously, aware she had left her friend to go do this party.


    <em>am establishing a business in Invrisil. See me soontheres big stuff happening. </em>Well, that doesnt sound ominous at all.


    Ryoka sighed. She wondered how Fierres de-toxified life was going. She was definitely going to Invrisil as soon as


    The next letter was from Lyte, informing her about the Potion of Regeneration. Ryoka dropped it, fumbled, and picked it up with shaking fingers. She read, heart poundingthen saw a [Message] from Palt.


    <em>The Potion failed.</em>


    Surprise, fear, shockit hit her all together so she wasnt as fully torn as she might have been if she had been able to get her hopes up. Ryoka lowered the letters.


    The potion was worthless. Nothey just hadnt done it right. There was something else. Teriarch would know. Teriarch <em>would</em> know.


    She wasnt in the mood to visit the Lischelle-Drakle family all of a sudden. So, Ryoka trudged out of the Mages Guild, sorting through the remaining letters slowly. It was too dark to read, so, without realizing it, she found herself pushing open a door into


    <em>The Huntress Haven.</em> It was


    Ryoka blinked at the noise, light, and <em>voices</em> in the inn where she had stayed. She saw a group of people nce upand then an exmation.


    <em>There you are! Hah! I knew youde by!</em>


    Mad Madain, [Innkeeper] and former adventurer, bellowed as he pushed himself back from a table where he was drinking. A serving man was passing out stew from a kettle, there was a lot of alcohol in the air


    Ryoka was back.


    -


    Shed uh, forgotten about Mad Madain. Which was amazing since he was <em>hard to forget.</em> But Alber and Fierre had both gone to Invrisil.


    But the [Innkeeper] had his inn. Ryoka might have expected it to be empty and Madain in a bad way as he sometimes got, but the inn was crowded.


    <em>Obviously,</em> because the Wind Runner stays here! Im famous. Sos your room. I heard you got a house so I didnt keep italso, someone bought everything where you stayed. Pillows, mattresseven went sweeping up for your hair.


    Ryoka nearly spat out the meat stew and drink.


    And you <em>let</em> them have it?


    The [Innkeeper] shrugged, unconcerned with the sale.


    It was good money. And she was what, a [Mage] or something. Weird woman.


    Stalker-creeps didnt get better by gender! Ryoka was about to protest when she had a sinking suspicion she knew whichshehad bought all that stuff.


    Well, <em>that</em> was fun. Madain grinned at her.


    I also squashed some [Assassin] bastards. You can pay me for itter. Even thosePithfire kids. Yeah, theyvee by a lot. Although theyre headed south on an adventure. Damned thing.


    Im sorry I didnt see them. How are they? Howre the dogs? Howre you, Madain?


    This was fine. Ryoka was sorting through letters as she talked, and Madain wasnt <em>that</em> much into the conversation. He just wanted to know about the battle. Saliss of Lightshe had an admiring note when he talked about the Drake. Ryoka supposed the former adventurer had respect, even for a Drake Named adventurer.


    Ah, well, I have <em>actual </em>guests who want service, so I hired that bastard to serve and clean up. Not like the [Fistfighter] and Fierre. They were easy, like you. Whats his name?


    Alber. Hes in Invrisil.


    Oh, right.


    Madain was refreshingly straightforwardat least at this moment. He was talking.


    Anyways, since business is good, Ive bought a scrying orb. Thats fun all day, and getting adventurer-types in. Did you hear what the Pithfire Hounds are going for? Idiots. Theyre going to get hurt or killed.


    What? Why?


    Ryoka was distracted. Shed just seen a [Message] fromMadain snorted.


    Some foolsthe Horns of Hammerad are going after the Vige of the Dead. Better teams than theirs have died trying. I dont even know their name. Ever heard of them?


    The Wind Runner of Reizmelt stared at the [Messages]piled from Ceria Springwalker. She looked up at Madain.


    <em>What?</em>


    -


    They went because they knew you were connected with thoseHorns? I told them it was stupid. They got puffed heads because they sent a few [Assassins] running. Idiots.


    An hourter in the dead of night, Madain was talking to Eldert and Lupp. And wasnt <em>that</em> a weird meeting?


    Ryoka had actually dragged him down to Lupps farm. Madain could move quite fast on horseback. Shed asked him to, so she could consult with the man who knew about the Horns crazy nand a Named Adventurer.


    Eldert and Lupp had been surprised to see Ryoka, but theyd stopped talking on the porch to let them in. Madain was chewing on the spicy baby corn as he finished telling them the setup.


    The Vige of the Dead. Thatsmadness.


    Eldertuin the Fortress looked at Madain and the former Gold-rank nodded. Ryokas stomach twisted.


    Fool. She had been worried about what she, Ryoka, might do impulsively, especially given the Potion of Regeneration failing. The desire to see Erin again


    She had forgotten other people wanted to see her just as bad. And they would risk anythingno, more than Ryoka. They were adventurers. She was a Runner.


    Are you sure?


    Of course we are. Thats death. Its a safe zonedoesnt attack you, doesnt getrger or send wavesbut its still death. No one lives there. But it takes a real fool to try and attack it knowing how many attempts have been made.


    Madain was disgusted. Eldert looked at Ryoka.


    Let me put it this way, Miss Griffin. I have a team of adventurers I would join with if I were raiding a dungeon or particr area I thought was worthwhile. I wouldnt try the Vige of the Dead with them. I wouldnt try it if there were three times our numbers. You would need an army to fight that many undead, especially how fast they regenerate. Nothing <em>kills</em> them permanently.


    You know? Youve been there?


    Madain spat. Lupp looked offended at the spot on his floor. Eldert looked at Madain.


    <em>They both had.</em>


    Everyone <em>tries</em> it, well, most teams. Everyone thinks theres a way in, or that its exaggeration. I nearly lost a teammate. Bitten down to her bones.


    A simr experience. Its not even a ce to train. The undead move too fast. Theyre too deadlywe tried to kill a single zombie for good. Held it down, burned it until it was ash and tried to destroy the ash. <em>It still came back. </em>You have to tell this team to stop. If theyre wise, theyll fall back. But so many teamsand Silver-ranks? They might push in too far.


    Ryokas heart was pounding. She knew they were right. But why the Vige of the Dead? UnlessPisces knew there was something that could <em>help</em> Erin?


    I think my friends have tried to talk them out of it. II can make it there tomorrow. But what if I cant?


    Then youd better hope every Gold-rank team and Named Adventurer in the north joined their call.


    Madain drained his drink. He put it down and looked at Ryoka, serious for once.


    But I think itll be them and half a dozen idiots like the Hounds. No one whos smart will read that and join in if theyve got half a brain. And the ones withoutwhod go there for a <em>share of the loot?</em> Theres no gold, no glory. Its a stupid request. For an [Innkeeper]? Hah! <em>I </em>couldnt get a Gold-rank team to risk their lives for me.


    He said that. But Ryoka just looked at him. And she saw another [Innkeeper]. For her? She slowly pushed herself up.


    They might have an army, though. Even if its not enough.


    Eldert and Madain stared at her, disbelieving.


    -


    The Vige of the Deady far north of Invrisil. Not as far as Reizmelt. Soif you left now, you could make it in three days.


    Hey, Jewel. You going to the Vige of the Dead?


    In the Gold-rank+ back rooms of the Adventurers Guild in Invrisil, one of the local Gold-rank adventurers leaned out of his chair and called across the room.


    Laughter followed his remark. Jewel, leader of the Glitterde, ignored Samungsment. But she was sitting thererather than making ns to go.


    I cant believe <em>anyone</em> is going. Or that someone would post a raid call that stupid.


    Samung, a member of Oblivions Call, a Gold-rank team with a name that was arguably cooler than they were, was pushing the envelope.


    Jewel hadughed a bit with her team and shaken her head when she saw the request. But she had met the Horns.


    Theyre Hells Wardens, Samung. Maybe they think they have a shot.


    Another Gold-rank had his feet up on the table. Invrisil was actually quite crowded at the moment.


    Lots of Gold-rank teams had returned from the High Passes and the Wyvern hunt. They were in the mood to <em>spend gold</em>, and the City of Adventurers was the ce to do it.


    Jewel was annoyed because shed missed the rushand some teams had earned over ten <em>thousand</em> gold. Three had earned over twenty thousand! Easy money!


    Heyis this table taken?


    The veteran Gold-rank nced up. He had his legs on one table, and he and his teamWaterborn Raiderswere upying the other. A new Gold-rank team, rookies, were looking around and the crowded back room had nothing but standing room, which a number of teams were using.


    My feet need rest. Whore you?


    Hazing again. Jewel, another rtively new team, was sick of it. But Todi wasnt here. The Gold-rank adventurer murmured.


    Were, uh, Ten Razors.


    <em>Ten Razors?</em> Then why are there eight of you?


    The teammates of the adventurer flushed. The answer was that the founding group had taken casualties. One of them looked at the Waterborn Raider.


    Can we use this table?


    Sorry, my feet need rest.


    The Gold-rank veteran stared at them. He grinned unpleasantly, testing them. The Ten Razors knew the score. Two glowered, but the rest stood.


    <em>Respect for seniority. </em>Alternatively, older adventurers bullying younger ones.


    Its almost tempting. If they offered money, Id give it a shot.


    One of Jewels teammates muttered after a while. Jewel half-nodded. Tempting. But


    Hey, arent the Horns one of the Silver-ranked teams that got <em>wiped</em> in Liscors dungeons? They reformedbut is anyone going to follow <em>them</em> into another death-zone?


    The noisy adventurer got another muted round ofughs as he went on, studying the appeal.


    <em>For the [Innkeeper] of Liscor.</em> If there was one reason Jewel would have been interested, it was that. But she wasnt about to speak up.


    Hes being disrespectful. Why do we even hang out back here? We saw that [Innkeeper]shemanded the <em>ck Tide</em>. Theres something there, Jewel.


    Jewels friend muttered. He turned to the Gold-rank Captain and [Swashbuckler]. She nodded.


    Lets go to the main room. At least we dont have to listen.


    Glitterde was getting up. They had looked aroundas some teams had donewhen the Horns contract was brought up.


    Because, despite what the Waterborn Raider saidthere was interest. But adventurers watched each other. Some took risks, but calcted ones.


    The Horns had taken huge losses at Liscorbut theyd also <em>won</em> at Albez. That sort of squared their record. And they were Hells Wardensa title even Gold-ranks respected.


    And the [Innkeeper]but no one had said they were going, so Invrisils adventurers expected the Horns to not raid the Vige of the Dead.


    Ordo it alone? But that would be madness. Even the Vige of the Dead


    Wasnt that what Gold-ranks <em>did?</em>


    Jewel was conflicted. Thenthe door opened. Heads swung around. There was a shout.


    Hey! Thats a face I havent seen in a while! Is that you, Seborn?


    Jewel turned and saw another Gold-rank team enter the room.


    Whos that? I know that name.


    She turned to a friendlier team. An old [Mage], a member of the Distinguished Staves of Invrisil, a [Wizard], chuckled.


    Oh, Jewel, thats the Halfseekers. Theyve been in the south for a whileyou know them?


    The half-Fr


    Jewel kicked her teammate so fast that the word never came out. The older [Wizard] smiled and nudged one of her sleepingpanions; her trio of three were all over fifty. [Mages] who walked to easy requests, sted it with spells, and thus earned decent pay.


    Youll like them. Their leader, Jqua, is quite friendly. And theres Moore, such a sweetheart. Theyre all friendlyexcept for Seborn, at times. They had a rough patchbut I hear they took on a new member. Oh, there she is.


    The Gold-ranks were surrounding a new teaming in. Greeting them, exchanging newsJewel saw one figures head <em>rise</em>. She blinked.


    A half-Giant. Old Geni waved her hat gently.


    Jqua! Moore! Over here!


    They didnt appear to hear her. The half-Giant was frowning; he didnt look as friendly as described, but perhaps he was worried about standing on someones foot. He did move through the room slowly, looking for a table.


    He saw the only one with the Waterborns Raider resting his feet there. The half-Giant pointed.


    Excuse me. We need to use this table.


    A nervous Gnoll approached. That had to be the new member; there was a grinning Drake with a il over her shoulder. Jewel realized <em>both</em> were Selphids. There was a Drowned Manhalf crab or maybe lobster


    Sorry, Im resting my feet.


    The Waterborn Raider smirked. Ulinde hesitated.


    Look, we need this table. Youre not using it.


    Hey! Let our teammate rest his feet!


    The other Waterborn Raiders turned. They were apparently former [Raiders] in actuality, hence their nature. They sniggered as Ulinde turned to the [Rogue].


    Seborn?


    <strong>Youre not using the table. Feet up.</strong>


    The [Rogue] appeared and addressed the annoying adventurer. Jewel saw the mans eyes narrow.


    Oh yeah? I dont take order from the half-Freaks.


    She held her breath. Seborns Human eye narrowed. The Waterborn Raiders turned in their seats. There was a potential in the air. The other Gold-ranks leaned in or out depending on their natures.


    Seborn, theres no need for that. Sit with us.


    Geni called out, but her voice was still lost. The Gold-rank adventurer looked at Seborn. Thena shadow fell over him. He looked up and his grin faded.


    <em>Move.</em>


    Moore <em>loomed</em> over the man. Jewel blinked.


    That didnt <em>look</em> like a friendly half-Giant. He had a scar running across his chin. Andnope. She didnt see any nice qualities. The [Rogue] looked like a ray of beaming sunshinepared to the [Green Mage]s face.


    Unfortunately or fortunately for the Waterborn Raider, he knew Moore. So he recovered from the moment of chagrin and sneered.


    Nice try. Why dont you go coddle flies, Moore? Have Jquae over, greet our team Captain, and then


    Moore reached down. He picked the man upand <em>tossed</em> him over the table.


    It was so fast. It was like Jewel flicking a bug off her knee. She stared, open-mouthed, as the man shouted and then went <em>thump.</em>


    The other Waterborn Raiders stared. They had ducked when he went sailing over their heads. Two got up.


    You b


    Moore reached out and grabbed a head. His handgently covered the top of the adventurers head.


    Now, the guild was silent. The Waterborn Raiders looked up. And finally began to realize that Moore hadchanged.


    Why dont we allsit down? Sorry about the trouble.


    The leader of the Waterborn Raiders suggested slowly. Jqua Ivirith appeared.


    Moore? Whats the problem?


    Nothing. Weve got a table.


    Moore turned. The Waterborn Raider hed let go of slowly sat back down and then shuffled his chair around. Everyone stared at the half-Giant.


    <em>Whoa.</em> Thats <em>nice?</em>


    One of Jewels teammates whispered. Old Geni was just staring. Jewel looked at Moore, appraisingly. Nice or not, hed impressed <em>her.</em>


    Moore sat there, cross-legged on the ground, as the other Halfseekers sat down. They didnt smile long. Jqua greeted Geni, but she was transparent with why theyde.


    Were seeing who else is heading north. We need to move <em>today</em> if were getting to the Vige of the Dead.


    The Gold-ranks turned in their seats. Geni gasped.


    The Vige of the Dead? You cant be <em>serious</em>, my dear! We all thought it wasnt worth even considering. There have been jokes told all week.


    <strong>By who?</strong>


    Seborn was grinning. He turned to the Waterborn Raiders. They didnt look around.


    Just jokes.


    One of them muttered. Jquas eyes were steady.


    You dont have to take your team, Geni. Its going to be dangerous. No doubt about that. But were going.


    Jqua, youve never beenthis reckless. Are you sure?


    Geni chose her words carefully. The Selphid looked at her.


    Sometimes, we have to go in. Were going. And weve been getting ready. Were armed up.


    She gestured. And Jewel saw that under their travelling cloaksthe Halfseekers were wearing armor. It wasnt unusual, so shed barely noticed.


    But wait.


    Even <em>Moore?</em> Yes, the half-Giant was wearing a kind of leather-and-steelposite. Leather covering tes of metal. It was probably as thick as te mail, but made for someone <em>his</em> size.


    AndSeborn pulled back his dark clothing to reveal shining chainmail.


    Lightweight stuff. Custom-made by Maughin of Pass.


    He told the other admiring adventurers. One whistled; even Ulinde and Jqua had armor. Light for the Selphid [Spellslinger]. Jqua?


    Jqua had te armor. Her lover had not sent her without all the help he could muster.


    Were going to the Vige of the Dead. Any team who wants to join uswe can ride together. Well hire the carriages.


    Jqua announced to the room. The Gold-rank teams hesitated. Jewel bit her tongue. It was still reckless.


    Even if its two teams, youre outnumbered.


    One of the newer Gold-rank adventurers pointed out. Moore shifted in his seat. The female adventurer gulped.


    I just meant


    Moore.


    Jqua put a hand on his arm. The half-Giant looked away. Jqua replied with a smile. Not a happy one butjust a smile.


    Were <em>adventurers. </em>The Horns say this ce has something specialwere going in. For the [Innkeeper] of Liscor. And youre wrong, friend. Were not going alone.


    There were voices from the guilds main hall. Jewel rose as another team entered. To the surprise of Invrisils adventurers, they saw


    <em>Drakes.</em> In armor. The heavy-armored group marched in.


    Are thoseDrake adventurers?


    <em>mewardens. </em>Thats Pass Gold-rank team.


    Someone muttered. Jewel saw Keldrass remove his helmet and look around.


    Shame we cant stay here. So this is Invrisils Guild? Are we sitting here? The other teams cant get in.


    We could ask for an exception.


    <em>Other teams?</em> Jewel craned her head. Thenmore Drakes appeared.


    Lifwail des. Another Gold-rank team. The Wings of Pass werent present. But a Wall Lord had spoken. So more teams were waiting behind them.


    Gemhammer, The Pride of Kelia, Pithfire HoundsSilver-ranks. The Silver Swords would join us if they werent so far away. All but two teams in Liscor areing through. Nowwhosing from Invrisil?


    Jqua put her foot on a stool and looked around.


    Ceria had put out the call. The Horns, thoughthey were new. New to their rank. But Jqua? She had led teams before. She turned her head, waiting. It just took oneshe needed a <em>force</em> to bring to Ceria. She had promised.


    The southern teams waited, stares challenging. The Gold-ranks hesitated. To say it now was to not be able to go back. Not <em>here.</em>


    Then, someone spoke.


    Were going too.


    The Selphid turned. She saw a team, fresh off their horses, stride into the guild. She blinkedthen smiled.


    There you are.


    Why are you waiting around?


    Halrac stopped next to her. Revi, Typhenous, and Briganda entered the room. Jqua grinned.


    We were just leaving. Whos with us?


    Jewel pushed back her chair at the same time as half a dozen adventurers. And that was the first moment. She felt her heart beating.


    Reckless. Dangerous. She began ordering her teammates to stock up on gear.


    Because they were going to the Vige of the Dead.


    -


    To the north, it was a dead zone. Even grass died the closer you came to the Vige of the Dead. Only one group of people were in the area; animals fled, as did people.


    They had camped there for days now. And they were as yet alone. They might go in alone.


    But their friends had promised toe.


    We could still wait. That is the strategic move. Wall Lord Ilvriss, wes, they have promised to send aid ore.


    Were not waiting, Ksmvr. The Potion failed. Who knows if she can be frozen forever? Were going in. If the other teams arrive, they wont wait for weeks.


    Yvlon was polishing her sword. Checking the edge, though it was enchanted. Ksmvr nodded. She looked up.


    The vige was silent. Apparently, empty. To her left, she saw a sh of light. A shout.


    <em>Tree rot!</em>


    The magic around Ceriabusted and a sh of light sted Yvlon and Ksmvr with air.


    Trouble, Ceria?


    The half-Elf came stomping over.


    A bit. Did I get you with anything?


    Nope.


    What is it you are failing at, Ceria?


    Ksmvr peered at what had been intricate drawings in the ground. The half-Elf blew out her cheeks.


    Spell circles. Its the next step in my [Mage] learning. Probably. I dont know. Illphres sort of outlined her process, and long-term spellsfields of magicwere what she said I should master. <em>Control the battlefield.</em> Greater spells require stuff like that. But Im not going to master it before


    She looked ahead. Cold air swirled around her. She was visibly nervous. But she calmed herself and her aura of ice cleared. Yvlon nodded. She couldnt do more than train with her deand she didnt want to injure herself, or Ksmvr, so they werent sparring hard. She turned her head.


    What about you, Pisces? Whats your next step?


    The [Necromancer] nced up.


    Something else that wont be ready in time.


    He went back to using a needle toYvlon frowned.


    Are youmaking another undead?


    A permanent one.


    Ceria blinked. She looked at him for confirmation. The [Necromancer] replied absently.


    The barest beginnings, yes. It will take monthsbut I thought it was time. I failed once. But it urred to me one would be needed. Like Ceria, it will not be ready. We could prepare a year, Ksmvr. But that might be a decade, until we level. s. I do not believe we are that patient.


    No.


    Yvlon rose. She left their camp and walked to the edge of a bluff facing the Vige of the Dead. It looked soempty. But every instinct she had, no Skills needed, told her what would happen when they approached it.


    They hadnt. Not yet, in case they woke something. She remembered the dungeon of Liscor and folded her arms.


    <em>It will be different this time. It had to be. This was not for glory, but Erin. Pisces told them that if they recovered just </em>one<em> Relic-ss artifact</em>


    Her silver-steel arms glinted in the light. The grim [Armsmistress] stood there, contemting the odds and seeing no reason to turn back. Not for her. But her team


    Ksmvr joined her. He nced at Yvlon, then folded both arms and his third arm over that. She smiled at him.


    Someone put his foot on the bluff. Pisces. Hefolded his arms and struck a pose, chin raised. Yvlon stopped smiling at Ksmvr and red at him. He grinned at her.


    What are we doing, posing? Let me in.


    Ceria joined them, arms folded, standing sideways. Both of them sniggered at Yvlon. She debated kicking them down the short incline.


    Then they stopped. The Horns looked at each other. Then at the Vige of the Dead. Pisces sighed.


    How does it go? Our team motto? Death before dishonor?


    Something like that. Calruz said it. I prefer lets not die, and get lots of loot.


    That is a very admirable statement, Captain Ceria. I find many practical elements in it.


    Yvlon smiled. She looked at them. Then the Horns stared ahead.


    Three days. Thats how long this ce has to remain standing.


    For the [Innkeeper] of Liscor.


    Pisces agreed. He looked ahead, and Yvlon thought he looked more noble the less he pretended towards it. Ceria smiled. She sat down and dangled her legs over the edge. Ksmvr looked at Yvlon.


    Let us not die and get lots of loot.


    He suggested. Theyughed. The Vige of the Dead waited.


    The Horns of Hammeradughed at it and went to have lunch.


    <strong>Authors Note: </strong>A thousand words over 20,000. I did my best. Shortshorter.


    Thest chapter really tired me out. But I have one more chapter after this before my break, and lets hope its a good one. Big announcementing for thest chapter of the month. So stay tuned and hopefully there was something good in this shorter chapter!


    I have nothing more to say. Thanks for reading! Im going to eat food.


    <strong>The Wandering Inn Crosswords!</strong>


    <strong>Week /crossword/bin/crossword.cgi?cmd=solve&filefrag=2021.01/2911/29115458.133.html</strong>


    <strong><strong>Week /crossword/bin/crossword.cgi?cmd=solve&filefrag=2021.02/0511/05115830.762.html</strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>Week /crossword/bin/crossword.cgi?cmd=solve&filefrag=2021.02/1017/10174609.478.html</strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong><strong>Week /crossword/bin/crossword.cgi?cmd=solve&filefrag=2021.02/1721/17213828.965.html</strong></strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>(<strong>Created by:</strong> Kadraginn, Gorexn, and Mr. Wiggles. Contributors: Richi, tt, Li_Melody, MoMo, Tomeo, Tnoz, Tacit Condor, Qwiliman, Kalmia, Vondeklompz, Me, AndromedaStar, and Igneel)</strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>Ilvriss by Auspicious Octopi!</strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>Instagram:</strong>https://.instagram/auspiciousoctopi/</strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>DeviantArt:</strong>https://.deviantart/auspiciousoctopi</strong></strong><strong><strong>


    <strong>Mrsha, Mrsha, andme? by Pontastic!</strong>


    </strong></strong>
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