Uninvited Guests

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXXII


Yak stood behind the bar, sleeves rolled, brow furrowed in deep, cocktail-based concentration.

I’m calling this one ‘The Aftermath,’” he muttered, mostly to himself, as he dropped a sliver of something green and faintly glowing into a shaker. “It’s going to be sweet, sour, and slightly acidic. Hopefully it will make you question your life choices.

Carrie fluttered to her usual perch at the bar and eyed the glowing green substance with suspicion. “Are you sure that’s edible?

Fairly sure,” Yak said cheerfully, shaking with enough force to dislodge a shelf. “If it isn’t, that’s where the questioning your life choices part comes in,” he added with a wink.

 “If that’s true, I think it sounds pretty accurate,” I muttered to Trunch, who nodded sagely.

Behind him, Din wandered toward the corner window and inspected it quizzically.
Didn’t we have all the windows repaired after the molotov incident?” he asked.

We did,” Trunch replied. “I found and paid the glasswright myself.” He looked proud. The window did not.

So this wasn’t broken when we left?” Din said, picking a large shard off the floor and peering into the alley.

Oh, Az mentioned that before he left,” Day cut in from the table. “Said there was a party here last night. Apparently it got a little crazy.

The best parties always do,” Carrie murmured with a smile. 

Din’s face went white as he looked toward the bar.
The head!” he gasped. “Yak, is Dominic’s head still in the cupboard?

Yak was carefully pouring ‘the aftermath’ into glasses, biting his tongue in concentration. “I don’t know,” he replied. “The cupboard door is broken though.

Shit!” Din dashed across the room, shoving Trunch aside and knocking over a stool in the process. He tore what remained of the cupboard door off its hinges and lunged forward to peer inside.
A moment later he placed a cloth-wrapped bundle on the bar with a resounding thud and carefully unwrapped the severed head of Dominic.

It looks pretty good, considering,” Carrie observed.

I put a little preservation spell on it to keep it from decomposing,” Din replied, wrapping it back up and carefully returning it to its dark hiding spot.

Why, exactly, are you keeping it?” I asked, not really wanting an answer.

I’ve been wondering that myself,” Trunch added.

Din’s voice, muffled from within the cupboard, came back. “Answers.” As if that were a satisfying or well-explained reason. There was the sound of items being moved around. Din spoke again from inside the cupboard.

Yak,” he said slowly. “Did you move the box?

Yak paused, blinking.

The box?

The upper half of Din emerged from the cupboard. “Yes.” His tone was tight. “The box. With the egg thing. From the Whispering Crypts.”

Yak leaned over and squinted. “Oh. Huh.

What huh?” Din asked.

Well the head’s still there,” Yak said. “And it looks like all our money is still there. But the box is definitely gone.

Did anyone move the box?” Din inquired to the room at large, meeting a chorus of shaking heads. 

Do you think the box and the window are… y’know, connected?” Carrie asked. The look on Din’s face implied he wasn’t okay with the amount of excitement in her voice.

A loud sigh of relief cut the tension as Umberto appeared on the stairs, adjusting his loincloth and tossing a mug down to Yak.
Mr barkeep sir,” he bellowed cheerfully, “I’ll have another.

Umberto, did you move the eggbox?” Din pressed.

No,” Umberto replied, snatching a now-full mug from Yak’s outstretched hand and walking over to the table in the center of the room. “Az said he and Iestyn moved it after the giant testicles came out of it.

Drink came out of Carrie’s nose. “I’m sorry? The what came out of it?” she asked.

Wikis’ eyes narrowed as she glanced first at the cupboard behind the bar and then to the broken window in the corner.

Din, clearly disarmed and caught off guard, shook his head. “Giant testicles?

Umberto threw himself onto a stool and picked up the coin markers. “That’s what Az said. Giant testicles came out of the box.” 

Din and Trunch looked visibly confused.
And, you didn’t ask for further clarification?” Trunch asked.

Umberto slapped a coin onto the table, “Nope. He looked pretty shaken up, thought it best not to press him on it until tomorrow.

Where, exactly, are they?” Din asked looking around, “Iestyn and Az, I mean.

Iestyn is upstairs, I’m not sure about Az. They both looked exhausted – Iestyn could barely stand.” Day barely looked up as he spoke. “I told both of them to get some rest.

Umberto pointed to Day then tapped his own head and wordlessly raised a glass in agreement.

 Din looked toward the stairs. “I think we should wake him.

No,” Carrie said quickly.

He’s just a kid,” Wikis added. “Let him sleep.

Yak walked over to the table with a tray of his latest creation.
If he survived the kind of party that breaks windows and has boxes with giant testicles, I say we let the boy rest,” he said, placing a glass of faintly glowing green liquid in front of each of us.

We can ask them more later,” Umberto continued, reaching for Yak’s creation without hesitation. “But for now, let’s get back to telling Klept how I kicked more vampire ass.

The box might-” Din started before Day laid  a hand on his shoulder.

I think it’ll be fine,” he said reassuringly. “There’s not much we can do now, we all need rest. Az and Iestyn can fill us in later. Let’s just finish telling Klept what happened so he can record it.

Din reluctantly took a seat at the table, his eyes kept flicking back to the broken cupboard. He absent-mindedly raised his glass while mouthing the word ‘testicles’ to himself, as if pondering the veracity of the statement. Wikis muttered something about ‘bad lines of sight,’ stood, and repositioned herself. Her stool gave a low creak as she dragged it slightly closer to the broken window. She nocked an arrow, drew it halfway, then let it rest, still taut, at her side. One hand held the bow steady, the other cradled her drink with practiced ease. 

All right,” I said, holding my glass at arm’s length and examining the swirling, glowing liquid inside. “So the vampires were dead, the kitchen hands were still prepping radish swans, and the butler had just informed you that you were late for the resurrection of a long-dead tyrant.” I sniffed the contents and cast a cautious glance across to Yak. “Are you sure this is safe?”

“I think we were at Mathers,” Carrie chirped. “Umberto had pissed on the floor to trap the vampires and Din had used a spell to destroy them.

Sounds right,” I said, opening my journal and readying my quill. “Who was Mathers again, was he one of the kitchen hands?

As it turns out, Mathers was the head butler. He had just returned from delivering tea to the ritual guests and mistook the party for Dan’del’ion members. Trunch suspected it was because of a combination of their poorly fitting, stolen garb and Mathers’ own poor eyesight. A curmudgeonly gentleman of what Day called ‘indiscernible age’, Mathers introduced himself, apologised for the current state of the castle and ushered the group upstairs via the servant’s access – a dark and dimly lit passage of stairs barely wide enough for Din to fit through, all while mumbling about late arrivals and the need to make yet more tea.

At the top of the stairs, Mathers ushered them into what he referred to as a ceremonial preparation room, although Carrie said it looked more like a cocktail party that had wandered into the wrong building and decided to stay. Guests stood in small clusters, drinks in hand, their voices low but animated. There was an unmistakable air of anticipation, the kind that comes from people waiting for something important and believing themselves safely removed from the consequences of it.

According to Yak, one of the guests mentioned, quite casually, that they were simply waiting on the writer’s return and the ritual to begin. The way it was said suggested this was a minor inconvenience rather than the last step in a resurrection ritual involving a long-dead tyrant.

They were talking about Barbara,” Carrie said in excited animation, as if she had uncovered a secret conspiracy. “Barbara was the writer they were waiting for.
At the mention of Barbara’s name, Umberto grunted and returned to his earlier, darker demeanor. He rose silently from the table and returned to brood over by the hearth.

Trunch said that by mingling and asking questions, they discovered that Barbara had used her position and status as a writer to gain access to restricted sections in various libraries and archives around the continent. The Dan’del’ion Court had discovered the ritual to bring back Ieyoch but lacked knowledge of the final glyph. Barbara had apparently discovered it, and recreated it at the base of the crystal. She had accompanied Eric down to the basement to reproduce it on Ieyoch’s sarcophagus so that the connection could be completed. The guests were awaiting her return.
Of course, by this point, we had already intercepted and captured Barbara and Bot and I had been in the process of delivering her to the Dawnsheart City Watch.

Day said everything had been going smoothly until another guest began to pay them a little too much attention. Wikis described him as sharp-eyed and unpleasantly observant. He noted their lack of proper ceremonial robes, leading the group to realize everyone else in the room was wearing a large ceremonial robe over the top of whatever else they were wearing. The guest pressed further, asking which of them had memorized the secret of the fourth floor maze. Apparently this was said with the expectation of an immediate answer. Wikis said that several of the guests had begun to pay them closer attention at that point, including several whom the group recognised as Dawnsheart citizens.

Thinking quickly, the group claimed their robes were still downstairs. A simple oversight, they explained. Mathers, in his haste, had forgotten to direct them to the cloakroom, distracted by their late arrival and his insistence they not be late for the ritual. This explanation was met with a scoff and a dismissive remark about Mathers’ advancing age and legendary forgetfulness. Trunch recalled the man adding that if Mathers didn’t make such extraordinary tea, he would have been dismissed years ago.

At that point, discretion prevailed. With forced apologies and downcast eyes, careful not to draw further attention, the group excused themselves and retreated down the servant stairs. As they turned to leave, another guest, several drinks into what was clearly a very enjoyable evening, casually mentioned they should change quickly. Naida was about to return and usher everyone through, writer present or not.

They were beginning to get too suspicious,” Trunch said. “The robes gave us a temporary cause to regather and rethink our approach, but we were quickly running out of time.

Din, who moments earlier had been panicking about the missing eggbox, now seemed almost grateful for a different crisis. “We couldn’t really tell if they were armed or not,” he said wearily. “And there were too many of them for a direct assault – despite what Umberto might think.

I could have taken them all,” Umberto grunted from the hearth. He was scowling at a piece of parchment, crumpled slightly in his grip, the personalized and signed Barbara Dongswallower message.

Carrie began to flutter in Umberto’s direction, but Trunch put a hand on her shoulder and softly shook his head. She turned back to the table, casting a sad frown in Umberto’s direction before rejoining the conversation.

You’re sure some of the guests were Dawnsheart citizens?” I asked, concerned. “You’ve only been here a short time.

I’m sure,” Wikis said through gritted teeth. Her eyes darted toward the broken window. 

I recognised the guy from ‘Write of Passage’,” Day said.

I blinked. “Ferrin?” I asked.

Halfling. Sandy hair, crooked nose,” Day replied. “Sold me some ink a couple of days ago.”

But… but I buy parchment from him regularly.” I stammered.

Dan’del’ion.” Wikis practically spat the word.

I regathered myself. “And there were others?” I asked, “could you name them, identify them? We need to tell Tufulla.

You can tell him,” Yak said softly, “but I don’t think they’ll be a problem anymore.

Why?” I asked, though I already knew the answer. The thought of Ferrin standing in that room made something in my stomach turn.

They said Day had lingered in the doorway as the rest started to retreat down the servant stairs.
They had been outnumbered. He had made a calculation.
Last to leave the ceremonial room, he turned back, raised a hand, and cast fireball.
Then he closed the door.
He held the handle while the blast went off.
Trunch said it was over quickly. For most of them.
A couple had to be finished with a blade afterward. To silence the muffled screaming.

For a beat, no one at the table spoke. I stared at the surface of my drink and watched the green glow swirl. I glanced up to see Day doing the same, his jaw set, his gaze fixed on the glass in front of him.

They told me that as Yak and Wikis dealt with the last of the screams, the rest of the group encountered Mathers halfway down the servant stair. He carried a tray of tea and carefully arranged sandwiches, balanced with immaculate precision. He seemed completely oblivious to the smoke beginning to drift along the ceiling. He was muttering about punctuality and the impossibility of maintaining standards when one insisted on hosting rituals in half-finished buildings. There was, he added bitterly to himself, the matter of cleaning the drawing room, where someone had recently set fire to a tapestry and soiled themselves on the floor.

Carrie informed him, with calm efficiency, that Naida had just ushered the guests through and that an unfortunate incident involving one of the tapestries had necessitated a brief delay. When Mathers raised an eyebrow at the mention of tapestries, Din explained that one of the guests had held his cigar too close to the fabric, and another had attempted to douse the flames with alcohol. The explanation, according to Trunch, was delivered with such authority that Mathers accepted it without protest, though he did close his eyes for a long moment and let out a deep sigh as if adding yet another grievance to an already substantial ledger.

Apparently this was not the first ritual of late. Nor the second. Nor even the third. Mathers complained bitterly about the frequency of “blasted ceremonies” and the increasing lack of regard for staff. When he had accepted the post, he had expected tasteful gatherings, controlled environments, and perhaps the occasional ceremony. What he had not expected was a weekly assault on drapery.

It was during this tirade that Trunch suggested that a change of employment might better suit a gentleman of Mathers’ evident standards. The Goblin’s Grin, he explained, was a growing establishment in Dawnsheart. Chaotic at times, certainly. Combustible on occasion. But mercifully short on dark cultist rituals and, more importantly, a tapestry-free establishment.

Yak, seizing the moment, added that any kitchen hands capable of carving radishes into swans would be warmly received.

I’m sorry,” I cut in. “I don’t quite follow.

Trunch smiled. “I offered him a job here,” he said. “We could use more help.

The group nodded in unison.

He makes really good tea,” Wikis added upon seeing my confusion.

Apparently, Mathers hesitated only long enough to glance once more up the stairwell, where the smoke was now impossible to ignore. Then, with the composure of a man who had decided he had endured quite enough ritual-based nonsense for one lifetime, he agreed to collect his coat. The group lingered long enough to watch him and the two kitchen hands pass through the great dark doors, descend into the foyer, and step out into the courtyard beyond.

The group was now forced to find an alternate route to the upper floors, where they believed the crystal was kept. A problem compounded by the fact that the main staircase was under construction and the servant stairs were structurally questionable following Day’s fireball.
Carrie, apparently, had inadvertently stumbled on a solution. In a rare moment of clarity, she reminded the group that she possessed the ability to fly.

She remembered she could fly.” Yak deadpanned.
The pout and subsequent scowl from Carrie would have made a gnoll cower.

According to Carrie, she slipped out through a kitchen window and flew upward until she caught sight of the crystal glowing through an upper window. She secured a rope to a balcony rail, descended, and informed the others that this was now the plan.
According to Wikis, the climb was straightforward.
Din disagreed with conviction.

They told me they had just started their ascent when the courtyard below erupted into motion.

Doors burst open. Figures poured out — not living men, but dozens of undead, moving with terrible purpose. They flooded the courtyard and converged on the portal lamps. One by one the lamps flared, and the creatures vanished in pulses of sickly light.
They were not gathering.
They were deploying.
The scale of the preceding weeks’ events settled over the group like a weight. This was not a ritual confined to a castle. This was an invasion already underway.

How they managed to complete the climb without being seen was in Din’s view, a miracle. He suspected that the undead were singular in their focus. Had just one looked up and back toward the castle things might have turned out differently.
Day said that halfway up, they passed a fourth-floor window. Inside, the air shimmered. Hallways bent and re-formed. A doorway dissolved as they watched. Trunch recognised it immediately. The maze. A Dan’del’ion security measure designed to prevent exactly the sort of intrusion they were currently attempting. Had they entered through the main corridors, the maze would likely have scattered them across four floors and three dimensions.

Instead, they bypassed it with a rope and stubbornness.

Once they reached Carrie’s balcony anchor and had hauled Din over the railing, they took Yak’s preferred route into the room – directly through the window – and found themselves face to face with the resurrection crystal.

There was a perfectly serviceable door.” Trunch muttered

My way is more … intimidating.” Yak claimed with a grin.

There was nobody in there to intimidate.” Trunch replied.

Yak just shrugged.

Once inside, they found the resurrection crystal filling the chamber — a jagged pink-and-purple mass that pulsed steadily, light bleeding through its fractures and casting warped shadows across the walls.

A column of light shot from its apex, piercing the ceiling and continuing upward into the night sky.

Around its base, glyphs burned across the floor. Some had been etched carefully into the stone. Others carved in deep furrows. A few painted in thick, deliberate strokes. One drawn in salt.

From each glyph, a line of pulsing energy fed directly into the crystal’s core.

The absence of guards did not feel like oversight.
It felt like confidence.

Nothing the group did to the crystal or the glyphs disrupted the energy feeding into it. Wikis scattered the salt glyph beneath her boot, but the tether continued to pulse as if nothing had changed. Carrie attempted to wash away the painted markings using Umberto’s “running water vampire tactic.” It made a mess. It accomplished nothing.

I badly needed to go,” she said matter-of-factly.

I raised an eyebrow in her direction.

The sound of boots outside the chamber answered for them. Their efforts had not gone unnoticed.

Umberto, Yak, and Day ran to the door as the first heavy impact rattled the frame. Day wedged his sword between the handles to bar it. Wood splintered under the next blow.

But Umberto had other ideas.

He pulled at the door from the inside, determined to meet the guards head-on. Yak swore and grabbed him by the shoulder. Day had to split his focus between bracing the door and preventing Umberto from opening it himself.

Behind them, Din raised his hammer. Trunch lifted a hand.

The first strike left a shallow fracture in the crystal’s surface.

The second widened it.

Wikis loosed an arrow into the crack and Din drove it deeper with a brutal swing. The fracture spidered outward, lines racing through the stone.

I still think it was my witty insults,” Carrie muttered, “not the physical attacks.

You insulted the crystal?” I queried.
Din just shook his head.

Meanwhile, the door buckled. Day’s sword bent visibly between the handles. Yak yelled for support and Din joined them, bracing the door with his hammer and grabbing Umberto around the legs. 

Another eldritch blast tore into the widening fissure. This time the crystal answered.

The sound was a thunderous rupture – a concussive roar that split the chamber. The force hurled them to the floor as the door burst inward and the crystal exploded into thousands of shards, cascading down like violent glass rain.

The guards had expected a sealed chamber and a ritual underway. They had followed orders to the letter, posting themselves outside the only entrance.

Instead they found a shattered crystal, falling shards, and a group of very determined intruders who had chosen the window.

The fight did not last long.

Umberto was on his feet first. He crashed into the nearest guard with a barrage of strikes that drove the man backward, continuing the assault even after the man had fallen.

Din seized another and slammed him into the wall hard enough to crack plaster.

Yak’s daggers flashed in tight, economical arcs. A third guard collapsed before he seemed to understand what room he had entered.

Trunch staggered as a blade caught him in the ribs. Wikis hissed as steel grazed her upper arm.

We hadn’t planned to shatter the crystal,” Trunch said quietly. “We just couldn’t find any other way to stop the process.

He reached into his pouch and placed something on the table. When he withdrew his hand, a large shard remained – rough and jagged at the edges, faintly pink, but dull and lifeless.

This was one of the larger pieces,” he continued. “I grabbed it after we took down the guards. I thought we should keep a fragment. To study. Just in case.

He slipped it carefully back into his pouch.

Wikis said that after the crystal shattered and the guards had been dispatched, a commotion in the courtyard below caught her attention. From the balcony, she saw a small group of Dawnsheart guards moving toward the castle, Captain Rynn at their head. They advanced cautiously, cutting down undead that continued to stream in the opposite direction.

Day said the active glyphs at the base of the crystal unsettled them more than the fight. If the ritual had completed before the crystal shattered, then destroying it might have been too late. The basement quickly became the priority.

Unwilling to waste time navigating the fourth-floor maze, they returned to Carrie’s rope and descended the way they had come.

Tell him about Naida.” Umberto growled as he rejoined the table.

Naida, you met her again?” I said, looking around, quill at the ready.

When we got back down the rope,” Day said nodding. “I think it’s fair to say she wasn’t happy to see us.

Yak theatrically rose from his stool. His face shifted, his voice trembling with fury. “You… did you burn my guests? Where is Barbara? What have you done with Eric? Where is Mathers?” He shook as he became Naida. 

She was so angry.” Carrie said looking away from Yak and raising a hand as if to protect herself. “I almost feel sorry for what happened.

We did kind of ruin her party,” Trunch stated. “I think she had a right to be annoyed.

She turned Barbara against us,” Umberto muttered flatly. “She deserved everything she got, even if it was…” he trailed off, looking at Trunch.

We told her about the crystal,” Din said. “She wasn’t happy.

We told her we killed Eric,” Wikis added. “She hated that. Said we were ruining everything.

The memory seemed to settle over the table like ash.

We told her she’d broken Svaang’s heart.” Trunch added sadly.

She actually laughed at that, the bitch.” Carrie sighed.

You should have heard the scream when we told her about Dominic,” Umberto grunted. “Then she lunged.

Carrie glanced at Trunch before speaking. “She lost it. Completely. The crystal was gone, Eric and Dominic were dead, Barbara was gone… she just snapped.

No plan. Just fury.” Din added. 

We took her down easily,” Wikis said. “Too easily.”

Yak gave a small shrug. “She was angry. Anger makes people predictable.

I scribbled quickly.  “You killed her?” I asked.

There was a brief, uncomfortable pause.

We were going to leave her,” Day said, glancing at Trunch. “She was beaten. Finished.

I watched them all cast glances at Trunch. He looked like he didn’t understand what was going on. 

Carrie shifted uncomfortably. “She said something.” She said softly. “Something about fate.

The room went still.

I looked up.

And?” I prompted.

Wikis spoke carefully. “The shadows changed. They got darker.

No one laughed.

They stretched,” Carrie said bluntly. “Across the floor. Toward Trunch.

Din nodded once. “I saw it.

So did I,” Day said quietly.

Yak did not joke.

I turned to Trunch.

He was frowning.

Not defensive. Not angry.

Just… thinking.

That’s not how I remember it,” he said gently.

The words hung in the air.

What do you mean?” Carrie asked.

She was on the ground,” Trunch said. “We were leaving.

His brow creased slightly.

She said something. I couldn’t hear it.

He glanced down at his hands, as if checking them for something.

So, I leaned in closer.”

Silence.

And then?” I asked.

And then she was dead.

No one spoke.

You hit her,” Wikis said. Not accusing. Just certain.

With an eldritch blast,” Din added.

Trunch blinked.

I don’t… remember that.

A faint crease formed between his brows.

I remember leaning in,” he repeated. “She was trying to say something. It sounded like —

Like what?” Carrie whispered.

Trunch shook his head slowly.

I don’t know.

The fire popped in the hearth. 

Wikis’ eyes drifted briefly toward the corners of the room.

The shadows there were entirely ordinary.

You told her,” Day said at last, voice low, “she’d die like Dominic.

I did?” Trunch asked.

No one answered immediately.

Day met his eyes. Steady. Measuring.

You did,” he said.

And then you fired an eldritch blast into her, like you did with Dominic out there, in the alley” Din said, nodding toward the door.

Trunch leaned back in his chair.

He did not look frightened.

He did not look guilty.

He looked confused.

That seems… unlikely,” he said mildly. “I wouldn’t have said that.

You did,” Yak replied.

“I remember she was trying to say something,” Trunch said. “I leaned in because I thought she was about to reveal something useful.

Wikis’ jaw tightened. “You leaned in and told her she’d die face down in the gutter.

Trunch blinked at her.

That’s… unnecessarily theatrical.

No one smiled.

You said she’d die exactly like Dominic,” Day said quietly.

A beat.

In the gutter,” Din added. “With a bolt in the back.

Trunch’s brow furrowed deeper now. He turned slightly in his chair, as though testing the memory from different angles.

I don’t recall saying that,” he murmured.

The silence that followed was heavier than before.

Finally, Trunch cleared his throat. He offered a polite, almost apologetic smile.

Well,” he said, smoothing an invisible crease from his sleeve, “if I did, I imagine she had earned it.” And just like that, the gentleman returned.

Wikis’ eyes drifted once more toward the corners of the room.

The shadows did not move.

For a long moment, no one reached for their drink.

Then Day exhaled quietly.

We didn’t have time to think about it,” he said. “The glyphs were active. The ritual might have already completed.

That seemed to settle it.
The basement became the priority. They had shattered the crystal. They had broken the ceremony. They had killed Naida.

But none of them yet knew whether they had arrived in time.I dipped my quill again.
What did you find,” I asked softly, “when you reached the basement?

Bastards, Baths, and Bosoms

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXX


The doors of the castle flew open with such force they slammed into the stone walls behind them. The crash echoed through the space like the opening bell of a very poorly thought out plan. 

We stood at the threshold of a grand foyer. For a moment, nothing moved. 

The room was cavernous, lit only by a very unsettling combination of flickering candlelight and the dull pink glow of the sky behind us that crept through the wide open doors. Twin staircases rose on either side, a sweeping mixture of dark marble, polished wood, and cracked stone, curling toward a landing above. At the top of the landing, a small nondescript fountain burbled from a curved balcony, the water catching just enough candlelight to shimmer.

Interesting design choice,” Trunch murmured. “I’d have put the fountain down here in the foyer myself.”

Behind the fountain loomed a set of massive ebony doors, carved with the symbol we’d come to be very familiar with: a wilted dandelion in coiled thorns, gilded with silver so fine it gleamed even in the doom.

Above us, suspended from the vaulted ceiling, a black chandelier hung like a cursed stalactite, holding dozens of waxy candles. Their low, flickering glow danced across the stone walls, where smaller sconces cast narrow shadows that seemed to slither whenever no one was looking.

To the left and the right, on the ground floor, two wooden doors sat in silence, trying very hard not to be noticed, and failing miserably. While far less ostentatious than the grand set above, they were still a fine example of the exquisite craftsmanship available in the valley.

There were no guards. No footsteps. No distant chatter. The only sound aside from our hushed whispers was the faint drip of water from the fountain above, echoing like a countdown to an unavoidable confrontation.

I don’t like this,” Din said, low and serious. “It’s too quiet.

Bot cleared his throat. “Well, like I said, everyone’s preparing for the ceremony.

You mean the ritual.” Day corrected.

Bot waved a hand dismissively, “Same thing.

No. Ceremonies have catering,” Trunch replied. “Rituals have chanting.”

Which way to the chanting then?” Day sighed.

I don’t know. Not exactly, anyway. The upper doors lead into the castle proper. The side doors eventually take you to some servant quarters, the waiting parlour, the cellar and further down, the crypts.

Yak reached into his robes. “Two gold, six copper and a half eaten pastry says they’re bringing back the old vampire lord in the crypts,” he whispered.

Wikis turned to him. “You’re on. The beams coming from upstairs. The ritual is up there.” She pointed to the upper doors and then reached into a pouch, pulled out her fist and opened it. “Three gold, 4 silver, some lint and.

The rusty ring?” Yak asked, looking at the rusted circlet of metal in her hand.

NO.” Wikis plucked the ring from her palm and clasped it tightly to her chest. “You can’t have that.” Her eyes went wide and darted around the room before she raised the ring to her ear, nodded sagely, and carefully placed it into her pouch. 

We split up, Yak, Bot and Day headed to the door to the left. Wikis, Trunch and I headed to the right. Din held back Umberto who was determined to head up the stairs.

She’s up there,” he grunted, trying to push himself past an immovable pile of platemail. “I can smell her perfume.

No one can smell anything other than Bot right now.” Din grunted back. “We need to be careful.

Carrie had fluttered back over the threshold and was hovering just outside muttering to herself.

There’s someone behind this door.” Day hissed. “I can hear a conversation.

This side’s clear,” Trunch whispered as Wikis carefully opened the door and peeked through.

It’s a passage” she said softly, “It’s empty.

Carrie fluttered back, closing the castle doors carefully behind her, as Day, Yak and Bot joined us at the right door.
Tufulla says the other group thinks the crystal is upstairs. The sarcophagus of old Ieoyoch is in the crypts – they won’t move it for fear of damaging it.

What? How do you know?” I asked

I sent him a message, dummy.” Carrie said, to the doors that led outside and tapping herself on the head.

Oh – that’s what you were doing. I thought you were just getting some fresh air.

Well, that too.” She waved her hand in front of her face while staring at Bot. He looked at her, smiled and waved.

There was a click  – and a scraping sound.

Ah shit.” Din grunted, lifting Umberto like he was a sack of angry potatoes and sprinting toward us. Wikis held open the door and we dashed through just as the great doors above swung open. She closed it behind, leaving just enough of a crack to carefully peer through. 

A. Little. Help. Please,” Din growled, straining to hold back a writhing Umberto, arms pinned to his sides. Yak rushed over and grabbed his legs. Day dove in and held tight around his torso.

What’s happening out there?” Carrie whispered.

Shhh. It’s that Eric guy,” Wikis murmured over her shoulder through gritted teeth. “And three heavily armored guards. Big guys. Naida just walked through. And Barbara’s with her.

Time slowed. I froze.

There was a collective grunt as Din, Day, and Yak struggled to restrain Umberto, who was vibrating with rage. His jaw cracked open, and Din’s eyes went wide with horror.

A scream, deep and guttural, began to rise in Umberto’s throat. It was less a scream and more the charging blast of some ancient horn, like dragonfire made audible.

Just before he let it loose, Carrie raised a single finger and calmly whispered,
Shush.

The word hung in the air with unnatural weight. Divine. Authoritative.

Umberto froze mid-unleashing – mouth wide, rage bubbling just behind his teeth. He blinked once… and went utterly, murderously still.

Trunch joined the dogpile, grabbing whatever part of Umberto wasn’t already restrained. Umberto’s face turned a dangerous shade of plum. He glared at Carrie with the betrayed fury of someone who had just been magically told off by a friend.

Wikis raised a hand, her eyes still fixed on the scene through the crack in the door.There was the sound of muffled conversation through the door before Wikis gingerly closed it shut and turned to the rest of us. She stared quizzically at the group hugging Umberto in front of her and then shook her shoulders. 

Well?,” Carrie asked, voice low. “What are they doing?

They went through the other door, on the other side of the room. Most of them. Naida went back upstairs. Eric and Barbara are going to check on the vessel downstairs and make sure everything is ready. Naida said she would tend to the guests upstairs and get everything ready to activate the crystal.” Wikis nodded smugly, congratulating herself on a job well done. 

Din let go of Umberto’s hands and shot him a look that said ‘Do not fuck this up’. He looked at Trunch and the others and nodded. I braced for rage but Umberto simply turned and headed toward the far end of the corridor, breathing heavily and casting long aggrieved glances at the rest of us.

I think that confirms it,” Din said, voice hushed. “Ieyoch’s body is downstairs. The crystal is up.

I told you that already.” Carrie whispered angrily, “It’s what Tufulla suggested.

You said he ‘thinks’ thats where they are. Naida, Eric and Barbara just confirmed it.” Din shot back.

So which do we go for?” Yak asked.

I don’t think we should split up, we don’t have enough manpower and don;t know what we might run into.” Trunch added

Good thinking,” Bot cut in, “Last time I was down in the cellar, albeit shackled to a wall, there were dozens of guards and undead – some of them were former friends.” The last words were spoken with a soft reverence. 

I decided to throw my two copper into the pot, “If you…we, destroy the crystal – then maybe the ritual won’t take hold and they can’t bring Ieyoch back.” Trunch nodded, which felt like validation.

If we deal with Ieyoch,” Day countered, “then the ritual won’t have a vessel to ground to.” I noted that Trunch also nodded at this suggestion. 

Which is it?” Wikis managed through gritted teeth, “Someone make a choice.

I think it comes down to which is closer.” Trunch’s brow furrowed, clearly trying to calculate something based on absolutely nothing.

Din and Day turned, slowly, to Bot.

Well?” Din asked.

Which is closer?” Day added.

Bot blinked, looked at all of us, then scratched his head with a dirt-caked finger.

That depends,” he said carefully, “on whether you’re prepared to navigate your way through the unknown magical upper floor – it’s where I got caught trying to escape – or walk into the very known horrors of the crypts.

There was a beat of silence.

That wasn’t an answer,” Carrie said from in front of a large wall portrait.

I know,” Bot whispered back.

You’re serious about the magical maze upstairs?” Day asked.

Oh yes.” Bot replied. “Some kind of protective spell I guess. I was totally confused by it, but now it kind of completely makes sense if they’ve got something valuable, like the crystal up there.

So…the crypts then?” Din said, sounding just a little too unsure.

We moved quietly down the corridor, passing a series of faded tapestries and dark, oil-painted portraits, all sallow cheeks, thin lips, and disapproving eyes that seemed to follow us as we moved. Carrie hung near the back, pausing to study a few in suspicious detail. At the far end of the corridor, At the end of the hall, Yak and Wikis leaned in to listen, checking the edges of the door for movement or sound. Din and Trunch flanked Umberto, just in case he decided now was the time for vengeance.

Day motioned for Carrie to keep up. I wandered back to fetch her, and caught her red handed.
She’d produced a charcoal stub from somewhere and was, with quiet precision, ‘suggestively enhancing’ several of the portraits.

One portrait now featured a woman with dramatically larger breasts. The eyes of the stern gentleman in the portrait adjacent having been edited to now be staring hungrily at them. Another now had a suggestively placed banana. A third, previously stoic noblewoman, now had an exaggerated wink and a well coiffed moustache. 

Carrie looked at me innocently, charcoal gripped in hand.
What?” she whispered. “They started it.

There was a nod of agreement between Yak and Wikis. Wikis reached out and pushed. The door creaked open.

A breathless moment passed—

Shit,” Yak muttered.

Not empty!” Wikis hissed, already drawing.

Two guards stared at us from across the room, eyes wide, mouths opening.

The first guard inhaled to shout—

Thunk.

An arrow punched through his neck, silencing him mid-breath. He dropped, but Day was faster. He dashed forward and caught the man mid-fall, gently lowering him to the floor before his body could crash into the ceramic vase full of swords beside him.

The second guard froze for a split-second, then bolted.

Wikis!” Carrie snapped.

I’m trying!” Wikis fumbled with her bowstring.

The guard was halfway across the room, hand outstretched for the door.

Yak launched forward. In a blur, he vaulted a table, kicked off a nearby stool, and landed behind the fleeing guard. He reached out and slammed the man’s head into the stone wall just above the handle with a sickening crack.

The guard crumpled to the floor.

You said it was clear,” Carrie snapped.

I meant it felt clear.

That’s not a thing,” Din growled.

Yak, brushing dust off his sleeves, grinned. “On the bright side, that was very quiet. Ish.

We all looked at the splatter mark on the far wall.

…ish,” Yak repeated.

Trunch threw open a storage room door at the side of the chamber, revealing stacks of dusty crates and boxes.

In here!

The team sprang into action, dragging the two bodies across the room. And unceremoniously shoved him inside.

Wikis pulled the door shut behind them and leaned against it, breathing hard.

No more sneaking around.” Umberto snapped. “It wastes time. We stick together, kick down doors and fuck up anyone in the way.” He unclipped his axe from the harness on his back. “Anyone opposed?

He’s right,” Trunch said, a little breathless. He was standing by a tall window, peering out. “We really need to move.

We joined him.

Outside, a line of undead shuffled through an archway beneath us. Slow, aimless, and far too many of them.

Oh – that leads to the crypts,” Bot said cheerily. “Looks like they’re still recruiting.

We need to get down there,” Din growled.

Through there,” Bot said, pointing to a heavy wooden door. “The stairs to the basement are just beyond.

Day looked at Wikis and Yak and gave a quick nod. They slipped ahead, taking positions on either side of the door, whispering and pointing like a pair of overly dramatic stagehands preparing for a cue.

I thought we agreed, no more sneaking,” Umberto growled.

Then he launched himself at the door.

The impact was immediate. Wood splintered, hinges screamed, and the entire door exploded with a thunderous crash.

Umberto stood in the wreckage, chest heaving, nostrils flared. The hand gripping his axe had gone bone white at the knuckles.

BARBARA! I’M COMING FOR YOU!

Behind him, Din pressed his palms to his temples. “Oh fuck.

Beyond the wreckage of the door lay a simple, windowless chamber. Square-shaped, sparsely furnished. A few dusty crates. Shelves lined with neglected boxes.

Bot stepped in cautiously.
The door on the right leads to the servant quarters,” he murmured. “You won’t find much there. Opposite side’s another hallway, like the one we came through. Loops around to the parlor and back into the foyer.

Schkt.

The hiss of a blade drawn.
Wikis had a dagger to his throat before anyone saw her move.

You sure know a lot,” she whispered in his ear. “For someone who claims not to be Dan’del’ion.

I snuck around,” Bot said, hands raised. “A lot. Before they caught me.”

Umberto stormed forward, eyes blazing with a mix of rage and something dangerously close to lust. He stopped inches from Bot, axe raised, not to swing, just enough to make the point very clear.

The basement,” he snarled. “Where is it?

Bot flinched and pointed to a narrow stairwell tucked to the left.

There! That’s it. Only way down from inside the castle. I swear.

Umberto spun on Wikis.

You said she was going downstairs!

That’s what I heard!” Wikis snapped, defensive and indignant.

She hasn’t been this way,” Umberto growled, sniffing the air like a warhound with abandonment issues. “I’d know.”

There was a beat of confused silence before Trunch delicately stepped around the edge of Umberto’s fury radius.

Let’s… verify before anyone else gets accused of deception,” he muttered.

Day joined him at the stairs. He knelt and extended one hand, eyes flickering with quiet magic. A moment later, a small raven shimmered into view and leapt from his wrist, wings silent as it drifted into the shadows below.

We waited. Umberto seethed.

Day’s expression grew still.

They curve,” he murmured. “Stone steps. Wide. They open into a large chamber.

He blinked. “Dozens. Maybe more.

Undead?” Din asked quietly.

Day nodded. “Ghouls, Skeletons, Zombies. Packed shoulder to shoulder. There’s far too many. We go down there now, we die.” The raven fluttered back into the room and then vanished in a whisper of feathers and magic. Day stood. “We need to find another way.

A figure stepped into the room from the opposite doorway, tall, broad, and covered head to toe in dark armor etched with thorny scrollwork. The unmistakable glint of a Dan’del’ion insignia shimmered on his chest plate as he froze mid-step, taking in the scene.

Shit,” Trunch hissed.

The armored guard reached instinctively for the blade at his hip.

He never got the chance.

Day surged forward with a shout. Trunch was right behind him. Bot, with a surprising burst of energy, followed, wheezing as he charged.

The three of them slammed into the armored figure, forcing him backward through the doorway before his fingers found his hilt. The hallway beyond echoed with the sound of steel boots scuffing against stone as the guard stumbled.

Move! Let us through!” Carrie called, trying to push forward, but the bottlenecked doorway was now entirely occupied by Day’s ponytail, Trunch’s robes, and a surprising amount of Bot.

I can’t—” Din grunted, wedging a shoulder in. “They’re blocking the godsdamn—

A second guard stood in the hallway, sword already drawn.

Day raised a hand and spoke a word in a tongue I didn’t recognize. Light bloomed around him as a shimmering celestial shape that spun through the air like a radiant cyclone appeared in the doorway.

What the fuck is that, Day?” Din yelled

DON’T come in here!” Day barked over his shoulder. “You’ll get shredded!

You couldn’t summon it down the other end of the hall?

Slight miscalculation. Heat of battle. Just, don’t go near it.

I told you we should’ve gone upstairs!” Carrie huffed.

Can’t talk right now!” Trunch yelled, hurling a blast of eldritch energy down the hall, clipping the second guard’s shoulder.

Then Bot raised his cracked pipes to his lips and played a long, reedy note.

At first, nothing happened.

Then … skittering. Dozens of tiny claws on stone. The walls seemed to ripple. Rats, filthy and sharp-toothed, poured from cracks, pipes, and gaps in the floor, swarming the hallway.

The second guard screamed as the swarm engulfed him. His sword dropped from his hand as he desperately tried to backpedal away from both rats and radiance.

Day stepped forward, sword in hand, the light of the spirit guardian coiling behind him like a vengeful sun. The first guard hesitated, torn between the very real man in front of him and the glowing, faceless horror spinning at his back.

Day struck first.
Steel met steel with a sharp clang, sparks flashing in the narrow corridor. The guard parried, then slashed, his blade quick, desperate, panicked. But Day was calm. Precise. Each of his movements was clean, calculated, economical – like a man who knew exactly how long it would take to win.
The spirit guardian circled behind Day, spinning, and seething with radiant energy. Its ghostly form flickered, tendrils of light reaching toward the terrified guard.
The man’s eyes darted between Day and the spirit, sweat beading on his brow.
Day feinted low, then drove his sword up in a tight arc. The guard barely blocked in time, but his footing wavered. He stumbled back a half step and caught sight of the guardian again just behind Day’s shoulder, whirling like a divine executioner waiting for its cue.
That was all the opening Day needed. With a sharp twist, he stepped inside the guard’s reach, locked their hilts together, and drove his elbow into the man’s throat. The guard gasped, too late, as Day wrenched the sword free, pivoted, and plunged his blade between the plates of the man’s armor.
The guard choked. Twitched. And dropped.

The second guard, flailing wildly to dislodge the swarm of rats, caught Bot across the torso, opening a deep gash that splashed crimson across the floor. Sword and hand swung, stabbed, swatted, but the rats kept climbing, tangling, biting.
Trunch raised a hand, muttered something low and cold, and a sickly arc of shadow tore through the air. It struck the guard dead center in the chest with a heavy, muffled thud, like a slab of wet stone hitting flesh. The rats clinging to his torso were obliterated instantly — vaporized in a bloom of dark energy and scorched fur.

The guard slumped where he stood, lifeless, smoke curling from the hollow in his armor. The surviving rats scattered, vanishing into cracks and pipes like they’d never been there at all.

Panting. Blood. Scorched stone. The faint sound of rodents skittering in the shadows.

The hallway fell into a momentary silence, broken only by the hum of Day’s radiant guardian and the final, pitiful squeaks of dying rats.

Then footsteps and the creak of a door opening. Two figures emerged from the far end of the hall. One tall and composed, the other: Barbara Dongswallower.

Eric’s eyes widened. His hand went instinctively to the sword at his side.

Go!” he barked. “Get help from upstairs!

Barbara flinched, then turned on her heel and ran.

Day’s eyes went wide. “She’s heading upstairs! Go back around! Cut her off!

Back in the room, Umberto roared. “BARBARA!

He lunged forward,directly into the glowing aura of Day’s Spirit Guardian.

There was a flash of light, a sickly slicing sound and Umberto staggered back with a bark of pain, clutching his ribs. Radiant energy scorched across his chest like a divine slap.

I SAID DON’T COME IN HERE!” Day shouted.

Umberto’s eyes burned with rage.

Carrie, Wikis, Yak, and Din didn’t wait. They turned and bolted back the way we’d come, Din calling out behind him, “Klept! Make sure he stays there!
Sorry, What?” I blinked and looked to them for clarification.
But they were gone.

And I was alone. With Umberto.

The radiant hum of Day’s spirit guardian pulsed like a living wall between two very different hells.

Steel clashed again as Day parried Eric’s brutal overhead swing, their swords shrieking across one another. Eric was fast. Far faster than any armored man had a right to be, but Day fought like a man who’d already mapped the outcome. His eyes stayed locked, cold and focused, even as Eric drove him back a step.

Behind them, Bot stumbled against the wall, clutching his side. Blood wept through a tear in his robes, his pipes clattering to the floor. Trunch caught him.

Stay behind me,” the gnome growled, then raised a hand. A pulse of sickly light surged from his fingers, slamming into Eric’s shoulder. The armored man staggered, and Trunch grinned.

Eric snarled and lunged again, only to meet Day’s blade and a shadow-forged one that flickered into the fighter’s off-hand. The clash rang like a cracked bell.

I took a single step back towards the door that moments earlier Umberto had shattered into oblivion.

Umberto’s glare could have broken stone. Scorch marks from the spirit guardian still smoldered across his chest, but he didn’t seem to notice. All he saw was the door. The barrier. The thing between him and Barbara.

Then he looked at me.
He growled.
I swallowed.
Move.”

I… can’t,” I said. “The others—

He charged.
Panic surged. I threw up a hand, the only spell I knew bursting from my fingers. Three glowing darts of force spiraled into being and rocketed toward him slamming into the floor inches from his feet.

The stone cracked.
Umberto skidded to a halt, blinking.
What the-

I’m serious!” I squeaked. “I know more of those!” 

His eyes blazed. “You’d choose them over me?

I’d choose surviving over being flattened!” I backed up again. My hands shook. My legs shook. Other parts shook. I may have wet myself. Just a little.

Umberto roared and turned, not at me, but at the wall beside the hallway. With a bellow, he raised his axe and brought it crashing down. Stone splintered. Chips flew. He struck again.

Behind the whirling dervish that was Day’s guardian Eric drove forward, laughing. “You think you can stop this? You’re too late! The glyph will be drawn, and Lord Ieoyoch will rise again.
Trunch didn’t answer. He simply pointed.
A bell toll rang, low and mournful, and Eric’s head snapped to the side as if the source was inside his skull. He staggered again.

Now,” Trunch barked.

Day lunged, both blades aimed true. His steel blade cut low, while the shadow blade arced from above. Eric raised his sword to parry –
Too late.
Steel caught flesh. Shadow pierced through armor. A gasp. A laugh. And then he fell.

Near me, in the room, the wall groaned.
Another of Umberto’s strikes dislodged a large chunk of stone. The next, left the blade damaged – tiny flakes of steel missing where the wall bit back. Dust swirled in the air, and I stood there—helpless, horrified, and just a little damp.

Umberto, please,” I tried.

He didn’t answer. Just lifted the axe again.
From behind the spirit guardian, I heard Trunch shout, “We’re fine!” 

Day ushered the struggling Bot to his feet. The three of them looked at me through the haze of the guardian, still spinning in the doorway. Then they looked at Umberto, mindlessly trying to hack his way through several feet of solid stone. Keep an eye on Umberto! Don’t let him leave. We’ll loop back through the foyer. Stay put!

And just like that, they were gone, leaving me alone in the small chamber with the aftermath of battle, the lingering smell of death, and a silent, primal, and thoroughly enraged Umberto.

He ignored me completely. His focus was entirely on the stone wall. He was hacking at it—not with any tactical goal, but with the desperate, blunt force of a child throwing a tantrum. His great axe, meant for cleaving armor, was beginning to chip and blunt against the castle masonry. He was oblivious to the damage, oblivious to the wound scorching his chest, oblivious to everything but the rage that replaced his breath.

A small, firm object was suddenly pressed into my hand. I looked down. It was a perfectly intact, slightly sticky pastry. I looked up, and saw Yak standing there, having somehow slipped back into the room unnoticed. He gave me a quick, confident wink. His face shimmered for a heartbeat—the usual unsettling sign of his shapeshifting power in transition.

Then Yak stepped into the center of the room, directly behind Umberto. He opened his mouth, and the voice that came out was melodious, slightly breathless, and deeply recognizable.

Stop that, you silly little man.

Umberto froze, mid-swing. The axe fell to his side with a soft thud on the dusty floor. He turned slowly, the feral fury in his eyes giving way to utter confusion, then a flush of genuine, desperate relief.
Standing before him was Barbara Dongswallower. Or rather, a perfect copy of her. Yak had captured every detail: the sweeping, dark hair, the confident posture, and the gentle, almost maternal disapproval in her eyes.

Umberto moved toward her, his heavy boots slow and hesitant now. “Barbara…. I—I saw them take you, and I…

You sweet little fool,” the figure replied, turning away with a flit of her hand, as if dismissing his entire fit of dragon-rage as a minor misunderstanding.

Umberto reached out, desperate for contact, and grabbed her wrist.
How could you side with them?” Umberto pleaded, “With the court?

You couldn’t possibly understand,” she sighed, and turned to face him so quickly that her ample, generous bosom smacked him squarely in the face.

He staggered backward, briefly winded, gently rubbing the side of his face. Lower lip trembling. His face slowly moving from plum purple rage to baby pink wonder as realisation of what just happened sunk in.
Yak, as Barbara, simply stood there, a look of calm, utterly unconcerned pity on his face.

I discreetly adjusted my robes to hide my earlier ‘accident’ and stared openmouthed at what was unfolding before me. 

Umberto stepped forward, his anger beginning to subside. His breath became more even. He lunged forward toward Barbara, throwing his hands around her waist and burying his face in her chest. 

There, there.” She said, patton the top of his head gently. She glanced at me and made a face that screamed ‘I don’t know what to do now’.

Help me,” he whimpered, his voice muffled. “Help me to understand why.
The rage was fading, replaced by something almost worse: need.
His shoulders shook.
With grief.
With relief.
With possibly inappropriate joy.

I dropped my pastry. It hit the stone floor with an unenthusiastic thud.

We will,” she said softly. “We will, we just need to get back to the others.” She began to push him away. He sniffed deeply – the kind that follows tears, and his eyes darted up to Barbara’s face, sharp and investigating.
She lightly shook her shoulders and readjusted her blouse as Umberto leaned forward and sniffed again. His lips pursed.

You fucking little…

Yak began to shift, “I’m sorry dude,” he said, raising his hands. “Din asked me to help Klept and … well … we needed to calm you down. So I thought …maybe…

You…bastard.” Umberto’s color deepened, but the exhaustion won out. His shoulders sagged. He bit his lip. Then turned, and pointed a trembling finger at me.

And you… not a single word. Spoken or written. To anyone!

I wouldn’t dream of it,” I said, already bending to pick up the pastry, my mind already wandering.


He was fury incarnate. A storm bottled in mortal form, undone not by blade or fire, but by the soft hush of her voice.
“Stop that, you silly little man.”
And like thunder fading into hush, he turned.
There she stood. The countess, the enigma, the ghost in his heart. Her gaze, equal parts pity and fire, pierced the armor he had never worn but perhaps had always needed. His axe fell. His breath caught. His soul cracked open like the earth before a rainstorm.
“Barbara…” he whispered, his voice a prayer half-forgotten.

She smiled. Tragic. Beautiful. Inevitable. She smelled like secrets and crushed lilac.
“Help me understand,” he gasped, his voice a ragged tapestry of pain, passion, and poorly restrained desire.
She sighed. It was the sound of a candle flickering before the kiss of wind.
“You couldn’t possibly.”
And when she turned… and that glorious, moonlit chest collided with him like prophecy, the world changed. He did not cry out. He did not resist. He simply folded into her — a wounded knight collapsing into the velvet dusk of his sins. And there, buried in her impossible softness, he gently wept.

* Yak’s not the only one who can do a Barbara impression, I thought to myself.


Umberto’s boot came down. Crushing the pastry to paste a half-second before my fingers reached it.
Not. One. Word.” he growled, before stomping through the shattered doorway and down the hall.

Yak leaned against the doorframe beside me, wiping sweat from his brow.
Gods, he’s heavy. For a little guy,” he muttered. “That was the most emotionally compromised I’ve ever been. I think I pissed myself.

Me too,” I admitted, a little too quickly.

Yak glanced at me, “Really? Huh. Can’t even tell.” He straightened and patted my shoulder as he walked through the doorway, “You did good, buddy.

We set off toward the foyer at a brisk, definitely-not-fleeing pace, keeping what we hoped was a safe enough distance between us and Umberto, just in case he found a second wind.
Behind us, Day’s radiant guardian still whirled in the doorway like a divine tornado waiting for round two.

We reentered the foyer to the unwelcome sound of a muffled shriek and Wikis hissing ‘hold her still’.

Barbara Dongswallower – bound, gagged, and red in the face – was slumped at the top of the stairs. Din was casually sitting on her back like a disgruntled librarian resting on a particularly uncooperative book.
She was halfway through the doors,” Wikis said, boot planted on Barbara’s lower back. “This one caught her right in the—
Sckthwick.
The arrow came free. Barbara screamed into the gag.
—right cheek,” Wikis finished, holding it aloft. “Stopped her dead in her tracks.

Umberto didn’t say a word. He didn’t even look at her. He stared at the far wall, jaw clenched, eyes hollow. Rage gone. Only disgust remained.

He turned away.

I felt… spent. Completely. Magically, emotionally, digestively. I looked across at Bot, dishevelled, exhausted, emaciated from months of capture and torture.
I’m going back to Dawnsheart.” I said firmly.

Carrie looked up, alarmed. “What? Now?

I can take him,” I said, stepping forward and pointing to Bot. “He needs medical attention, and rest.
Bot gestured to his ruined tunic with still-shaking hands.
Sounds good to me. I’d rather not end up back on a hook, if it’s all the same.

Carrie gave Din a look. Din nodded. Then Carrie gently touched Bot’s shoulder, whispering a few words. A soft glow radiated from her hand, followed by a second glow from Din’s. Bot visibly straightened, some of the pain leaving his eyes.

Thank you, friends.” He clasped a hand to his chest. “We could also take her,” Bot offered, thumbing toward Barbara.
Trunch blinked. “That’s… actually a good idea.
I was wondering what we were going to do with her,” Carrie said.
We’ll take her to Tufulla,” I said. “For questioning.”

You sure?” Day asked, wiping blood from his blade.

Not really,” I said. “But I’d rather be locked in a room with her than spend one more minute dodging friendly fire from summoned guardians and Umberto’s unresolved issues.

Carrie raised a finger. “There’s one more thing before you go.

She shoved Bot into the fountain.
SPLASH.
Trunch and Day immediately jumped in, holding him down while Carrie started scrubbing at his shoulders with the vigor of a determined washerwoman.

What in the name of the Seven—!” Bot gurgled, swallowing water as he thrashed.
What are you doing?” Din cried.

Carrie glanced over her shoulder, arms still scrubbing. “Washing the Stinky Dwarf,” she replied with a cheeky smile.
Yak, leaning on the edge of the fountain, nodded knowingly. “Is that what the kids are calling it these days?

Then they let him go.

Bot surfaced, sputtering and soaked, blinking wildly. Then he went still.
…I feel amazing.
He blinked again.
I actually feel amazing.” He raised his hands, touched his head and muttered a word. A glow of radiant energy spilled from his palm and shimmered down his body. “Elaris’ blessing!” He groaned. “That feels good.

We all stared at the fountain.

Yak stuck a finger in it. “Huh.
It’s not just water,” Carrie whispered. “It’s… something else.
Restorative,” Din confirmed, already filling his waterskin.

We drank. We filled flasks. We splashed our faces, and for a moment—just a moment—the castle felt less cursed.
Then I turned to the others, adjusting my satchel.

We’ll see you back at the Grin for a drink.” Day said, offering a hand.
I really hope so,” I said, shaking it. “Be careful.
Bot clapped his hand over his heart. “I can’t remember the last time I had an ale,” he said with a crooked grin. “But I’d be honored to have one with all of you.
He reached down, grabbed the rope tied around Barbara’s bound wrists, and gave it a tug.

Umberto still didn’t look at her.

He just walked to the far end of the foyer and stared at the wall.
What’s the Grin?” Bot asked eagerly as we crossed the threshold back into the courtyard of cursed sculptures. “Is the ale good?
The Grin? It’s an absolute shithole.” I replied with a smile. “The best little shithole in the valley.
Sounds perfect.” Bot sighed.
Behind us, the door creaked shut, and the real madness continued.

Have Fun Storming The Castle

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXIX

We stood around the stump in what could loosely be called a circle — if geometry had downed several mugs of mead and been spun around a few times. No one wanted to say it aloud. Maybe we didn’t need to. We all saw it.

Even in the dark — that deep, unnatural, starless dark — the signs were clear.
There’d been more activity since our last visit. A lot more. The ground was flattened, scuffed, churned. Boot prints. Claw marks. Deep indentations in the soil, some small, some… not.

And most of them didn’t lead to the stump. They led out. Something had passed through. Something was waiting. Somewhere. It wasn’t clear what. Or how many. Some, I realized, must have belonged to the group that came through the stump the last time we were here – when Jonath got shoved through and Dominic came back disguised as him. But there seemed to be many more.

Carrie coughed.
It was less fairy delicacy and more headmistress summoning confession. A sharp, pointed sound that sliced through the silence like a ruler on a desk.
She fixed Trunch with a look that could only be described as:
‘Well? Come on, out with it, young man — I haven’t got all day.’

Trunch stood with his head bowed and eyes closed. He might have been mumbling to himself. He might also have been asleep.
Neither would’ve been surprising.

Day attempted to elbow him in the ribs, but the height difference between the elf and the gnome turned the gesture into more of a glancing jab to the temple. Trunch jolted upright immediately, blinking wide.

Yes, right, you’re all…” he blinked, fumbling through his pouch, “...going to need one of these, I think.

He pulled out a small cloth-wrapped bundle and carefully unwrapped it. Inside: a pile of Dan’del’ion medallions. The simple kind. The ones they’d collected from the festival attackers, the graveyard skeletons, and most of the group that had chased us the last time we were here.

Wikis took one look and recoiled.
I’m not putting one of those things around my neck again,” she snapped.

Yeah,” Din added, eyeing the medallions warily, “that didn’t exactly work out so well last time.

You don’t need to wear them,” Trunch assured, handing them out to gingerly accepting hands. “Just hold them. I’m fairly certain this won’t work… but I need to be absolutely sure.”

Okay,” Yak muttered, not looking up from the medallion in his palm, “now what?

Now,” Trunch said calmly, “we all step onto the stump.

Nobody moved. Not even Trunch.

It was Carrie who stepped forward first.
Let’s just get it over with. The sooner we do it, the sooner we get to the castle — hopefully,” she sighed.

A few murmured agreements and slow nods later, everyone had a foot on the stump.

Well? What’s supposed to happen?” Umberto barked.

Because nothing did.

We just stood there, one foot each on the stump, like a group of confused villagers halfway through the world’s most underwhelming maypole dance.

Wasn’t it something to do with moonlight?” Wikis asked.

Instinctively, we all looked up.
The last of the stars had vanished. The sky glowed faintly, pink and purple, washed in the light from the beam over the mountains, but there was no moon in sight.

Isn’t this all supposed to trigger some kind of eclipse?” Carrie asked, confused.

Supposedly,” I replied. “But usually that requires a moon. And a sun. Not necessarily in that order. This feels… different.

Not natural,” Wikis hissed.

Maybe there are some clouds. Really high up or something,” Yak offered.

Hmm. Not to worry,” Trunch said, matter-of-factly. “I have another idea.

He pulled out the larger medallion — the one recovered from the undead direwolf rider, with the milky white stone in the centre.

I’m not sure how this works best,” he murmured, looking around and quietly counting heads. “Maybe… yes. Everyone back on the stump.

We obeyed, hesitantly. Day had to pull me on.

Now,” Trunch said, meeting each of our eyes in turn, “place a finger on the medallion.

There was a sudden, nauseating tug at the centre of my core — like the drop of a cart cresting a hill too fast. Glancing around, I could tell the others felt it too.

Din, Wikis, and Yak immediately yanked their fingers away.

Interesting,” Trunch mused, pulling out the same pouch he’d clutched during his nap on the cart ride. He gestured for us to try again. “The gem is moonstone,” he explained. “I consulted with Holadamus, as Tufulla suggested.

Buddy,” Umberto grunted, “less talky-talky, more fthump.” He made a disappearing motion with his hands and placed his finger back on the stone.

Yes,… but…It needs a command word. Something to activate the enchantment,” Trunch said. “Then it should emit moonlight.

And…?” Din asked, voice tight. “You guys figured out the word, right?

We tried dozens of words,” Trunch admitted, suddenly solemn. “In dozens of different languages. We couldn’t activate it.

There was an audible exhale of relief from several people.

So why are we doing this, then?” Carrie asked, clearly losing patience.

Oh, because I think this will work,” Trunch replied, casually pulling a smooth white stone from the pouch. A chorus of voices cut in.
Wait what are you—
Trunch, maybe we should—
I don’t think—

He held the stone aloft, “Luminara.

The clearing exploded with white light — moonlight, impossibly bright, impossibly pure. There was a sound. Or maybe it was a feeling. Either way, it was a lot like air being sucked through a keyhole at impossible speed. We were yanked. Not by arm or leg, but by something deeper — as if a rope had been tied around the very centre of our balance and pulled hard. The kind of pull that steals your breath and your bearings at once. A violent, invisible hook that tore us upward and forward in a blink.

We moved miles in fractions of a second. Upward. Outward. Through something. It wasn’t flying. It was falling sideways through the world. I don’t know if we screamed. 

I think maybe I did.

We hit the ground hard. Not hit, exactly — more like landed wrong in a place we were never supposed to be. The air was thinner. Sharper. Colder. The light was strange. Everything was too still.

My ears rang. My head spun.

Behind me, Day doubled over and retched — quietly, efficiently, with all the elegance of someone who had never vomited publicly in his life. A thin string of sick landed on his boot.

A second later, Umberto leaned forward, hands on knees, and let loose a guttural roar of a heave that echoed through our surroundings. He groaned, wiping his mouth, “what in all the gods’ groins was that?

A moonstone” Trunch wheezed, still lying on his back. “I borrowed it from Holadamus.

Yeah, that we got,” Carrie said, dusting herself off. “I think what Umberto is asking is ‘what the fuck just happened?’

Teleportation,” Trunch got to his feet. “The moonstone activated the portal. Of course it was improperly buffered, but it was the best I could come up with. Then, instantaneous travel over high altitude and long distance. Not… ideal, but it seems to have worked.” He balanced himself with his hands on his knees.

No shit,” Yak muttered, blinking furiously. “I think my eyeballs reversed.

I was still blinking stars when Wikis straightened. Eyes forward. Hand up. Still as stone. Then she moved, fast and low, guiding us with clipped whispers and sharp gestures toward a cluster of nearby stone figures. Statues. Tall, robed, faceless figures carved into jagged poses. But they weren’t decorative. They were meant to intimidate.

More importantly — they were cover.

We ducked behind them just as a pair of shadowy figures emerged on a wall above — patrolling.

No one spoke.

We didn’t need to.

Wikis’ eyes were locked forward, already scanning the terrain. Carrie crouched beside her, wings pulled tight against her back. Trunch leaned against the statue and put the pouch back into his satchel with a satisfied pat, like he was congratulating a pet for a job well done. Din steadied Day. Umberto sniffed the air, scowled, then spat – I assume it was for reasons of balance. 

We’d arrived in a garden — or possibly a courtyard. It was hard to tell. There was very little actual garden to speak of, unless one counts ‘dust,’ ‘moss,’ and ‘deep emotional discomfort’ as flora. The space itself was vast — easily the size of Dawnsheart’s main square, which, I remind, was currently smouldering, having recently been incinerated by an adolescent dragon with a grudge.

A few of the statues were scattered around for ambience — tall, contorted figures frozen mid-howl or lurch, clearly designed by someone who’d never heard the phrase less is more and thought ‘grotesque horror’ would pair nicely with a landscaping feature. We were enclosed on all sides by high walls and grim ramparts, the architectural equivalent of a sneer. 

And the lighting — well, that was new.

Aside from the rather confronting pinkish-purpleish glow that dominated the sky, seven lamp-posts, if you could call them that, loomed across the space like petrified scorpion tails. They twisted up from the ground like gnarled tree roots, curled at the top, and cradled large, glowing orbs that cast an eerie, soft light across the courtyard. Each orb hovered gently, pulsing with the soft, familiar gleam of moonlight. Seven squash sized moonstone orbs.

And at the base of every lamp was the Dan’del’ion sigil, glittering like a spiderweb in a morning frost. 

It took us a few blinks and several whispered profanities to process the implications. Seven lamps. Seven orbs. Seven carved symbols. Seven stumps.

Tufulla and the white ravens hadn’t found them all yet.

I made a mental note: the one behind us, the one we’d come through with our usual grace, was clearly connected to the stump near Nelb. The others? No labels. No directions. No helpful arrows with “You Are Here” maps.

Just the quiet understanding that the Court’s network was larger than we’d hoped. And far more complete.

I didn’t like it.

And neither did my internal organs, which were still trying to re-enter my body one at a time.

Castle Ieyoch loomed at the far end of the courtyard. Tall, jagged, and aggressively symmetrical, like someone had tried to build intimidation using a ruler, a stencil set, and a deep, lingering hatred of curves. Spires jabbed at the sky like accusations. The rooflines were steep and humourless, every tile and balustrade arranged with obsessive precision, like someone had said ‘make it gothic, but meaner.’

It had once been elegant. But that elegance had long since curdled into menace. Whatever charm it might’ve held had been stripped away by time, fire, and neglect. Once the cold, dead heart of an oppressive regime, it had been left to rot — a chapter the valley’s people had convinced themselves was folklore.

And yet, someone was rebuilding it.

Signs of restoration clung to the walls like scaffolding-shaped guilt. Timber frames stretched awkwardly between buttresses. A section of the southern tower wore a crude wooden brace, and patches of stonework were fresher than the rest, gleaming faintly in the purple light like newly healed scars.

The whole place smelled like damp mortar and unresolved trauma.

From the upper floors, a beam of pink-violet light pulsed steadily skyward. It stained the night in eerie, beautiful horror.
Day nodded in its direction.
So… the crystal thing is up there, right?” he whispered.

A quiet chorus of nods followed.

And somewhere inside,” Din added, voice low, “is the long-dead vampire lord they’re trying to resurrect?

Another nod. Less enthusiastic. 

Something felt… off. There were no orders being barked. No marching boots. No ghouls on chains. No waiting undead horde. No robed cultists. Just eerie stillness and quiet – like the world was holding its breath. 

It didn’t feel like a stronghold. It felt like a stage.

Were we too late?
Had they already gone — dispatched across the valley while we fumbled with medallions and moonstones?

Or were we early?
Was everyone inside — cloaked and chanting, eyes closed, hands outstretched — making the final preparations for whatever came next?

Which do we look for first?” Carrie asked, eyes wide in wonder, or horror at the sight in front of us. “The crystal, or the corpse?”

I think, we need to get inside first.” Day replied.

So let’s get moving,” Umberto grunted, already stepping toward the castle doors.

Day grabbed his arm and pulled him back. “We need to be careful. We don’t know what, or how many are inside.

Umberto huffed.

We need to make sure we aren’t seen by them.” Trunch pointed to the walls. Four guards paced the ramparts above, their lanterns casting long shadows over half-repaired battlements.

And we need to figure out how to get past them,” Day added, nodding toward the castle steps.

Two enormous direwolves prowled the base of the stairway. Their riders sat high in blackened armor — not flashy, just quietly confident that you would regret crossing them.
I don’t know if you remember, but just one of those bastards nearly took us out in the forest” Day muttered.

And that was it. Four guards. Two riders. A space built for hundreds. Something was definitely not right.

I leaned closer. “So… what’s the plan?

No one answered.

Probably because — like me — they were still deciding what was most alarming: The glowing beam of necromantic energy. The heavily armed patrol on the ramparts above. The armored direwolf cavalry. Or the deeply unsettling fact that the Dan’del’ion Court had managed to organize construction crews.

Possibly because — knowing them — the idea of a well-thought-out, clearly communicated plan is both foreign and personally offensive.

A moment of quiet followed. The kind that fills your lungs with dread and dares you to exhale. I think a tumbleweed rolled past. It might’ve just been a shadow. Either way, it wasn’t exactly reassuring.

Psst.
Yak, crouched behind one of the gargoyle-styled statues, waved us over with the urgency of someone who had definitely just seen something we hadn’t.
He pointed.
Tucked against the far wall of the courtyard was a squat, moss-choked structure – glass-walled, iron-framed, and barely holding itself together. An old atrium or greenhouse, by the look of it. The windows were grimy, thick with decades of ash, rain, and architectural neglect. Thick glass, bubbled and warped, gave only vague hints of the overgrown ruin inside. Still, it was shelter.
And from the looks of it, it was unguarded.

We moved.
Fast, low, and quiet. A blur of soot-stained cloaks and hasty glances. No shouts. No arrows. No angry howls. By some miracle, the direwolf riders didn’t see us. The rampart patrols didn’t look down. One by one, we slipped through a twisted iron door and vanished inside.

I didn’t know exactly what I expected when we slipped inside, but it certainly wasn’t this.

The interior had been repurposed with all the grace and finesse of a bandit hideout crossed with a barracks. A dozen narrow cots lined the space. Four suits of Dan’del’ion armor stood propped awkwardly on a rack near the doorway, like mannequins dressed for a funeral no one wanted to attend.

A hearth crackled dimly in the corner, offering just enough warmth to remind you how cold the rest of the place was. Against the far wall, a desk sagged under the weight of chaotic paperwork, while two half-eaten meals sat on a rickety table nearby — one of them still steaming.

It smelled like stale ale, wet socks, and the kind of hygiene that only gets worse with confidence.

Carrie wrinkled her nose. Umberto cursed. Loudly. Din took one look around and muttered, “Oh great. There’s absolutely no chance of anything going wrong in here.”

That’s when we heard it — the unmistakable rhythm of snoring.
And worse — the sound of someone shifting in their cot.

We froze. Din exhaled in way that said: Told you so.

Four cots were occupied. Four rising and falling chests. Four deeply asleep individuals, unaware that a group of soot-covered misfits had just wandered in.

This could be advantageous,” Trunch whispered, barely audible. He gestured toward the armor. “We could use those. Disguise ourselves. Move past the guards unnoticed.

Carrie glanced at the rack, then slowly held up four fingers. Then she turned to Trunch and slowly held up four more. “There’s eight of us you turnip. What’s your plan, Trunch? Stack us like four kobolds in a trench coat?”

Wikis, meanwhile, was already at the desk — rifling through the papers with the focused intensity of a raccoon who’d just discovered an unguarded picnic.

There’s a shift change coming up,” she hissed, slipping back with a folded scrap in hand. “These guys are scheduled to relieve the wall guards.
She held up the paper like proof of treason.

Wonderful. So… they’re about to wake up,” Carrie said grimly.

We could tie them up,” I suggested. Mostly because I hadn’t thought it through at all and felt like I should say something before someone noticed I was just standing there blinking.

And then what?” Wikis asked, flatly.

We take their place,” Trunch offered, always the optimist when it came to impersonating cultists.

Din nodded slowly. “Could work. But it can’t be all of us. And what if they wake up while we’re tying them up?

Then we take them out,” Umberto said a little too quickly, casting a glance at the cots that could only be described as enthusiastic.

Yeah — and then the whole courtyard’s on alert,” Day muttered, peeking through the grimy greenhouse glass.

We don’t let them wake up,” Yak said quietly.

He stepped forward, knelt beside the nearest cot, and for a moment, we all assumed he was about to produce some sort of sleeping draught or knockout dust or whatever mysterious goblin brews he carried in his endless pockets.

Oh, he’s got a potion or something,” Carrie whispered, hopeful.

Not exactly,” Yak replied.

The sound was soft. Precise. A clean ‘schtk’ of metal — out, then in again. Silent. Efficient. Lethal.

The body in the cot stilled.

Any objections?” Yak asked, calmly.

We blinked. In unison.
It wasn’t fear, not exactly. More… the unsettling kind of respect that creeps in when you suddenly remember your friend knows how to make people disappear.

Plans are often born from panic, and this one was no exception.

We couldn’t all sneak into the castle unnoticed — not with guards on the walls, wolves on the steps, and a courtyard lit up like a midsummer festival. But a shift change? That gave us a chance. A window. A strategy.

We thought fast. In hindsight, maybe we could have thought more … thoroughly, but we had the beginnings of a plan at least.

Day, Trunch, Wikis, and Yak would take the place of the sleeping guards and head to the ramparts. The rest of us would stay behind, deal with the next group when they came in. Quietly. Efficiently. Hopefully with less blood than usual.

Yak had already ensured three wouldn’t be waking up for roll call.

He moved like breath — in and out — and by the time you noticed, someone was already dead.

He was just slipping the dagger away from the third cot when Umberto stepped forward.

That’s cheating,” he said, voice low.

Yak blinked at him. “Sorry?

Killing them in their sleep. Too easy. No honour in that.

Yak tilted his head, genuinely baffled.
We’re in a cursed greenhouse, quietly murdering cult guards so we can wear their clothes and lie about our identities. I don’t think honour showed up for work today.

Cursed?” Wikis hissed, eyes darting around the room like they were trying to escape her skull. “Wait—how do you know it’s cursed? What kind of cursed?

In front of Yak and Umberto, the sleeping guard shifted slightly.
There was a collective inhale.
Then the snoring resumed.
Then a collective exhale, the kind of synchronized panic-release you only get from a group this profoundly accustomed to near-death.

I’m doing this one,” Umberto announced, plucking the dagger delicately from Yak’s fingers like they were passing a ceremonial torch.

Yak hesitated. “It’s not as easy as it looks. There’s a method to it,” he said quickly. “You’ve got to angle the blade. Not too deep, not too shallow. You want the larynx and artery, not the shoulder blade—

Yeah yeah,” Umberto grunted, raising the dagger.

He plunged it down — and missed. The blade caught shoulder instead of throat, and the guard jerked upright with a howl of pain.

It was the sound of a loosely thought out plan dying. Loudly. And without dignity.

Umberto clamped a hand over the guard’s mouth, forcing him back into the cot as his legs kicked wildly.

Give me the dagger!” Yak hissed harshly.

Umberto growled, refusing to let go.

A short, frantic struggle followed, the dagger ended up clattering to the floor and Umberto, abandoning all subtlety, resorted to the oldest, loudest method available: fists.

He beat the man with both hands and all his fury, snarling through gritted teeth like this was personal. Which, knowing Umberto, it might’ve been.

Eventually, the guard stopped moving. The room was filled with the sound of heavy breathing and suppressed horror.

Problem solved,” Umberto said, wiping his bloody hands over his bare stomach.

Yak just stared at him.

Well,” Day said abruptly, turning from another glance out the door. “That seems to have caught the attention of one of the wolf riders. He’s heading this way.

He squinted through the glass again. “Slowly,” he added, with a look of confusion.

Whatever we’re doing, we need to do it now,” Din said.

Hide the bodies,” Carrie hissed, flitting toward the center of the room.

Where?” Umberto growled. “It’s not like there’s a cupboard we can throw them in.

Carrie’s eyes lingered on the hearth for a beat too long before she shook her head and scanned the rest of the room instead.

We’ve got a couple of minutes at most with the speed he’s ambling over at,” Day said, still watching the rider’s approach.

Didn’t you say you hid Tufulla in a pocket in the ceiling during the Dominic fight?” I asked. “Could you do something like that again?

Yak clicked his fingers at me and nodded.

Wikis uncoiled a rope and tossed it into the air. It hung there — connected to absolutely nothing. She scrambled up and disappeared mid-climb like a raccoon vanishing into a treetop. Her head reappeared moments later.

Toss them up,” she said, as matter-of-factly as if she’d asked for a mug of tea. “And then get up here unless you’re going out on the wall — there’s enough room.

Umberto scurried up the rope in a fashion that made his loincloth an extremely public garment.
The bodies followed — quickly, if not gracefully. One took several attempts.
Carrie fluttered up and vanished. Wikis slid back down.

I climbed after and extended a hand to Din, who grunted and struggled beneath the weight of his full plate. This was not exactly his area of expertise.

Below us, Day, Trunch, Yak, and Wikis took their positions in the now-vacant cots — ‘asleep’ and as inconspicuous as possible. I saw Day mutter something under his breath and flick his hand. A raven shimmered into existence at his feet — sleek, silent, and already watching.

With a simple gesture, he sent it fluttering up into the rafters. It vanished almost instantly, lost in the crossbeams and shadows.

I’d seen Tufulla use Solstice the same way — remote sight, extra senses — but Day didn’t hesitate, didn’t overthink. Just conjured, directed, and lay down. Blanket pulled over his head, back to the entrance. Watching through the raven’s eyes.

It was quick. Practical. Efficient.

Exactly what we needed.

Din and I reeled in the rope, and the boundary between our space and theirs closed.

The moment the end of the rope was pulled through the portal, Umberto gave a loud grunt and heaved one of the bodies across to the far side of the cramped extra-dimensional space.

Just rearranging the furniture,” he said.

I froze. “Shh! They’ll hear us!

Carrie giggled. “No they won’t. Wikis explained it all after the Dominic fight,” she gestured vaguely, “Sound doesn’t travel in or out. We can see them, but they can’t see us. Or hear us.

I blinked. “That’s… incredible. Why don’t we use this all the time?

Din shrugged. “Because Wikis forgets she can do it.

That… tracks.

Umberto groaned and dragged another body to the wall, stacking it with more interior design enthusiasm than I was comfortable with.

We might be here a while,” he muttered. “Might as well be comfortable.

I shifted uneasily, attempting to find a spot that wasn’t elbow, boot, or shoulder. “How long does this thing last?

A few minutes,” Carrie said breezily. “Before we run out of air and it all collapses in on itself, crushing us in the process.

I gaped at her, eyes wide, before Din helpfully added: “No. Wikis said it lasts about an hour. Then it disappears and drops everything back down.

Ah,” I said. “Only mildly better.” I glanced at the bloodied and lifeless guards, and then peered out at the drop to the floor below, “and slightly messier.

We settled in, watching the silent scene unfold below — the view strange and glassy, like peering through the bottom of a bottle. Moments later a large snout appeared in the doorway. Quickly followed by more of the beast.

The rider ducked low as his wolf entered, padding forward with the unhurried confidence of a creature that had never been prey. Like the undead version we’d encountered in the forest, it was huge — all muscle, shadow, and teeth. It sniffed the air like it already knew what it was about to find. The guard dismounted with lazy grace — casual, almost bored, as if this entire check-in was an inconvenience beneath his station. One hand stayed on the pommel of his sword. The other scratched the wolf’s thick-furred neck. We watched its lips curl in a silent growl. Watched the rider speak to the room — but thanks to the soundless pocket Wikis had conjured, we heard nothing. Just glassy silence.

He waited.

Our friends lay still, feigning sleep, and the rider — with no warning — drew his blade.

Long. Dark. And even from above, unmistakably sharp.

There was a collective swallow.

He moved to the nearest cot and, without pause, stabbed down. The blade punched clean through pillow and straw.

Then the next.

Another spoken command.

Stab.

Then another.

Stab.

He walked slowly, deliberately, working his way down the row — inching closer to where our friends lay.

To be fair,” Carrie whispered, “Trunch might actually be asleep. He did pass out on the cart. I imagine he finds that cot very comfortable.

I heard the faint click of Umberto unfastening his axe from his back. Then the creak of leather under a white-knuckled grip.

If he gets one of them,” he growled, “I’ll finish him and his dog before he gets another.

The rider reached Trunch’s cot.

Paused.

Every muscle in my body seized. No one flinched — not up here, not down there. It felt like watching a disaster in slow motion, knowing full well you couldn’t scream to stop it.

He raised the blade.

We held our breath.

Umberto’s knuckles went bone white.

Then the rider’s head snapped toward the doorway. The wolf’s did too. Ears pricked. Nose twitching.

It looked at him. Then the door. Then back again.

He froze mid-thrust. Frowned.

Lowered the blade.

Somewhere outside, something had happened. A clang? A voice? A breeze out of place? We couldn’t tell,  couldn’t hear a thing. But both rider and wolf had heard it.

And that was enough.

The rider stepped back, sword still drawn. He muttered something then marched stiffly to his mount and swung himself into the saddle.

One last barked command over his shoulder.

Then he was gone, riding low and slow, like someone whose instincts had finally caught up with his arrogance.

No one breathed for ten full seconds.

Carrie opened the barrier and stuck her head out, whispering down with wide eyes,
Too close. What happened? Why’d he leave?

Yak bolted upright, voice low and fast.
There was a noise outside — shouting, I think.”

Wikis sat up too, peeling the blanket off her face and glancing toward the door.
He was about to gut us. That wolf knew something was off.

Day sat up slowly, rubbing his eyes.
Something’s happening out there.

Umberto leaned over the edge beside Carrie.
Then what the hell was the noise?

I don’t know,” Yak admitted. “Didn’t sound like a fight. Just… sharp. Sudden.

It looked like he said something. What was it?” Carrie asked.

He called us lazy pricks,” Wikis muttered, “Said if we didn’t get up and man the walls, he’d kill us himself. Then he started stabbing pillows.

Trunch shook his head.
These guys are serious. He didn’t even hesitate. He was willing to kill his own men.

The shift change. We need to get moving.” Yak was already pulling on one of the armor sets. “Before he comes back.

Day stood, as a raven swooped down from the rafters and out the door. His eyes glazed over and he cocked his head slightly to one side.

Oh Shit.” Wikis said reaching for her bow, “Day’s falling under the curse.

No, he isn’t,” I said, climbing down the rope. “He’s just temporarily seeing through the raven. I’ve seen Tufulla do it with Solstice.

Wikis eyed Day. Then me. Then the doorway — as if neither of us had earned her trust and she had zero plans to start now.

He’s heading back to his post,” Day said. His voice was distant, eyes clouded.
Two more just arrived. Walking up the stairs.

Can you see who?” Din asked.

Day murmured something under his breath, brow furrowed.
They’re shouting orders. The riders are nodding. It’s Naida. And Erik — the big guy from the Briars.

Fuck,” Umberto growled.

Naida’s asking if they’ve arrived,” Day continued.

They?” Carrie frowned. “Who’s supposed to arrive?

Maybe she means us,” Umberto muttered. “They’re probably expecting us.

I don’t think so,” Trunch interjected, giving a final tug on a pair of boots slightly too big for him. “Not yet, anyway. She wouldn’t think we could use the stumps. If she suspects we’re coming, she still thinks we’re hours out.

I bet it’s Brenne,” Umberto said, eyes narrowing, “I knew she was hiding something.

Day’s head tilted. His voice sharpened slightly.
“They’ve gone inside. Naida and Erik. She told the guard to find out what happened to Dominic.

The group fell quiet.

The armor looked… wrong on all of them. Ill-fitted, mismatched, poorly strapped. Wikis and Trunch were half a foot too short. Day stood a little too tall. Yak’s armor looked like it was trying to escape his body altogether — but his face, at least, matched. He’d shifted into the likeness of one of the guards he’d ‘silenced’ and tossed into the extra-dimensional crawlspace above.

Trunch straightened up next to Day with the posture of someone trying very hard to look official.

Right,” he said, in his best approximation of confident leadership, “We’ll go and, um, take over on the, ah… wall patrol. You wait in here. When the other guards arrive, you, uh… take care of them.

We’ve got it covered on this end,” Din assured him, placing a steadying hand on his shoulder. “Just make sure to let us know when you’re in position.

I’ll send my raven back in,” Day said, his voice slipping into a clipped, official tone. “That’ll be your signal. I can also use a spell to speak directly into your minds, if we need to coordinate the next step.

I can do that too, you know,” Carrie added with exaggerated drama, as though she’d been waiting for someone to ask.

Great,” Din replied dryly. “We have multiple ways of keeping in contact. Just, use them only if necessary. I’m getting low on energy. Could really use a rest.

We don’t have time to rest,” Trunch replied, pulling on a too-large gauntlet. “We’ll just have to make do. Use magic sparingly. Up close, hand-to-hand—like Yak did—is probably going to draw the least attention.

Yeah,” Umberto barked, cracking his knuckles. “I’ve got that covered. Just get them in here.

A couple of quick handshakes, fistbumps and ‘good lucks’ later and they headed out. We quickly took up positions. Din and Umberto either side of the doorway crouched low. Carrie flew up into the space, pulling the rope up behind her, wand at the ready. Me – I took up residence behind Din, pressed up against the wall – heart pounding. Sweat dripping off my head in the mountain cold. It felt like an eternity.

The first one came alone.

We heard his footsteps before we saw him — the steady, tired clank of someone finishing a shift, expecting warmth and ale and maybe a nap before dawn.

Umberto’s eyes lit up. Genuinely lit up.

He crouched beside the door like a wolf preparing to pounce on a ham sandwich.

Din raised a hand. “Wait until he’s fully inside,” he whispered.

Umberto didn’t respond. He just nodded once, eyes wide, already smiling.

A long shadow appeared at the door.

The guard stepped in.

And that was all it took.

Umberto lunged with a speed and enthusiasm that could only be described as deeply personal. His fist hit the guard square in the side of the head, sending the poor bastard sideways into the wall with a dull thunk. There was a short, muffled grunt — more surprise than pain — and then Umberto dragged the limp form into the center of the  room.

“Didn’t even drop his lantern,” he said proudly, holding up the glowing thing like a prize.

Carrie stuck her head out from nowhere and dropped the rope. “Up.

Umberto flung the guard’s body over his shoulder with ease and clambered up like a man returning a borrowed cushion.

Through the thick glass window I watched the second guard approach, and heard him moments later.

He was humming.

To himself.

Out of tune.

Din straightened, adjusted his grip on the warhammer strapped across his back, and moved closer to the doorway. No muttering, no magic, just quiet intent.

I leaned closer. “No spell?

Din didn’t look back. “Don’t need one.

Another shadow, accompanied by an off key note.

The guard stepped inside, mid-hum, his lantern casting long shadows ahead of him. He barely had time to blink.

Din’s hammer struck squarely in the chest — not a swing, not a smash, just a sudden, perfectly timed thump that landed with surgical brutality.

The sound was quiet. The impact wasn’t.

The guard folded inward like someone had cut his strings.

Din caught him by the collar and eased him to the floor before the lantern could rattle loose.

Carrie’s head appeared in an instant, Umberto appeared beside her. 

Same place,” she said.

Din didn’t respond. He just hauled the body upward like it weighed nothing. Umberto leaned out and caught it like a trapeze artist and hauled it in. Carrie fluttered down seconds later with Umberto sliding down the rope behind her.

I looked back at the flickering ceiling portal. The magical corpse loft.

Do we… have a plan for when that spell ends?” I asked.

Carrie blinked at me.

What do you mean?

I mean, the pocket. The ceiling hole. The floating meat library. It ends eventually, right?

Well, yeah,” she said, “But not for, like, an hour.

Yes, but then… what happens? All the bodies just fall back down?”

Carrie tilted her head, thoughtful. “Technically yes.

I stared at her. She stared back.

What would you like to happen?” she asked, as if I was the unreasonable one.

I don’t know! I was hoping for less gravity and more long-term planning!

She patted my shoulder. “By then, it’ll be someone else’s problem,” she smiled.

Din straightened suddenly.

Not like he’d heard something with his ears — more like something had spoken directly to his bones.

He turned to me and muttered under his breath, “Two more. Coming together.

I blinked. “From Day?

Din nodded. “Said they were more suspicious. Yak had to talk them into it. Apparently… they’re still not convinced.

Carrie dropped back into the room from above, and fluttered over to the window “Two of them. They’re talking outside the door.” She whispered.

We froze.

Pressed low. Hearts hammering.

The voices came muffled through the glass and wood — close, cautious.

“Did he seem a little… off to you?”
“Yeah. Didn’t sound right.”
“And was he shorter?”
“Definitely shorter. I thought that too.”

Then a rasp of steel.

Carrie hissed, “They’ve drawn swords.

“I think someone’s in there.”
“Then we go in together.”

Footsteps. Slow. Measured.

I didn’t breathe.

The first stepped in, sword raised, eyes scanning the room.

Din moved first. He surged forward and drove the flat of his hammer toward the man’s ribs — but the guard twisted at the last second, grunting as the blow clipped him sideways instead.

That was enough.

The room exploded into motion.

Umberto barrelled into the second guard like a landslide made of elbows, snarling through his teeth as the two crashed into a nearby cot and splintered it like dry kindling. Feathers, dust, and curses flew through the air.

Din’s opponent swung wildly, blade catching a lantern and sending it spinning across the room in a wash of sparks.

Carrie shouted something but I was too busy ducking under a chair someone had weaponized to hear it.

One of the guards went down — Din struck clean this time, dropping him with a single hammer blow that thudded through the floorboards.

The other slipped from Umberto’s grasp, blood trailing down his face from a broken nose. He bolted for the doorway.

And screamed.

GUARDS! THERE’S —

HALT!
Carrie’s voice rang out — not loud, but sharp. Precise.
A single word, soaked in magic.

The guard froze mid-step. Mid-breath. One foot still raised, sword half-lowered, mouth open. The rest of the sentence died behind his teeth.

Din moved first — hammer to the gut, then shoulder to the wall. Umberto followed with a crunching blow to the jaw that snapped the man’s head sideways and dropped him like a sack of bones. The body slumped just inside the doorway.

Carrie lowered her wand, breathing hard. 

We all stared at the still form on the ground.

Through the grimy glass, just beyond the twisted iron frame of the greenhouse, movement caught my eye. A tall silhouette. Broad shoulders. A glint of metal at the hip. Dark shape beneath.

One of the riders. He was heading our way — faster this time, more deliberate.

I didn’t think he’d seen anything. Not yet.
But the way he moved… Head tilted. Posture alert. Like he’d smelled smoke on the wind and was trying to place it.

I swallowed hard and backed away from the door.

He’s coming back.

Din stood, breathing heavily. He wiped a smear of blood from his lip. “Put him with the others,” he said, already stooping to scoop up the fallen guard’s helmet. He tucked it under one arm. “And get ready.” Then he stepped out through the doorway.

The mounted guard approached through the courtyard gloom — tall, and deliberate. The wolf sniffed at the air.

We have a problem,” Din said confidently, as the rider closed the distance.

What is it?

One of the recruits. The others played a prank. Set him on fire. Accidentally.

The rider snorted. “Get out of my way.” He pushed past.

The wolf padded into the greenhouse just as we were trying, and failing, to hoist the most recent corpse up the rope.

We froze.

Carrie gave him a bright, theatrical smile and an entirely unconvincing, “Hi.

The rider’s brow furrowed. His wolf bared its teeth.
What the fuck?” he growled.

Din stepped in behind him, cutting off the exit.
As I said,” he muttered, “we have a problem.

The guard slide from his saddle. Umberto let him. Din didn’t move. The guard drew his sword and a fanged smile crept across his lips. His wolf tensed, fangs bared.

Bold. Brave. Stupid.” The guard growled. He lunged.

Too late.

Umberto met him mid-lunge with the kind of tackle that doesn’t win awards but ends fights. The two slammed into a rack of armor — helmets and gauntlets crashing like coins on cobblestone.

The wolf leapt.
Din spun with practiced precision — hammer raised — and caught the beast mid-air, driving it sideways into a cot. Feathers exploded in every direction, then caught fire from a tipped lantern. Smoke curled instantly.

The doorway. Move!” Carrie barked, wings catching a rising current of heat.

I didn’t need telling twice.

Umberto and the rider rolled, punched, bit, and spat across the floor — a whirl of teeth and armor. Din yanked Umberto up by the collar and shoved him backward through the door. Din followed – eyes on the guard and wolf in the center of the room. Carrie fluttered down in front of him at the threshold. Wand up. Eyes blazing.

And unleashed hell.

The fireball detonated in the center of the room with a sound like the world tearing open. We were blown back into the courtyard.
The greenhouse became a furnace. A bloom of heat and light. Shattered glass and flame swallowed the rider and his snarling beast in an instant.

I hit the ground, rolled behind a half-melted statue, and coughed smoke from my lungs.

When I looked up, the greenhouse was gone. Just… gone. Twisted iron jutted from scorched earth. Flames danced across blackened timbers.

Umberto stood, loincloth slightly on fire, and patted himself out with a grin.

Carrie hovered above it all, panting hard, wand still raised, eyes wide.

Din limped over, one gauntlet blackened and steaming.

I looked up at the space where I approximated Wiki’s little trick had been located. “Is it… still up there? Wikis’ cupboard thing — does it stay if the building’s gone?” I asked as Carrie fluttered down. She just shrugged.

We were supposed to be quiet. Instead, we’d just punched a fireball-sized hole in Castle Ieyoch’s courtyard.

A loud shout rang out — the second mounted guard, already wheeling his wolf toward us. The beast bounded forward, snarling.

Sound the alarm! the rider bellowed. Don’t just stand there — engage the enemy!

From atop the ramparts, a single arrow thudded into the wolf’s flank.

Not me, you idiot.

Wikis was already on the move — sprinting along the edge of the wall toward the stairs near her position. Yak vaulted the parapet beside her and descended in a blur of cloak and movement, bouncing between stone and support beams like gravity was a polite suggestion.

Another arrow from Wikis. Sharp. Clean. Center mass.

Realization hit the rider at the same moment as Carrie’s spell.
Her wand snapped forward — a flash of arcane energy, and the direwolf shrank mid-charge, collapsing into the size of a startled house pet. The rider hit the ground awkwardly, legs tangled around the now-miniature beast.

And then he didn’t move at all.

Din stepped forward, beard floating in the air like coiled lightning, his fingers closed into a fist.

The paralysis took hold instantly – the rider frozen mid-swear, arms stiff, muscles locked.

It was over in seconds.

We stood in the center of the courtyard, smoke curling upward from the ruins of the greenhouse. Day began working his way across the wall and down toward us. Trunch, furthest from us — on the wall near the castle proper — waved urgently from atop the ramparts, then broke into a sprint in our direction.

So much for the element of surprise,” Yak coughed.

The other person arrived,” Wikis said, pointing to the main doors. “They entered just as you made the greenhouse explode.” She looked at us, curious. “It was you who did that, right?

I did!” Carrie chirped.

Did you get a look at them? Do you know who it was?” Din asked.

No. Their face was turned. I couldn’t see.

Yak?

No.” Yak shook his head. “I was occupied watching you talk to the first wolf guard. I was still trying to figure out what you were doing.

Improvising,” Din said calmly.

I tugged Wikis on the arm and gestured back at the smouldering greenhouse.

The pocket space, rope trick thing of yours,” I asked, “Is it gone, or is it still there.

Don’t know,” she answered matter-of-factly. “You’re welcome to wait a while and see.

Day jogged up, breathing hard.
Well… they should definitely know we’re here by now,” he said, just as the large wooden doors of the castle creaked open.

A single, solitary guard stepped out.

What was that? What’s—
He stopped. There was a metallic clang as he dropped his weapon. Then he swore, turned on his heel, and bolted for the doors.

I don’t know why. I only vaguely know how. It was a reaction born of necessity. I raised my hand. Pointed.
He dropped, face-first, as three magic missiles caught him in the back.

The rest of the group stared at me.

Wikis lowered her bow and frowned, “I was just about to drop him.

Carrie blinked.
Klept… do you have something you want to tell us?

I looked around nervously.
I, uh… I found a couple of scrolls in the archives.
My notebook was open in one hand — a sigil still glowing faintly on the page.

Umberto clapped a heavy hand on my back, nearly knocking me forward.
About fucking time you made yourself useful.

So,” Yak said nodding in approval, “What now?

Din started walking toward the stairs. “We storm the castle, that’s what.” He looked around to a sea of nodding faces, “Quietly and carefully of course.

Hey guys,” Trunch called out as he got nearer, “Nice shot Klept. Didn’t know you could do that.

I wasn’t sure either.” I said vaguely, still in shock at what had just happened.

So, you want to join us in storming the castle?” Carrie asked Trunch with a smile.

Sure.” he replied, “Um, were going to do it carefully right?” he asked everyone.

Of course.” Day replied, “Isn’t that how we operate?

Oh, good.” Trunch breathed, “because, I know who the other person is. The one they’re waiting for.”

Umberto cracked his knuckles, followed by his neck and shoulders, “It’s Brenne, isn’t it?” He growled. “Has to be.”

It’s Barbara.” Trunch said stopping abruptly. “Barbara Dongswallower.

Umberto didn’t speak.
He just bolted for the door.

It’s easy to forget that Umberto is just over three and a half feet tall.

Raised by orcs, he learned early that the best way to survive was to act twice the size of whatever was trying to kill you. Apparently, the strategy stuck.

When he’s angry, he doesn’t storm. He charges.

In battle, he hurls himself forward with such reckless force it’s hard to tell if he values his own life, or simply values momentum more. His axe, very clearly heavier than he is, cleaves through whatever’s in his way before he even registers what, or who, it was.

Outside of battle, that fury simmers in squared shoulders, a clenched jaw, boots pounding like war drums, and fists clenched tight. Angry punctuation marks, intent on ending a person’s sentence before they’ve even begun speaking.

It wasn’t the first time I’d seen him like this.
Back in Nelb he’d moved the same way on the walk up to Brenne’s house. A short, furious march that demanded the world get out of his way or get broken.
There’s a certain weight to Umberto’s stride when he decides something.
And judging by the look on his face, what he’d decided was violence.

Each step echoed like a countdown.
I considered calling after him, but I’ve quickly learned there are few forces in this world capable of stopping Umberto once he’s at full march.
And I am not one of them.
Naturally, I looked to Din.

Din was already moving.
No shout. No panic. Just movement. Purposeful and fast.

Umberto!” Din called, voice low and urgent. No response.
Umberto was halfway up the steps now and accelerating.
UMBERTO!” Still nothing.

So Din did the only thing he could: he ran.
Boots clanked. Armor groaned. And then, just before Umberto reached the landing, Din lunged and grabbed him by the shoulders.

Umberto spun, fists already halfway raised. “Let go.

Think,” Din said, voice sharp. “For once. Think before you kick the doors in.

She’s in there!” Umberto snarled. “With them.

The rest of us caught up, panting, forming behind Din in what was admittedly a pointless wall between Umberto and the castle doors. If he wanted through us, there really wasn’t much we could do to stop him without causing physical damage — to ourselves.

Then we need to be sure,” Din said, holding his ground. “We don’t know why she’s here. Or what they’ve told her. Or if it’s even her.

Umberto’s eyes burned. “It’s her.”

Maybe,” Day offered. “But maybe it’s someone wearing her face — like Dominic did with Jonath.”

A flicker passed over Umberto’s features.

“Not her actual face,” Trunch added helpfully, “a disguise. Like Yak does.

Maybe it’s a spell. Or a trick,” Carrie added, glancing at me. “Right, Klept — it could be magic stuff?

Umberto sneered, as if the idea that I might be a voice of reason was a personal insult.
Din’s grip didn’t loosen.

The point is,” Din said flatly, “you kick down those doors, you don’t get answers. You get arrows.

It’s more likely to be swords, actually…

The voice was dry. Hoarse. It didn’t sound like anyone in the group.

We don’t know what’s behind those doors,” Trunch added.

I do…” The unfamiliar voice said from somewhere nearby. Carrie waved a hand toward the source like she was shooing away a fly. 

Is he going to explode?” Wikis asked, eying Umberto with trepidation. 

No,” Din replied gently. “He’s thinking.

She wouldn’t—” Umberto’s breath caught. “She can’t…

I know what’s behind the doors…” The voice again — louder this time. Urgent.

Maybe Trunch got it wrong. Maybe it’s a trap. Maybe she’s not with them. We don’t know,” Din said, still locked in place, still gripping Umberto’s shoulders. “Just don’t rush in like a wild boar with something to prove.

Umberto leaned toward the door, glaring at it like he could will it open through sheer fury.

She can’t…” he growled. “She wouldn’t.”

He trembled — fists tight, shoulders squared, rage barely held in check. But not moving. Not forward, at least. He growled again — low and guttural — then exhaled through gritted teeth.

Fine,” he muttered. “We make a plan.

Good idea,” came the voice — that same voice — sounding exasperated now.

Umm,” Yak said, between mouthfuls of crumbs. “Guys? There’s a weird dwarf in a cage over here.

It’s a gibbet, actually. Common misunderstanding,” came the dry, rasping voice. “Technically, a cage is for containment. A gibbet — like the one you see before you — is for punishment. Humiliation. Public spectacle. That sort of thing.

We’d been so focused on stopping Umberto from doing something, well, Umberto-like, that we hadn’t noticed the prisoner hanging just a few feet away.

He was — to put it generously — a mess. An unkempt dwarf, emaciated and barely clothed. Hair matted into ropes, tangled with twigs and gods-know-what else. His face was caked with blood, dust, dried vomit, and (judging by the stench) at least one other unfortunate bodily function.

It’s a wonder we hadn’t seen him earlier.

But now that we had — oh gods did we smell him.

Carrie recoiled and wretched. Din relaxed his grip on Umberto. I blinked. Wikis poked him with the end of her bow, an arm outstretched as far as she could.

Ow,” he muttered, with about as much enthusiasm as someone in his condition could manage without passing out from the effort.

Oh gods,” Carrie coughed, pinching her nose. “You stink. Have you ever heard of bathing?

The dwarf smiled weakly. “Funnily enough, I did ask that they put me in the gibbet with the tub, but apparently that one’s reserved for more important prisoners.

Well,” Trunch said, nodding seriously, “at least we know they have levels of accommodation. That’s impressively progressive for an oppressive, tyrannical, regime.

The dwarf stared at him, visibly confused, then added, “At least my quarters aren’t exposed to the elements as much as some of the other, less fortunate souls.

He lifted a trembling hand and pointed skyward.

We looked up — and there they were. Other gibbets, swaying gently from the upper reaches of the castle walls. Some were occupied. Some weren’t. All were adorned with carrion birds.

Wikis poked him again with the end of her bow. “Who are you?” she asked, eyes narrowed, voice pinched like she could taste the air.

The dwarf shifted in the gibbet with a wince and backed away from Wikis’ accusatory poking stick. “The name’s Bot,” he rasped. “Bot Battlehammer.”

There was a brief pause that was interrupted by Yak biting into something that crunched. Bot looked at him and licked his dry, cracked lips with longing.

I realized Din was still clasping onto Umberto’s shoulders. Umberto himself was clearly still ‘thinking’, as Din had put it. It looked like the current scene hadn’t registered yet.

Bot continued. “Former sergeant of the Underwatch. Sewer rat enthusiast. Last dwarf standing – twice.” He gave a lopsided grin. “And, apparently, cautionary tale.”

Against what?” Umberto growled, having finally decided to join in.

Wikis was about to poke again before Day gently placed a hand on her shoulder and pushed the bow down. Bot slumped back against the iron bars, his eyes fluttering shut for a moment.

Against standing up to them.” He gestured weakly to the castle as a whole.

How do we know you’re not one of them?” Wikis asked. “How can we be sure you aren’t a spy?

There was a chorus of nods.

A spy?” he replied with a rasping chuckle. “A Dan’del’ion spy. Who has chosen to be locked in a gibbet, in this condition, and asked to hang outside his own castle?

That’s a fair point you know,” Yak nodded “Not a lot of information gathering to be found in this location for a spy – now if he was locked up in a town square, with all the chatter and daily events, like the attacker from the festival who went all, gooey, then …” If a look could ever be discerned on Yak’s featureless face the current one would have been ‘dawning sudden realization’.

We get it, Yak.” Carrie cut in, “He’s probably not a spy.” She turned back to Bot, eyes watering. “Clearly no one sane would let themselves get this rancid. How long have you been here?” She barely got the question out before dry heaving and gasping for air.

At the castle?” Bot asked, “About a year or so, I think. Here in my room, maybe a couple of months.

How have you survived this long?” Trunch asked, utterly fascinated. The kind of fascination usually reserved for ancient scrolls or mysterious potions. .

Well, I’ve had a little help from some special friends.” Bot replied, with a weary shrug.

I knew he was spy!” Wikis hissed. “Someone’s been feeding him. Or passing him notes. Or both.

Day shook his head, “I don’t think so. Look at the floor.

We leaned closer – and immediately regretted it. Upon closer inspection, we discovered yet another delightful note in the ever-evolving perfume that was au de gibbet: rich notes of warm, rotting meat, entwined with an earthy base of desperate gnawing and despair. At Bot’s feet were several half-eaten rat carcasses. Some of the smaller bones had been picked clean; there were clear marks showing an attempt to file them into lockpicks.

“I’m going to be sick.” Carrie wailed.

Bot raised his hands defensively, weakly – but defensively. “Look, I’m not proud of it, but a dwarf’s got to do what a dwarf’s got to do. There’s only so much magical healing one can give themselves before the well kind of runs dry, if you know what I mean.” He touched his chest and a dim light flickered and died. “I’ve got too much fight in me for the birds, but not enough energy to catch one. One of them…” He looked up, eyes narrowing at the carrion birds above, “... would feed me for weeks.” 

How do you get the rats?” Trunch asked, “You’re hanging in a gibbet.

Oh, you noticed did you?” Bot said dryly. “Like I said. Not proud.” Bot shifted and pulled something from somewhere unspeakable – a small set of battered pipes. 
Got these in a trade years ago.” He lifted them to his cracked lips and blew a soft shaky note.
Carrie dry retched.
A moment later there was a scuttling sound nearby. From the minimal underbrush a rat appeared. It paused, sniffed the air, then scrambled up the wall using crooked stones and ivy knots. It reached the iron arm that held Bot’s cage, tiptoed along the beam like a tightrope walker, and then dropped through the bars into the gibbet.

Wikis clapped with far greater enthusiasm than any of us expected. 

Bot didn’t even look at it. He just sighed. “Used to call them to carry messages. Unlock doors. Fetch keys. That sort of stuff. Now,” he sniffed mournfully, “for dinner.” 

We stood in a kind of impressed and disgusted silence for a beat before Yak stepped forward. He offered an extended hand to Bot.

It’s not much. Not warm. Kind of squashed actually. But …” it was a small croissant. “I already nibbled the corner off, sorry.

Bot took it in both hands like it was an ancient relic. He stared at Yak with tears welling in his eyes.
May the bloom of Elaris nourish your roots.” he whispered reverently.
Then he stuffed the entire thing in his mouth and began hurriedly chewing like a dwarf reborn.

Thank you,” Bot mumbled through a mouthful of pastry crumbs, his voice already sounding stronger. He swallowed hard. “Right. So … now that we’ve established I’m not a spy, and that you are decidedly very nice people – any chance one of you could get me down from here? I kind of know my way around the place a little. I can help.

Wikis immediately narrowed her eyes. “We don’t need your help. We have a map.

Carrie furrowed her brow. “We do?

Day turned to Wikis slowly. “What map?

Wikis reached into her pack, dug around with exaggerated effort, and triumphantly produced a  crumpled, stained piece of parchment and handed it to Day.  He unfolded it cautiously. We all leaned in. Bot clung to the bars of his gibbet to get a better look.

To call it a map was an insult to the fine craft of cartography. It looked like someone had tried to draw a floorplan from memory, while concussed. Rough box shapes marked ‘big room’ and ‘stairs’ were connected by crooked lines that looped into each other like drunken intestines. In one corner, a little arrow read ‘possibly a statue, maybe a guard’.

Day stared. “Did … Yak draw this?” He glanced up at Yak, who had one hand on his chin and was nodding like an overly confident art critic admiring a piece only he understood.

No,” Wikis huffed. “Svaang did. From his memory.”

Day stuffed the map unceremoniously into a pocket. 

Like I said.” Bot rasped from above. “Unless your map comes with directions like ‘how to not get lost on the magical maze floor’ or ‘this stairwell is full of undead,’ you might want someone with a bit more… experience.

He does make a persuasive argument,” Trunch said helpfully.

He sure does,” Yak added. He was already standing next to the gibbet — one hand holding the door open, the other wielding a stiletto-bladed dagger — as Bot carefully lowered himself down.

Bot dusted himself off and bowed. “At your service,” he rasped. “You said something about making a plan? It’s clear you’re not the kind of reckless assholes who would just storm a castle with no idea what’s inside – kicking down the doors, yelling ‘surprise’, and charging in blindly. So, what’s the plan?
He looked around expectantly.

There was a beat of silence

We are wasting time, and we don’t know what they’re doing to her in there,” Umberto growled. He turned toward the door and started stomping forward.

You’re going in after the woman?” Bot asked.

We … well, he, thinks she’s been kidnapped and is being held prisoner.” Carrie pointed at Umberto.

She’s not a prisoner,” Bot rasped, licking a stray flake from his lip.

Umberto turned on his heel and stormed up to Bot, jabbing a stubby finger into his chest.
You’re lying. Barbara Dongswallower would never work with the Dan’del’ion Court.

Bot stepped back, eyes and mouth wide, “That’s Barbara Dongswallower?
There was  a chorus of nods. Umberto sneered
The author?
More nods. Umberto’s lip quivered.
A Tight Fit? In Too Deep?
All Choked Up.” Carrie added

I haven’t read that one yet,” Bot sighed. He looked at the gibbet, “I was kind of occupied when it came out. Is it any good?

Umberto’s stance softened. “A modern classic,” he said wistfully. “Possibly her best work yet.

To think…” Bot whispered, eyes glazed, “’The’ Barbara Dongswallower has walked past my cage several times, and I didn’t even realize. I mean, I would have asked her to sign…” he looked back up at the gibbet “...something.”

There was a pause.

Umberto’s brow twitched “What do you mean — several times?” he growled.

She comes and goes as she pleases,” Bot said slowly. “She’s been and gone multiple times over the past few weeks. The Dan’del’ions treat her like…” he shrugged, “… like a VIP.

Umberto let out a sound somewhere between a growl and a broken sob.

The whole castle has been waiting for her arrival the past couple of days.” Bot continued. “That’s why there aren’t many guards about – usually the place is swarming with them. They’ve pulled everyone inside for the ceremony.

Ceremony?” Day pressed, stepping closer. “Is there a crystal involved?

Bot shivered in the cool mountain air. “Maybe, I don’t know. I heard something about a resurrection, a big one, not one of their little experiments. This one needs something to be activated which… I’m guessing is what that is.” He pointed up at the beam of purple-pink light erupting from the top of the castle into the starless sky. “Apparently, they need a final piece for the ritual – that’s where she comes in.

She’s an author,” Trunch mused, scratching his head. “What do they need a romance author for?

That, I don’t know.” Bot said defeatedly.

“Maybe,” Yak added “They just need her.”

What do you mean?” Din asked – he’d been unusually quiet since the discovery of Bot. Just staring, like someone trying to discern if Bot was a long lost cousin. 

Her blood.” Yak said casually. “They’re bringing an old vampire lord back right? Probably need blood. Maybe hers is special – or extra spicy, you know,  from all the romance stuff.

Carrie looked at Yak, her head slightly cocked. “Seriously? Extra spicy?

What?” Yak looked offended. “Vampires are meant to be sexy and romantic, right? Klept?” He looked at me — as if being a church reader who spent their days reading musty old parchments somehow made me an authority on vampire seduction.

I shrugged.

It’s actually as good a theory as anything else we have right now.” Trunch pointed out.

And it still means I can save her.” Umberto bellowed as he turned back toward the door.

So.. What’s the plan?” Bot called out after him.

The plan is we kick down the doors and storm the castle.” Umberto said triumphantly as he gave the doors a weighty kick, flinging them open with surprising ease.
Surprise!” 

Into The Fire

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXVIII


Tales of dragon attacks often speak of villages wiped out in seconds. In this moment I understood. It’s not that dragonfire is fast. It’s the sound. A choked and pressurized shriek, combined with the roar of wrathful flame. It changes the air pressure. It’s paralyzing and it’s immobilizing. It’s not the speed of the fire that kills you. It’s the part where you can’t move. Well. Also the speed. 

To be clear – dragonfire is incredibly fast.

The air was thick with ash and smoke. The smell of scorched timber and blistering stone clung to everything. The heat wasn’t just oppressive, it was hostile. It singed nose hairs from dozens of feet away. My eyes stung, they felt  like dried peas rolling in their sockets. My head pounded from pressure and dehydration, as all the moisture in the square seemed to vanish in seconds. Every ounce of my existence told me to move. To run.

But I couldn’t.

The shriek of the air, the roar of the flames, the rumble of collapsing buildings — all of it conspired to hold us in place, as fire devoured the square.
It swept through like an unimpeded horde: relentless, consuming, and utterly merciless.

Flames licked the window frame and danced across the jagged remnants of shattered glass. Heat rose from the furniture around us, as if it might ignite from proximity alone. Travok didn’t move. His knuckles whitened around the head of his cane, but his eyes — dry and unblinking — never left the square.
He stood the way statues do: silent, still, and carved from something heavier than stone. My body begged me to curl inward, to collapse and let the heat pass over like wind through wheat. But I couldn’t.

If we lived, someone needed to remember it correctly.

The fire smothered everything. Building facades, shopfronts, market stalls, carts — all vanished in a heartbeat.

This wasn’t a blaze. Not a slow, creeping house fire from a spell gone awry or a mishap at the forge. This was an instant, ungodly inferno.

Seconds later, the dragon paused — only to beat its wings.
And the flames surged higher. Brighter. Hotter. It lowered its head, scales rippling in the firelight, gold-and-black eyes gleaming amid the ruin. Neck outstretched, snout just feet above the cobblestone — as if lowering itself to the level of mere mortals.
Then it spoke. Voice like stone grinding against stone. To all who were watching.

This you have brought upon yourselves. This is personal — my judgment, delivered to a select few. But soon, Lord Ieoyoch will rise, and his wrath will not be so precise. His wrath will consume this city and the entire valley.

The roar and crackle of fire momentarily gave way to thick, choking smoke. There were no screams. Only heavy sobs. Mournful whimpers.

Fuck you, you overgrown lizard.
From behind a blistered pillar, Day stepped into view — ash-covered, braid ruined, and absolutely done. He coughed, “Too much talk.

The dragon’s head snapped toward him, incredulous, it’s voice sharp, “You dare…

Din stumbled out from behind a crumbling wall, breastplate glowing red-hot.
Warm. Getting warm,” he gasped, fumbling at the buckles.

Umberto and Trunch sprinted in from opposite sides. Heaving a nearby barrel between them, they doused Din in one chaotic motion — water sloshing everywhere.

A hiss. A squeal. Steam engulfed the trio.

Gods, it’s hot!” Umberto shouted from within the cloud.
It’s so hot!

The dragon beat its wings again — a gust that fed the flames like bellows on a forge. The temperature spiked. Fire found a second wind. Smoke and steam parted across the square in a sudden, searing breath.

Umberto hefted his axe. His mohawk, once proud and defiant, now resembled the battered bristles of the Goblin’s Grin’s old broom. Calling the scorched scrap of fabric around his waist a ‘loincloth’ was generous at best.

Next to him, Din, soaked and steaming, slammed a gauntleted fist to his chest. The breastplate, softened by heat, dented with a clang. Above him, a shimmering anvil appeared, pulsing with divine energy.

Trunch straightened beside him, robes scorched, face streaked with sweat and soot. His eyes narrowed. Magic crackled at his fingertips, eager and bitter.

Day strolled across the square to join them, ash falling around him like snow. A shadowy blade coalesced in his hand as he walked — slow, deliberate, burning with focus.

Then Yak emerged from a bakery, pushing open the soot-smeared door as smoke billowed behind him. He plucked a flaming pastry from a melted display tray, blew it out with a puff, and took a bite.

Yo,” he called to the group, mouth full, “these are so much better when they’re hot—
He paused. Looked up. Saw the dragon.
Oh shit. We’re still doing this?

The pastry hit the cobbles. Another dagger appeared in his hand. I don’t think anyone knew where it came from.

The slow grind of stone followed — the sound of the dragon sneering.
Insolent. Insignificant.” It rose — towering, terrible. “They won’t sing of you in ballads. You won’t be remembered.

It opened its mouth. And the sound it made…
Imagine a child trying to suck the last drops of juice through a cracked straw — that desperate, sputtering inhale. Only this one was much louder and it came with a growing glow in its throat.
A light that promised to end everything.

Umberto growled.
Din scowled.
Yak choked slightly on a pastry flake.

The air pressure shifted.
Then — a whistle.
Short. Sharp. Attention-grabbing.

A roar. A shriek.
The inhale cut short.
The ember in its throat — snuffed out.

The dragon’s head thrashed violently — an arrow buried deep in its right eye.

Another roar. Angrier. Venomous.

On a nearby rooftop, Wikis reloaded.
Then, a puff of glitter. The dragon’s head slumped — briefly.

Now, you idiots!” Carrie wailed. “Get in close! Stay tight!

The group surged forward, striking at legs, underbelly, tail — everything they could reach with reckless, furious precision. The dragon thrashed blindly, tail whipping, claws tearing at shattered cobblestones — but they were too close. Too deep beneath it. It couldn’t get the angle. Couldn’t get the position. Couldn’t breathe.

They were cutting in, ducking between broken bits of the fountain, striking fast and ducking faster.
They weren’t winning.
They were surviving harder.

Carrie, one wing clearly crumpled, was still somehow airborne, her bagpipes shrieking in defiance, blasting directly into the dragon’s ear-hole region (assuming dragons have those). She shouted insults between wheezes and notes, her face smeared with soot and pure spite.

Arrows kept flying. Each perfectly timed, perfectly placed. The dragon recoiled with each one, but there was no time to track them. 

And then —
YES!

I jumped a foot in the air as Travok slammed his fist into the table beside me, teeth bared in a grin wide enough to split his beard. “They’ve got it!” he bellowed, pounding the table again. “The beast is off balance! LOOK AT THEM GO!” He was sweating. Trembling. His cane thumped the floor with every blow they landed. It occurred to me this might be the closest thing to joy he’d felt in a very, very long time.

The dragon realized what was happening too late — a combination of arrogance and underestimation

With a surge of its hind legs, it tried to take to the sky — wings straining, talons scraping for purchase.

An arrow thudded deep into its neck.

Trailing it, a rope.

From the rooftop, Wikis leapt. She swung in a low arc beneath the dragon’s throat — her unexpected weight yanking it downward mid-ascent. She released the rope at just the right moment, flipping up and over the other side. A flash of steel. Her dagger tore through the webbing of its wing like a pirate slashing down a sail.

The dragon screeched, flight faltering.

It tried to lift again — unbalanced, one wing dragging.

Din! Now!” Day shouted, jamming his sword into the base of the dragon’s tail.

A shimmering anvil appeared midair. It dropped, fast and brutal, onto the hilt of Day’s blade, driving it several inches into the stone below. The tail pinned, the dragon shrieked — a sound so raw, so jagged, it felt like claws raked across your soul.

The group surged. The dragon scrambled — wings flailing, claws gouging the scorched stone, eyes wild. The wrath was gone now. No seething vitriol. No divine fury. For the first time in its entire existence — it was afraid.

It gave one final, desperate push.

There was a sickening tear.

The blade stayed lodged in the ground. Its tail did not.

With a howl of pain, it beat its mangled wings — rising clumsily into the air. The webbing of one wing flapped uselessly, shredded and torn.

You’re not fucking leaving!” Umberto roared.

He hurled his axe. It spun once, twice, and buried deep in the dragon’s chest. The beast dropped several feet – flailing midair, just as a massive figure exploded into the square.

Az.

He bounded forward, leapt from a pile of rubble, and swung. His huge axe arced up and over, and then down, cleaving into the dragon’s throat.

The creature crashed to the ground. Hard. Dust exploded. Stone cracked. Its body convulsed … then stilled.

Carrie fluttered down and forward, wings crooked and bruised, blackened by soot. She hovered beside the dragon’s remaining eye, now wide and dimming.

The firelight flickered in its fading pupil. She reached to her bagpipes, blew a single, mournful note.

Then leaned close. Nose to lid. Frowned. Disappointed.

So weak,” she said.

The dragon’s final exhale was long and slow. 

The group sank, crashed and slumped onto the cobbles and hunks of scattered debris. Breathing heavily – clutching at ribs, shoulders and stomachs. Two bottles were quickly passed around, one a healing potion – brewed to speed the closure of wounds, the other – one of Yak’s concoctions – brewed to assist with … everything and anything else. The square smouldered with the crackle and pop of flames, some beginning to fade but many still furiously burning. The hiss of heated stone, the creaking of metal expanding in the heat. The cracking and crashing of beams, turned to charcoal and ash, crashing down. And then, finally, the slow rise of urgent shouts — as realization dawned, and people began to move. Rushing into the square dousing flames, dragging away the injured and deceased. Everyone wordlessly nodding their thanks and respects to the group sitting exhausted in the center of it all. Wikis poking the dragon with the tip of her bow every few seconds – just to be sure. 

I cautiously made my way across the square, doing my best to avoid open flame and glowing embers — on account of the highly flammable robes.

So that’s a dragon,” Din groaned, loosening his armour just enough to let some air through.

It is the greatest honour – to fight a dragon,” Az said, his eyes slowly moving over the mound of red scales. “You guys get all the fun.”

Yak grimaced, shifting a bloodied hand to staunch a wound at his side.
Yeah, fun,” he winced. “That’s exactly what that was.

Amazing.” Was all I could muster.

Finally come out of hiding have you?” Carrie called out. She was trying to pry a scale loose from the dragon’s neck.

Umberto turned to me — eyes still wide, still salivating, calmer but not yet what I’d describe as approachable.

You better have chronicled that,” he snapped. “Precise, accurate — and with the appropriate exaggerations.” He stepped closer and jabbed me in the chest with a stubby, blackened, very burnt finger. “It needs to be fucking epic.

Trunch turned to me “Klept, is everyone in Tufulla’s office okay?

I think so,” I replied. “They all went down into the cache, in the church, where Tufulla keeps the White Raven equipment.” I shook  my head the sight of a felled dragon just a few feet away was anxiety inducing in a way I couldn’t explain. “Travok went down to check. I’m sure they’re all safe down there.

As if on cue, Tufulla appeared on the church steps with Redmond and Osman in tow.

Divinely impeccable timing,” I muttered, shaking my head in quiet bewilderment.

They began making their way across the square toward us, but a guard intercepted them.

Mayor Tufulla, sir — your honour,” the guard stammered, clearly untrained for a situation like this.

Hmmm?” Tufulla blinked, then glanced around. “Ah, yes. Mayor. Duties.

He clasped the guard’s hand with the kind of gentle sincerity only a man of the cloth could muster, then shifted smoothly into command. “Healers. Find as many as you can, quickly. Have them tend to the wounded. Round up whoever’s able to search the buildings. The rest, help contain the fires.” Compared to our former mayor, Lord Roddrick, he was grace under pressure.Though I suspect that was the High Reader speaking — not the Mayor, who I’d seen just days earlier become visibly agitated while trying to distinguish between a clerical invoice and a lunch order.

Tufulla, Redmond, and Osman crossed the square toward us. As they passed a splintered bench still flickering with flame, Tufulla gestured lightly — and with a ripple of divine magic, the fire hissed out.

A few more embers ahead met the same fate. Trunch raised an eyebrow.

Tufulla caught the look and winked.

Church sermons land better when a dozen candles suddenly light or snuff out on cue. Makes the whole thing feel more compelling.

He joined us at the dragon’s side, surveying the scorched square — still smouldering, still groaning with heat. Redmond and Osman hovered behind, Redmond already directing a few guards with clipped efficiency.

Umberto approached Osman with an expression I’d never seen before: calm, deliberate, even… gentle?

That alone should’ve been warning enough.
But I was tired. Distracted. Possibly concussed.

He slowed his pace, then placed a hand gently on Osman’s arm — the way you might if speaking to a very small child. Or a particularly nervous goat.

Are you okay?” he asked, enunciating with painful care.

Osman blinked. “Yes?

Umberto nodded solemnly. “It’s okay. We took care of it.

Carrie turned red and snorted.

The rest of the group looked around, confused.
Even Redmond frowned — which is impressive, considering that’s his default expression.

What’s going on?” Redmond asked, stepping forward. “What’s the matter with you?

Umberto turned to him, still using the same patronizing tone — but now at a volume typically reserved for town criers or angry fruit vendors.

It’s okay,” he said, loud enough for half the square to hear. “Klept told me about his… condition. I think it’s noble that you accept him in your order, given what he’s had to overcome.”

He turned back to Osman, who had just enough time to look alarmed before Umberto clapped a soot-blackened hand on his shoulder and said, with absolute confidence:

You’re safe now.

Then he walked away — nodding to himself like a man who had just prevented a disaster only he was aware of.

Din watched him go, visibly trying to process the exchange. “What the fuck is going on?” He asked.

Carrie fluttered over and whispered in his ear, failing to hold back giggles and snorts as she did so. Din blinked and looked over at me. I offered a light shrug.

He exhaled. Placed a hand on his temple.

Oh gods,” he muttered.

Osman turned to me, wide-eyed. “I have a condition?

I sighed, straightening a piece of debris that didn’t really need straightening.

Well… he seems to think so. I’m not entirely sure why.
I dusted off my robes. “I find it’s best just to nod and let him feel heroic.

I patted him on the shoulder and followed Umberto in joining the group. 

We don’t have time to rest,” Day said looking at the beam of light coming from the mountains. “Whatever is going to happen, it’s already undway.

Tufulla nodded solemnly. “Agreed. Go to the castle. I’ll send whatever men I can spare — though,” he glanced around at the ruined buildings, the injured civilians, the exhausted volunteers, “it may be fewer than we planned. And later.

There were no objections. No complaints. Just tight nods and drawn breath. Din’s beard rose slightly as he uttered a light prayer, wounds and bruises on his friends healed slightly. Carrie twirled above raining down glitter that vanished just as it reached heads and shoulders. The group suddenly stood straighter – looked fresher, more energized. She clapped and nodded as if to congratulate herself.

Behind us, Svaang, Hothar, Travok and Yun had already begun helping — dragging beams aside, organizing buckets, lifting the wounded. Travok barked something unintelligible and raised his cane in the air like a sword before returning to the labour with a stubborn intensity.

Across the square I caught sight of Brenne. She emerged from the church doors, took in the square… and turned silently back inside. I could just make out her silhouette through the open doorway, kneeling before the altar. Head bowed. Hands trembling. Lips moving in wordless prayer.

We need to move” Umberto barked, “Now.

Wikis was gathering arrows from around the felled dragon. Sighting and running her fingers along shafts and fletching. She tossed several aside and stuffed others into her quiver. 

Yeah – but what about that?” She asked pointing at the dragon. 

The group looked the scaly mountain over before Az shrugged.

I can watch it for a while if you like.” He said.

I’ll pay you to guard it.” Din said

No need – just let me have that.” the orc pointed to it’s back. He strode over to the fallen dragon, wrapped one massive hand around the thick leather girth strap, and ripped the saddle clean off its back with a grunt.

What do you want with that?” Carrie asked, wiping soot from her cheek.

He slung it over one shoulder like it weighed nothing and gave a grin. “Strap it to the top of the keg. Make it real comfy to sit on.

There were nods of approval as a dozen individuals mentally pictured a huge orc, sitting on a keg, in a saddle made for a dragon, outside a small pub in a dark alleyway.

I have no objections to that at all.” Din said smiling.

I’ll give you 25,000 gold. Now. For the dragon corpse. The orc can keep the saddle.

Everyone turned.

Harmond of Harmond’s Beastly Bits sat at the edge of the square, confined to a chair that was part chair, part cart that looked far more expensive than any warhorse. His wide-brimmed hat was tilted low, his eyes gleaming beneath the brim like a man who’d just spotted a lifetime supply of merchandise. He spoke, and his voice carried a thick, rolling accent that sounded accustomed to giving orders in vast, open landscapes.

The whole thing,” he drawled, stepping forward and gesturing to the still-smoking corpse of the dragon. “Teeth, bones, blood, glands, hide—by the Prophet’s shiny toenails, especially the hide. It’s fresh, it’s rare, and it’s mine.

One of his men pushed him around as he inspected the body. 

Ahhh. You’ve done quite a bit of damage to some of the more valuable areas – let’s make it 20,000.

Umberto wiped blood and sweat from his brow. “You’re buying the corpse?

I want to buy artistic rights to the corpse,” Harmond said, already pulling parchment from inside his vest. “Gold. And custom work. Anything you want—armor, jewelry, boots, potion vials, wind chimes—

Wind chimes?” Carrie blinked.

I’m very creative.

Din stepped forward, resting his warhammer on one shoulder. “You can have it,” he said, “on one condition.

Done.

You haven’t heard it yet.

I don’t care.”

Din raised an eyebrow. “We keep the head. And the heart. The head is going above the hearth at the Grin.

Harmond hesitated – only slightly, and smiled “Fine. I’ll prepare it for you myself. But I take 5,000 off my offer

Done,” Din said flatly.

A blood curdling scream pierced the night air. It didn’t come from any of the wounded, or from any bystander or person in the square.

It came from the rooftops above.

Every head turned.

On the rooftop opposite the fountain stood a figure — firelight silhouetting her against the dark, starless sky.  A woman. Cloak torn. Hair wild. Hands clenched in rage. She screamed again, a sound soaked in anguish and fury. Then she pointed at the dragon. At everyone.

What have you done? You’ll pay for this.

Then she vanished, like smoke pulled into nothing.

Yun ran forward, arm outstretched to the rooftop, breath catching, face pale.
…Adina?” The name was barely a whisper.

Carrie touched her shoulder gently, wings still scorched from fire.
That’s not her,” she said softly. “Not anymore. Adina’s gone. They took her, when you were in the castle. She’s Naida now. And she’s dangerous.

Yun didn’t speak right away. She just stared at the rooftop where the figure had stood.

Then, quietly:
I know.

She took a breath that trembled at the edges. “The last time we saw her… Dominic brought her to us. Like a trophy. She didn’t smile. Didn’t speak. Just stared — like we were strangers. Enemies.” Her voice cracked, but she kept going. “There was no love in her eyes. Only anger. Hatred. And he… he was so proud of it. Like breaking her had been some kind of gift.” She paused briefly to look at each of her former party; Svaang, Travok, Hothar – each of thm nodded solemnly, “We knew then. She was gone.” she continued. “Adina never survived that castle.

A long silence followed, broken only by the soft crackle of dying fire and the distant thrum of wind. 

And then, of course…

Harmond clapped.
Well, she didn’t seem happy — whoever she was I take it that was your doing.
He looked around the square, eyes wide with theatrical concern until they landed on Din — and were promptly joined by an equally wide grin.
A deal’s a deal, right? You took down the beast. It’s your kill. I’m buying it off you — and I’ll throw in something special, just because I like your style.

He whispered to an attendant who promptly stood next to each of the group, sized them up and jotted some figures down on a piece of parchment. 

Call it a reward for your efforts.” He looked back up at the rooftop where Naida had just vanished. “I have a feeling you’re going to be quite busy.” He looked out beyond the city walls to the beam of light in the distance. “And, if I did hear what I thinkI just heard, you’re heading off to the old Ieyoch castle ruins.” He eyed the group hungrily. “Bring me back any … beastly bits you find along the way and I’ll make it worth your while.” 

He handed Din a heavy pouch of gold with one hand and shook with the other.
A pleasure.” Then, with a signal to his men, ropes began looping over the dragon’s body — already being hauled away as Harmond called over his shoulder: “This feels like the beginning of a very profitable relationship.

Din glanced down.
There was something else in his hand. A small square of tanned hide — likely amphibian — that reeked faintly of leather oil and ambition. Something had been written on it.

Harmond’s Beastly Bits
Teeth. Glands. Hide. Heart.
No part wasted. No questions asked.

Din blinked.
I leaned in. “What is it?
I’m… not really sure,” Din replied, turning it over in his fingers. “I think it’s a business card.
Does it say anything about wind chimes?” Carrie asked.

Before Din could respond, Wikis cut in, sharp and focused.
We need to move. Now. If we’re going to stop whatever it is they’re doing up there—” she pointed toward the mountains, to the beam of pale light still pulsing above the castle ruins, “—we’re already late.

Tufulla stepped forward. His voice was calm, but heavy. “Yes. Go,” he said, nodding. “We’ll take care of things here. We’ll send whatever backup we can, as soon as we can.

Don’t forget,” Trunch added, brushing ash off his coat. “We don’t know what’s waiting there. A little help might be nice.

We’ll send someone as soon as we can spare them,” Redmond replied. 

Umberto clapped a hand on my shoulder. “Come on, chronicler. You can workshop your version of the dragon fight on the way — just make sure it’s enough to make Barbara blush.

I don’t think dragon battles are really her genre,” I muttered.

They are now,” he growled.

Ahead of us, Day was already moving. “If the stumps really are part of a teleportation network, it’s the fastest way to get there.

But we still don’t know how they work!” Carrie called after him.

I’ve been thinking about that.” Trunch said casually, already peeling off from the group. “I have an idea. Meet you at the C.A.R.T. stand by the west gate. Ten minutes. Grab whatever you can from the Grin.

Fifteen minutes later, we were on the move.

Burnt, bruised, and half-conscious, we slumped on the back of a transport cart — rattling faster than anyone would recommend, with Yak at the reins, shouting encouragement to the horses in three different languages. Two of which, I’m fairly certain, were made up.

Too exhausted to rest. Too shaken to talk. We sat white-knuckled and bleary-eyed in silence as the cart jolted violently beneath us.

The city smouldered behind us.
The castle waited ahead. Somehow, Trunch had fallen asleep — mouth open, head lolling, snoring like a contented stormcloud. In one hand, he clutched a small leather pouch.Even in sleep, he held it tightly.
Like whatever it was… mattered.

Like Moths To The Flame

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXVII


The square erupted. In screams, in motion, in chaos. Guards scattered like kicked-over chess pieces, some trying to rally, most just trying to survive. The Damaged Buttholes, who had already saved the harvest festival from deranged cultists and, unbeknownst to the general populace, prevented an outbreak of undead from overrunning a nearby hamlet, now found themselves protecting Dawnsheart’s citizens by actively engaging with an angry dragon. In the middle of the town square. All while the stars continued to disappear from the sky, casting an unusual darkness across the valley.

Usually lit by a scattering of half-hearted lanterns and the occasional yawn from a passing guardsman, the square now blazed with considerably more enthusiasm – mostly due to the building that was currently on fire.

Watching the guards attempt to extinguish it, shout to check if anyone was still inside, and very clearly try not to get involved in the dragon fight raging just a few metres away was, if nothing else, a masterclass in divided attention. They looked like men tasked with putting out a bonfire using cups of Sulker’s Fire, which for the record, is both extremely flammable and mildly hallucinogenic in large enough doses, all while pretending not to notice the house-sized lizard throwing tantrums behind them.

I can’t say whether it was due to wonder, awe, or fear  – but two guards stood frozen near an upturned apple cart until Trunch roared at them to move.

Townsfolk – get them out of here!

Din pointed toward a group of people cowering under an awning. “Go!

One guard nodded, snapped out of his panic, and began ushering people down a side street. The other squealed, dropped his spear, and sprinted in the opposite direction, wet-trousered and unashamed.  

I had no idea where to stand. Or what to write. There’s something uniquely awful about peering through a window as your friends take on a dragon. I just clutched my journal and tried not to die.


The screams outside weren’t theatrical – not the kind you hear in stories, long and poetic and full of meaning – these were the real kind. The messy, panicked, lung-ripping ones. You could practically smell the terror. Or maybe that was just the burning storefront. Hard to tell.

Travok stood beside me, leaning on the desk, his knuckles white around the edge. He said nothing. He didn’t need to. You could feel the weight of his silence – heavy, sharp-edged, filled with the unspoken ache of old scars and a leg long gone. If he still had both, he’d be out there. Swinging a hammer, shouting at the sky, daring the dragon to hit him harder. Instead, he stood beside me. Watching.

Tufulla fidgeted beside the window. “Perhaps,” he began delicately, “since we are… unlikely to tip the scales of battle, we should consider seeking shelter…

(A crash.)

“…somewhere further away,” Tufulla clarified.

A guard had flown through the window.

He had spun once, hit the floor, and skidded to a stop with a clatter of armour.

Osman hadn’t said much since being told he wasn’t going to the castle. But his sulking was aggressive — like a teenager with a vendetta.

He looked at me now, smug. “You’re still here, Klept. Shouldn’t you be out there helping your friends?

I blinked slowly. “I would, truly. But this room actually has a better vantage point. Far less dodging. Far more intact limbs. Improved field of vision. And unfortunately – ” I gestured to the scorched hem of my robe, “ – church robes are surprisingly flammable. We lost Reader Berin last year to a regrettable altar-candle incident.

Yes, a real pity,” Tufulla sighed, glancing at my journal. “He had excellent handwriting. Legible, even.

Redmond glanced over Tufulla’s shoulder and grimaced.

I’m told some could read it without divine intervention,” Tufulla added, as if stating widely accepted scholarly fact.

I snapped my journal shut, tucked it under one arm, and glowered at them.

Hothar watched the smoke rise through the broken window, nodding solemnly. “That’s because they’re a synthetic blend,” he said. “Not natural fibre. It’s what gives them that holy-shine finish.

I turned to him. “I’m sorry — what?

He gestured vaguely. “The robes. It’s the sheen. They shimmer. People trust a shimmer.

Right,” I said. “Of course. Why wouldn’t we compromise safety for sparkle.

It’s also a budgeting issue,” Redmond called out, halfway through testing whether he could fit behind a bookcase. “Natural fibres cost more these days, and the church needs to rein in its spending.” 

Ah,” Tufulla exclaimed, “That explains the itch.

Brenne opened her mouth, closed it again, and moved to a different corner of the room.

Yun knelt beside the crumpled guard. “He’ll live,” they said quietly, pulling some herbs from a pouch and placing them on a large burn on the soldier’s side. “But if we’re not fighting… we can still help.” They motioned Svaang over, guiding his hands to replace theirs on the wound. Then before anyone could argue, Yun was out the door, already shouting instructions to the guards trying to carry a bloodied comrade through the ash and flame.

Still,” Tufulla said, extending a hand towards Brenne, “perhaps we’d be safer downstairs. In the cache.”

Redmond nodded without a word and began edging toward the adjoining church while Brenne and Tufulla exited the room.

Hothar lingered in the centre of the room, unmoving. The firelight danced across his face as he looked out through the broken glass — not at the dragon, but beyond it. Past the flames. Past the square. Somewhere quieter.

I once told a sapling,” he murmured, “that the fire would not reach it. That the forest would shield it. That the old trees would hold the line.

He paused, the crackle and roar outside filled the silence. His shoulders rose and fell with a slow, heavy breath.

He turned toward the window. “I told them not to go to the castle,” he said. “Told them it wasn’t worth it. That the fight had cost too much already.” Outside, Day drove his blade upward with impossible precision, while Carrie launched from a toppled cart.

Hothar’s voice dropped to a whisper. “But maybe I was wrong about that too.

He smiled softly.

They’re not old trees,” he said. “But they’re holding the line.

Then, with a grunt that seemed to carry the weight of immeasurable regret, he nodded once to no one in particular, and mosied in Tufulla’s direction.

Svaang, lifting the unconscious guard, grunted toward Osman for help. Together, they half-dragged, half-carried him out of the room.

But Travok didn’t move.

He stood at the shattered window, one hand braced on the sill, staring out into the firelit chaos. The dragon’s roar shook the glass, but he stayed still.

You’re not coming?” I asked, motioning to the door.

He didn’t answer at first.

Then:
No more hiding.”

He didn’t look at me, just clenched his jaw.

They broke me in that damn castle,” he said. “Took my leg. Took my nerves. I’ve been hiding in that tavern ever since. But I’m done with that.

The firelight flickered against his face.

I can’t fight. Not anymore… But I’ll damn well bear witness.. So I can remember. So I can tell the others what they did.

I turned to go, but his hand gripped my arm — firm, insistent.

You need to record this.” 

Outside, the dragon roared. The square was on fire. Another star went out. I unsheathed my quill.


Most people in their lifetime will never see a dragon. A handful might glimpse one in the distance, or stumble across a burned-out hillside and wonder. Fewer still will live to tell the tale.

And yet here it was — alive, immediate, and visibly seething.

They had killed its rider.
Worse — they had tried to deceive it. Shape-shifted. Mocked it. Lied with the soft confidence of people too small to understand the size of the insult they’d offered.

Now, the dragon stood, firmly planted in the centre of Dawnsheart’s square like a god prepared to pass sentence. It was enormous. Not ancient, not fully grown, but adolescent in the way a hurricane might be considered ‘a bit of weather.’ Head cocked slightly, it watched as the group approached: weapons drawn, daggers and arrows already in flight. It watched not in curiosity, but in insulted disbelief – like a noble at the opera who’s just realised the orchestra is made up of hyperactive children.

Wings half-spread in a show of dominance, tail coiled and uncoiling with venomous intent, claws gouged deep in the cobblestones, ploughing the stone and rising to its haunches. It could have ended them already. It knew that. So did they.

One breath. One flash of heat, and this square would become a crater.
The buildings, gone.
The guards, ash.
The group, a smear of soot and misplaced bravado.

But quick death would be mercy. And mercy was not on offer. There was one intent: pain.

Intense.
Excruciating.
Deserved.

This wasn’t a hunt. It wasn’t battle. It was punishment.

The group approached, weapons raised, spells at the ready. But they were insects and the dragon was going to pull their wings off, one by one.

Travok whispered, “This is where legends are made,” voice low with mourning — the kind that spoke not of fear, but of a man who wished he were out there.

Defeat a pack of gnolls, or commit a lovable act of antiestablishmentism, maybe you’re lucky enough to get a pie named after you.

He let out a slow, wistful whistle.

But take on a dragon…

He shook his head with something like awe.

No matter the outcome — your name ends up in a ballad. Sung for the rest of time.

Even if they lose?” I asked.

Travok smiled.

Particularly if they lose.

I nodded slowly, eyes flicking to the square outside. Through the smoke, beyond the flames, past the broken carts and overturned market stalls. The people of Dawnsheart were watching.

From alleyways and torched doorways. From behind barrels and wagons and cracks in shuttered windows. Not just guards and soldiers, but bakers, blacksmiths, and children clutched by trembling arms. Those who had fled now turned to watch, distant enough to feel safe, foolish enough to believe distance would matter.

Dawnsheart, and by extension the entire valley wanted to know if this ragged band of lunatics — these misfits and martyrs and mismatched blades — could actually do the impossible. Could stand against a dragon. Could win.

And the dragon knew it too.

Its movements grew slower, more deliberate. Head turning just slightly toward the furthest corners of the square. Not to strike. Not yet. But to be seen.

To demonstrate to everyone, what happened to those who dared.


Carrie, airborne and fluttering near the dragon’s head like a particularly insistent gnat, was a flurry of celestial motion and aggressive music. Her bagpipes screamed a note that could melt glass.
Apparently, it also amused dragons.
Its head whipped around, nostrils flaring, teeth bared in a grin.
Magic like that won’t work on me, little bug,” the voice a blend of forge bellows and stone scraping against stone.
She dodged a swiping talon, grinned back, and pointed skyward, as a storm of glowing wisps surged down from nowhere, dancing along its scales in a cascade of burning starlight.
That’s okay,” she chirped. “This kind clearly does. Every day’s a learning opportunity.

The dragon snapped at her.
She veered hard and crashed through an awning with a string of impressively creative profanity.

She reappeared moments later, dusting herself off with all the indignation of a schoolteacher shoved into a bush, cupping her hands to shout:
Hey, Buttholes. Aim for the shiny salamander!

The dragon snarled.
Low. Guttural. Affronted.
As if salamander was a slur of the highest order.

Its tail whipped. A flick of scale and fury. Day was caught off guard and flung like laundry in a storm.

Carrie caught the full follow-through mid-taunt.
She didn’t fly.
She folded.
A puff of glitter. A crunch.
And then she was part of a bakery wall.

Wikis had loosed three arrows before most people had time to blink — each one fast, precise, and utterly useless.
They glanced off the dragon’s scales like pebbles hurled at a cathedral.
One ricocheted off its foreleg and a guard across the square suddenly found it embedded in his thigh.

Sorry!” Wikis called.
It’s fine!” the guard shouted through gritted teeth. “Not your fault! You guys are doing great.

She nocked another arrow, frowning, just as Day, groaning, slid to a halt beside her.
This time, she aimed almost straight up, toward the thinning stars above. The arrow vanished into the dark.

Then it came screaming back down, glowing faintly.
It struck the dragon’s back and exploded, scattering barbed throns across its wings and shoulders in a glittering cascade.

The roar that followed wasn’t surprise, it was offence.
Like it couldn’t believe something had actually impacted.

Wikis exhaled. “That’s better.

The guard across the square passed out. Yun, fresh from helping pull another to safety, rushed to his side, dragging him several feet back.
Wikis reached down to help Day up.

This one’s gonna be a bit harder than those fish guys,” he wheezed holding his side. Then he charged – sword raised, runes crackling in the air.
He moved with unnatural speed. A blur of steel and braid, darting between the dragon’s legs and launching into a spinning strike beneath its jaw.

The blade connected.
A flash of motion. A spray of dark crimson. The dragon recoiled with a snarl, fangs bared in frustration.

Then it brought its taloned foot down — fast, deliberate, furious.

The blur of motion stopped.

Day lay crumpled and bloodied beneath its weight.

The dragon snarled. Then twisted.

Its foot ground down as it turned. Not in malice, not in hesitation, but as an afterthought.

Day coughed – a wet, rattling sound, and blood splattered the cobbles.

The dragon’s attention moved, slow and dangerous, toward its tail as Din’s hammer cracked against a scale with a sound like stone on steel. Umberto roared and hacked, teeth bared, rage and fury seething from every pore. 

Yak sprinted toward Day, who turned just long enough to give a weak thumbs-up before vanishing in a puff of shadow. He reappeared several feet away, steadying himself on a stack of remarkably intact produce crates, just as Yak thrust a small bottle into his hand and kept running.

Day uncorked it with his teeth and downed the contents in one go.

Yak didn’t wait. He was already on the dragon’s foreleg, plunging a dagger between its scales. Then another.
He climbed — inch by inch — toward its back, scaling a mountain made of hate.

The dragon roared in outrage.
Its body writhed.
Its tail lashed.

Din was flung across the square, plate mail shrieking against the cobbles.
Umberto, through sheer rage and will, held on. For a moment.

Then the dragon twisted to snap at Yak.
Its tail came down hard.

A sickening crack as stone shattered.
Umberto’s grip broke — on the axe, on the tail, on everything.
The weapon clattered across the stone as the impact hurled him through the air.

He landed without grace. An angry tangle of limbs and barely functional loincloth, stopping just shy of the shattered window where Travok and I stood.

Across the square, Din rose from the cobbles, his armor scratched and dented, his beard smouldering and afloat, mouth moving in either prayer or profanity. It was hard to tell beneath the dragon’s roar.

The dragon had Yak.
It had torn him from its back, snagged him by the robe’s hem, and now held him dangling — a furious, flailing morsel.

Din raised his hammer skyward in invocation.
A radiant anvil shimmered into existence above the dragon’s head like a mark of holy punctuation.

With a shout, Din brought the hammer down.

The anvil followed.

It collided with the dragon’s snout just as it flicked Yak toward its waiting jaws, its planned snack rudely interrupted by a celestial anvil to the face.
The crack echoed. The dragon reeled and staggered.

Yak hit the ground in a perfectly timed, perfectly executed tumble that ended in a crouch, blades already drawn. Graceful. Intentional. Infuriatingly stylish.

It was as if Trunch had calculated for this exact moment to happen.

As the dragon stumbled, a volley of dark, writhing energy exploded from Trunch’s fingertips and slammed into its flank. The blasts struck like battering rams, driving the creature sideways, off-balance atop the shattered remains of the town square’s fountain.

Another crash from Din’s summoned anvil.
Another eldritch pulse from Trunch.
Then Din brought his hammer down on the dragon’s forefoot with a divine roar. Bone cracked. A talon shattered.

The dragon screamed.
A howl of fury, pain, and disbelief — neck snapping upward toward the sky.

Two arrows struck true, embedding in the softer scales beneath its jaw.

I turned to see Wikis on a nearby rooftop, already drawing another. Her face was calm. Focused. Dangerous.

Day carefully placed the empty potion bottle on the crates, then turned.

For once, he didn’t look polished. Or calm. Or even vaguely smug.
He looked annoyed. He looked hurt.
His braid was coming undone. His robe was scorched. His eyes burned.

Muttering something under his breath he reached inside his robes and withdrew something small and sharp-edged. Whatever it was, it sparked.

A moment later, so did the dragon.

Lightning tore from Day’s hands and lashed across the beast’s flank. It arched in pain, muscles convulsing, claws raking the ground as its body twisted in agony.

Yak, daggers in hand and clearly determined to start his dragon climb anew, suddenly paused mid-step.

He looked at the dagger in his hand.

Then at the seizing, crackling, electricity-wreathed mass in front of him.

Then at the dagger again.

With a muttered curse and a look of personal disappointment, he shrugged and hurled both blades instead.
The first bounced harmlessly off the thigh.
The second found its mark, lodging deep between softer scales near the hip.

The dragon snarled.

Yak sprang back, tossing in a couple of backward somersaults — because Yak — and landed gracefully beside Day, arms folded.

Teamwork makes the dream work,” he said, casual as ever.

Day didn’t respond. He was sweating with concentration, lightning still arcing between his hands and the dragon in a furious, crackling tether.

Yak raised an eyebrow. “Shocking.

He patted Day on the head. “Keep it up, big guy.

Then, with a chuckle, he dashed back into the fray.


Carrie fluttered over to Umberto. When he didn’t react to her gentle nudging she slapped him across the face and yelled.

Get up you angry bastard. You’re not going to let an over grown lizard get the better of you are you?

He blinked and began to stir. Looking around she glanced through the window.

Klept? What are doing in there? Let’s not go back to being the useless tag-along. Get out her and help.

There was a clang and a shout as Yak ducked under Day’s lightning stream and Din’s hammer clashed against the Dragon’s hide.

As I explained to Osman just moments ago, unfortunately, church robes aren’t made from fire-retardant materials. I’m afraid I’d be more of a liability out there.

Umberto rose to his feet and turned toward the window.

I knew there was something off about that guy,” he snapped.

Sorry — what?” I blinked.

Osman,” he said, like it should be obvious. “Now it makes sense. You said he was –
There was a thunderous roar from the dragon as it received a spiritual anvil to the chest. The walls shook violently. The last of the glass shattered from the window and rained down around us.

Next to him, Carrie clutched her ribs, turned red with laughter, and leaned in to whisper something in his ear. Umberto rolled his eyes and gave a resigned shrug.

No. I said I wasn’t –
Another roar. The sound of rubble smashing into Trunch’s direction cut me off.

Is it mental or physical?” Umberto shouted over the din.

Pardon?

Osman’s…” he glanced at Carrie, who was nearly doubled over, “… impairment?

Travok yanked my collar and pulled me down as a heavy chunk of debris slammed into the wall.

I popped back up, dazed. “His what?

I mean,” Umberto called out, “it’s probably physical — but honestly, could be mental too.

Carrie lost it. Howling, snorting, useless.

She and Umberto dashed off toward the fray.

I turned to Travok, frowning.
He thinks you said Osman is…” Travok raised a brow delicately, “…special.
Realisation hit me. “Oh gods. No, I didn’t … I said my robes weren’t …
But Umberto was already charging headlong into battle, scooping up his axe along the way.

Travok just grinned.
They’re starting to get it,” he said. “Starting to fight like a team.

Still reeling from the miscommunication, I watched. He was right. They were working together now. Using each other. Waiting. Trusting. Different strengths. One target.
And the dragon, was beginning to feel it.


Carrie returned to fluttering around its head.
Seriously?” she yelled. “This is all you’ve got? I’ve seen chickens with more fight in them!
She blew it a kiss.
It winced.
She winked. “Oh, did that hurt?
It fumed.

Umberto’s axe slammed into its haunch.
We killed Dominic twice, you know,” he snarled, ripping the blade free.
It seethed.

Lightning still arced across the square from where Day held firm — face strained, arms trembling, robe scorched.

A bolt from Trunch slammed into its ribs.
He died face-down in an alley,” Trunch growled. There was more venom than I’d ever heard from him.
It boiled. 

Arrows peppered its flank from Wikis’ rooftop perch.
Din’s anvil struck from above, forcing the dragon’s head downward — straight into Din’s waiting hammer.
So I brought him back with a spell,” he grunted.
It reeled.

Yak slid beneath its belly, carving a vicious line with his shortsword as he passed.
It writhed.

And I took off his head,” Umberto huffed — then buried the axe so deep he couldn’t yank it free.
It howled in pain, fury, and utter disbelief.

ENOUGH!” The dragon roared, its wings snapping open.

The gust hit like a storm front. Dust, ash, and debris exploded outward in a choking wave. The ground shook. The few remaining market stalls shattered. Stone crunched beneath the force.

Day’s lightning connection severed mid-stream as he stumbled backward, coughing, arms shielding his eyes. The magical hum that had tethered him to the beast vanished like a snuffed candle.

The others were thrown like ragdolls across the square, scattered by the shockwave. Din slammed into a cart. Carrie tumbled skyward, thudding into the cathedral spire. Trunch disappeared in the smoke. Yak landed in a slide, already reaching for a blade. Umberto grunted as he hit stone and bounced.

Then seconds of silence.

The wrong kind of silence.

The air grew heavy. The dust began to glow with a sinister, embered shimmer. Shadows danced strangely in the thick haze. The temperature rose. Instantly and horrifically. From somewhere within the swirling ash, light bloomed, blinding and white-hot.

And then … Dragonfire. Dust, ash and smoke gave way to vengeful, searing flame.

A torrent of incandescent fire screamed across the square, incinerating wood, melting iron, turning stone to glass. Shutters ignited. Flags disintegrated. 

The scream of fire drowned out everything.

Stubborn Beasts and Burdens

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXIV


It wasn’t long before the squeak of wheels and the soft clop of mule hooves on packed dirt were joined by the gentle sound of snoring.

Trunch had wedged himself between two packs near the back of the cart, a faded raincloak bundled beneath his head like a makeshift pillow. The cart jolted and creaked beneath him, but he was already fast asleep — mouth slightly open, hands folded across his chest, a look of childlike innocence softening his features. The rise and fall of his chest was occasionally interrupted by a flicker of dark energy crackling across his fingertips.
He looked peaceful.

Except for the shadows.
They didn’t quite match the rhythm of the cart’s movement — just a fraction too slow to follow, a fraction too eager to reach.

Yak sat near one edge of the cart with the ease of someone who had done this a thousand times – and with the glee of someone who was delighted each time as if it were the first. Legs swinging freely, a leather pouch bouncing at his hip, a smudged notebook balanced on one knee. Every so often, he’d leap down without warning and dart into the brush or to the roadside where a tree or flowering shrub caught his eye.

He sniffed, pinched, and occasionally nibbled at leaves, petals and bark, scribbling quick notes in cramped, inky handwriting. Then, just as suddenly, he’d strike, a flick of a small blade slicing a bloom or strip of bark free with surgical precision. More than once, he was back on the cart before the plant had finished swaying from the force of his cut.

There was something undeniably innocent about the way he perched there between bursts of activity; legs swinging, humming to himself, pleased by whatever strange alchemy he was planning. But the speed with which he moved gave his actions an edge. It was hard to say whether he was picking ingredients or hunting them.

He returned each time with eyes dancing. Sometimes he held up a leaf for the others to admire, only to tuck it away without waiting for a response. The cart ride settled into a strange rhythm: leap, nibble, sniff, slash, scribble.

And though he always smiled, it was hard to say what that smile looked like. Around strangers, Yak’s face became something slippery and forgettable. Constantly changing and unknowable. But even here, among friends, his features were oddly blank, almost like a placeholder for a person. You could stare at him for minutes and still not recall the color of his eyes. Only the smile remained. Unsettlingly constant. Unfailingly cheerful.

Wikis spent most of the journey watching the sky as though she believed it wasn’t being truthful.

She perched near the front of the cart, hood pulled low, eyes narrowed, scanning every passing cloud with the intensity of someone waiting for a very specific kind of doom to arrive. Her fingers toyed constantly with the drawstring of the small pouch at her hip, the one that jingled faintly with the weight of coins, buttons, fragments of mirror, and other shiny trinkets no one else had dared ask about.

She muttered to it often.

Every few minutes, she’d open it with great suspicion, rifle through its contents, and breathe a sigh of relief. Then she’d glance sharply at whoever was closest, brows drawn tight with narrowed accusation.

Once, she scurried forward along the cart’s wooden lip, across the reins with surprising balance, and leaned in close to one of the mules. She whispered something low and urgent into its ear. Then, just as quickly, she darted back, climbing over Day’s shoulder like a raccoon and tucking herself behind a pile of packs with a nod of satisfaction.

She tried hiding behind Carrie for a while although it was less hiding and more crouching very visibly in the open and insisting she was unseen. Every so often, she peeked out to glare up at a patch of sky that seemed slightly too empty for her liking, or slightly too full.

Her bow lay across her knees the entire time, fingertips brushing it occasionally, not as a threat, but more like a reminder. No one had taken anything from her pouch. But that didn’t mean they wouldn’t.

She seemed to think the sky definitely knew something.

Umberto sat cross-legged, reading a well-worn copy of Barbara Dongswallower’s A Tight Fit, his thumb tracing along the spine like it was something sacred. The cart jostled and groaned beneath him, but he didn’t seem to notice. He was deep in the pages, lips moving silently as he read.

He let out a satisfied grunt.
There it is,” he whispered, nodding to himself. “The perfect example. Right there.

He winced and rubbed his jaw, then touched the side of his face with two fingers, gently testing the tenderness of the bruise.
Totally worth it,” he muttered. “How anyone could possibly think Barbara Dongswallower’s prose is anything but the height of literary perfection is beyond me.” 

He shook his head and scoffed mockingly, “Oh, her prose is awful. She obviously uses a ghost-writer.” 

Then, louder — to no one in particular, but loud enough for everyone to hear — he read:

Their gazes collided like charging stallions on a moonlit moor, breathless and wild. His voice was gravel soaked in honey, scraping sweetly against the hollow of her hesitation. And when his fingers grazed her greaves, she didn’t just tremble — she unraveled, one thread at a time, until she was nothing but longing laced in plate.

Somehow, he rolled his eyes in both derision and ecstasy.

I mean, come on. Nuance. Subtlety. Structure. That guy and his idiot friends deserved the lesson in literary appreciation.

He rubbed the side of his face again and resumed reading with a sense of righteous conviction, the bruising along his cheek catching the sun as he smiled softly to himself.

Day looked at me and shrugged.

Carrie fluttered nonstop. From the moment the cart left the Dawnsheart, to the moment the Prophet Rock loomed into view, she buzzed from person to person like a winged monologue generator, trailing sparkles and unrelenting commentary in her wake. She didn’t wait for responses. Didn’t need them. It was less a conversation and more a performance. Delivered in acts, punctuated by costume changes, and underscored by the faint shimmer of fairy dust clinging to her wake.

That cloud looks like a muffin,” she told Umberto, who didn’t look up from his novel. “A sad muffin. I bet it has emotional baggage.

Later: “Do you think mules ever dream of being ponies? Or like, war horses? Or peacocks?

At one point she pulled out her bagpipes and launched into a triumphant, if uneven, rendition of The Ballad of the Soggy Goat. Yak applauded with genuine delight, throwing flower petals at her like a drunken wedding guest. Carrie bowed midair, blew a kiss, and stuffed the flowers into her corset with a dramatic gasp of gratitude, as though she’d just won a lifetime achievement award.

Eventually, her attention turned to the mules.

This began innocently enough: a little petting, a little cooing, a few whispered compliments. Then came the glitter. Then feathers. Then braided manes, makeup, a decorative sash made from a strip of old curtain she swore wasn’t stolen, and what might have once been one of Trunch’s handkerchiefs now acting as a headband across one mule’s brow.

By the time she was finished, the mules looked like parade float rejects—proud, sparkling, faintly horrified.

Stunning,” Carrie declared, fluttering between them, hands on hips, admiring her work. “Absolutely radiant. If we run into any bandits, they’ll be far too intimidated by the sheer confidence of these looks to attack us.

When not fluttering between the cart’s occupants and her newly beautified beasts, she twirled slowly above the wagon, arms outstretched, catching falling leaves and assigning each of them names and scandalous backstories. Somewhere around the midpoint of the journey, she adopted a small stick, named it Madame Dewsnap, and insisted it was the group’s moral compass.

While Carrie directed the mules through their glitter debut, Din and Day pressed me for details. Before we’d left, Tufulla had handed me a stack of parchment—updates, intelligence, scattered notes—meant to help us piece things together and prepare for whatever storm was brewing.

There’s a note here,” I said, flipping through the stack and holding one out to Day. “Something about another stump being found. In the forest outside Briarbright.

Day frowned, studying the parchment. “No doubt they’ll find more soon. Briarbright?

The Briars,” I replied. “It’s the half of the city across the river,” I clarified.

Din leaned over, plucking the page from Day’s hands. “Trunch mentioned that once, didn’t he? Something about one city becoming two?

I nodded. “The Briars used to be one city, Briarton: larger than Dawnsheart, actually. It straddled the Crystal River. But centuries ago, a family dispute broke out, an argument over which heir should lead. They never settled it. So the city split, clean down the river.

They just… split the city in half?” Day asked, eyebrows raised.

Right down the middle. It’s been two separate towns ever since – Brightbriar and Briarbright. And no, they never reconciled. No one even remembers what the original argument was about, but the grudge stuck. There’s only one bridge between them now, and it’s heavily guarded on both ends, just in case anyone gets nostalgic and tries diplomacy.

I flipped through the parchment until one sheet caught my eye. I passed it to Din. “You might find this interesting.

My eyes skimmed the text—years of scribing had made quick reading second nature. “There was an attempt on the King’s life. The Royal Guard’s been disbanded.

Day leaned in, peering over the page. “Really? During the harvest festival? That’s bold.

Looks like one of the bodyguards was killed. Another was arrested—accused of being part of the plot. The Brothers of Midnight ran an internal investigation and uncovered several others in the Guard who were complicit.” Din’s brow furrowed as he read. 

That’s… serious. Treason inside the palace guard?” Day questioned.

Seems so. The entire Guard was dissolved. The Brothers of Midnight took over.” Din handed the parchment back to me.. 

Brothers of Midnight?” Day glanced at me.

Elite splinter group,” I said. “Formed from the Royal Guard. Their job is to protect the royal family during the dead of night—silent operatives, moving in shadows. The kingdom’s hidden hand. Loyal, lethal, and invisible when they need to be.

Rumor has it they operate on two fronts” Yak’s voice cut in over Carrie’s bagpipes. “There’s a division that stays in the capital and another that operates around the continent.” 

Day gave a low whistle. “Well. They sound like a group you don’t want to piss off.

I flipped further through the stack. “Ah. Here we go. The White Ravens have confirmed increased undead activity. Scattered groups throughout the valley, most of them… drifting.

Drifting?” Din asked, leaning over again.

Apparently not attacking. Just walking. All headed in the same direction. Toward the mountains.

Day frowned. “Like Wikis and Umberto, back at the stump.

I nodded. “Castle Ieyoch. That’s the implication. They’ve counted at least four dozen distinct shamblers. Some groups as small as two or three. A few large enough to be dangerous.

“Only within the valley?” Din asked.

I’m not sure,” I said, flipping to the next page. “A few sparse sightings outside. All heading the same way – toward the Humbledoewn Valley.

Drawn to something,” Day murmured. “Or someone.

There was a silence as we let that settle.

I reached for another sheet, thinner than the rest, its ink faded but precise. “Huh.

What is it?” Din asked.

It’s a historical note,” I said, “about a celestial event—an eclipse, centuries ago. Lasted several days.”

Din raised an eyebrow. “That doesn’t sound normal.”

“It isn’t. Wasn’t,” I replied. “At least, not naturally. According to this, the eclipse coincided with the rise of the Dan’del’ion Court. Some believed it was a bad omen. Others thought it was unnatural, intentional.” Day pursed his lips and nodded. “One scholar posits it wasn’t an eclipse at all, but a ritual cloaking of the sun. Apparently it started with the removal of the stars from the night sky. Whatever that means.

Lovely,” Day muttered, exhaling sharply. “A kingdom of shadows rising in darkness. Of course they’d start with the sky.

Din steepled his fingers, “If we can believe anything Dominic said, before he revealed himself – he said there was an army at the castle waiting for an event.

You think they’re waiting for another eclipse?” Day asked.

You said they were vampires, some of them.” Din looked at me. “It makes sense. That would be a good time for them to attack. No sun.

Possibly. Or maybe it’s a ritual.” I folded the parchment and slid it back into the stack. “Either way, we’ve got little information and less time.” My gaze drifted up the length of the cart. 

Wikis sat perched with her hood drawn tight, still glaring up at the sky. Her hand hovered near the pouch at her hip. The other over the bow on her lap. A cloud passed overhead, and her eyes followed it like a hawk.

I turned back to the parchment.

Do you think she senses something?” I asked, quietly.

Din shrugged, “She’s been watching the sky all morning. Maybe she knows what’s coming.

Maybe,” Day replied. “Or maybe she’s mad.

Not always mutually exclusive,” I said.

A gust of wind stirred the trees.

Wikis narrowed her eyes at the clouds again, like she was waiting for them to blink.


The Kashten Dell was quiet. On its edges, sun-dappled trees swayed gently in the afternoon breeze, their leaves rustling in soft conversation. Birds chirped lazily from the branches above, and the hum of insects buzzed through tall grass and blooming wildflowers, blues and yellows and white-starred purple, growing in cheerful defiance of the beaten path.

It wasn’t bustling. Outside of the Harvest Festival and the Reading, it never was. Just a few scattered travellers, the occasional creak of a wooden cart in the distance, and the still, reflective surface of Prophet Rock lake.

The last time we’d seen the Dell, it was chaos — tents on fire, people screaming, smoke curling through the trees, the ground slick with blood. Now… It was peaceful. Calm. Serene. As if the land itself was trying to forget.

Now, we’d come in search of Hothar, a firbolg druid who protected the surrounding wilderness and was once a part of an adventuring team that had scouted Castle Ieyoch, but no one in the Dell seemed keen to talk about him. Or maybe they didn’t know him at all. We weren’t sure which. An old woman seated on a rock beside the road just laughed and waved us away. Umberto didn’t take it well.

Big guy,” Din said to a man fishing at the edge of Prophet Rock Lake. “Tall. Looks after the place. Might wear moss.

The fisherman shrugged and pointed vaguely toward the woods, “Haven’t seen him in a few days. His hut is just over there, beyond the tree line.

We headed in the direction the man had indicated and found a small, makeshift shelter; a simple roof woven from twigs and leaves, balanced atop four thick branches driven into the ground. A sleeping mat lay off to one side. Nearby, a pot and a blackened kettle hung over a small firepit, the ashes cold and gray – untouched for several hours, at least. Dried herbs hung in neat bunches from the ceiling. Clay bowls filled with berries and nuts sat carefully arranged on a flat stone.

It didn’t look abandoned.

But it didn’t look lived in either.

We called out a few times, but there was no answer. The woods stayed quiet.

Yak wandered over to one of the clay bowls, picked out a berry, sniffed it, then gave it a tentative lick.

Din didn’t even look up. “Put it back.

Yak sighed and dropped the berry back into the bowl with exaggerated disappointment, wiping his tongue on his sleeve.

Trunch wandered down toward the lake and stopped at the edge of the water. He stood there for a while, just… looking. Then he tossed a small stone and watched the ripples drift outward where it fell.

You gonna climb it again,” Umberto asked, eyeing the Prophet Rock with renewed interest.

Trunch shook his head. “No,” he said quietly. “Not this time.

Umberto turned. “Why not?

Trunch didn’t answer right away. He just stared at the rock.

I don’t think it would be respectful,” he finally said. “And… part of me wonders if what I did started something we didn’t understand.

Umberto nodded and shrugged.

Trunch tilted his head. “Also … I can’t actually swim.

We waited. We searched. We asked a few more questions to the handful of people still lingering nearby, but no one could point us toward him.

Hothar?” A portly man with a sun-reddened nose paused mid-step, his wiry mule snorting behind him beneath a tower of bundled fabrics. “Big fella, gentle as rain? He’s always pokin’ around the woods — talking to trees, rescuing birds, that sort of thing. Sort of nature’s warden, y’know? Usually shows up when something needs fixing. Or when the squirrels start organizing again.

He scratched his head beneath a frayed straw hat. “Might be out checking on a grove or a nesting site or who knows what. He comes and goes. Nature business.

The man chuckled as he adjusted one of the bundles. “If you’re waiting to talk to him… you might be waiting a while. Works on nature’s time, that one.

After an hour, we gave up.

We don’t have time for this,” Day said, scanning the treeline. “I think we should move on. Find Travok, he’s next on the list.”

No one argued. We left the Dell behind, the Prophet Rock shrinking behind the trees as we turned north — toward Ravenswell.

Apparently,” I ran my eyes over the notes Yun and Tufulla had provided about the group, “He runs an inn just outside Ravenswell, the Stumble Inn.

Finally,” Umberto snapped. “Somewhere that serves drinks.


Ravenswell came into view before the Stumble Inn — or at least, the aura of it did.

I think the forest is on fire,” Carrie gasped as we crested a low hill.

Chimneys,” I said flatly. “Just chimneys.

Chimneys?” Din asked, squinting into the haze. “That many?”

Welcome to Ravenswell,” I replied. “Industrial hub of the valley. Iron and coal mines in the Marwhera Peaks just behind it. Almost all the valley’s weapons, tools, furniture — they’re made here.

Smells like burnt socks,” Yak muttered, wrinkling his nose.

Doesn’t really fit the rest of the valley,” Day noted.

It doesn’t,” I agreed. “Everywhere else is farms and forests. Here, it’s soot and sawdust. The best smiths, carpenters, fletchers, coopers — all of them set up shop in Ravenswell. It’s not as polluting as some of the industrial towns beyond the mountains, but in a place like this? The contrast is… noticeable.

Trunch tapped a finger against his temple. “I read once that the best woodwork on the continent came from this valley. Timberham, wasn’t it?

I nodded. “Timberham. South of Briarbright. Legendary craftsmanship. The kind of place where chairs were heirlooms and doorframes had waiting lists.

And now it’s a ghost town. No one really goes there anymore?” Trunch asked.

Because of actual ghosts?” Carrie asked hopefully.

No. Bad memories.

What happened?

Dan’del’ion Court. They razed it — a warning to the valley. It’s just blackened beams and broken windows now. Very few actual residents.

Carrie’s eyes lit up. “So, possibly because of ghosts?

I turned to her. “No. Mostly just abandoned. Possibly cursed.

She frowned.

I sighed. “Although… given the circumstances and the rumors, I wouldn’t rule out ghosts entirely.

Several minutes later, just before the edge of Ravenswell proper, the Stumble Inn came into view — a squat, single-storey building of thatch and stone, nestled like an afterthought at the bend in the road. Smoke curled lazily from a small chimney. A modest stable stood to one side, and a C.A.R.T. stand sat nearby, its beast pen empty and its attendant half-asleep.

We led the mules over first. The attendant roused with a grunt — then froze as Carrie’s glittered parade-beasts came into view.

He blinked.

The mule with the braided mane snorted defiantly.

I can explain,” Carrie chirped, like someone accepting a trophy.

You really can’t,” Day muttered, patting the mule’s flank.

We left the beasts in his stunned care and made our way toward the inn.

I’ll stay out front,” Day said as we approached. “Keep an eye out. Just in case.

Wikis nodded and wordlessly joined him, already half-cloaked in her hood, watching the sky again like it had wronged her personally.

We headed to the door which creaked open with a groan, and stepped into the dim glow of the Stumble Inn.

Or tried to.

Trunch was first — and promptly tripped forward with a startled grunt, catching himself on a table and knocking over a spoon.

The inn erupted in cheers.

Yak and Umberto reached the doorway at the same time. There was an immediate flurry of elbows and shoulders as they jostled for position.

Move it,” Umberto growled. “I need a drink.

Not as much as I do,” Yak hissed back, grinning.

They pushed, twisted, half-tripped over each other — and finally burst through the threshold in a tangled heap.

The room erupted.

Yak landed sprawled and sideways across the earthen floor, arms splayed like a felled starfish. Umberto skidded into a table leg, rolled to his feet, and threw both arms in the air like he’d just won a wrestling match.

Cheers, whistles, and laughter rang out across the inn.

Carrie fluttered in with perfect grace, feet never touching the ground. She landed gracefully on an empty table, twirled and struck a dazzling pose … and was met with complete silence.

She blinked. “Oh come on.

Din followed next, stepping over the threshold carefully and with intention. A chorus of boos met him before his boots had fully hit the packed earth..

He raised a single brow. “Really?

They didn’t stumble!” someone shouted “They buy their own.

Carrie crossed her arms. “I was being elegant.

The barkeep shrugged. “Elegance don’t get you an ale.

She glared at him.

I followed right after them — and stumbled.

My boot hit the raised threshold just a little too high, and the floor dropped just a little too quickly. As I pitched forward, I had just enough time to think, Ah. Slightly elevated entry, lower interior floor. Optical illusion. How clever.

Then I hit the floor, caught myself on a table leg, and was met with thunderous applause.

Better!” someone yelled.

I straightened, dusted myself off, and gave a short bow. “You people are very enthusiastic about other people falling over,” I observed.

That’s the whole point.” the barkeep called. “It’s in the name. First timers get an ale on the house, if they stumble in.” He waved a hand derisively, as if he really didn’t care at all.

Free ale,” Umberto said, downing a mug that was handed to him in a long, satisfying gulp. He exhaled like someone who’d just emerged from underwater. “This place,” he said, eyes closed, “is great.” He turned to Yak, “We need a gimmick.

It was the happiest we’d seen him all day.

What brings you to the Stumble Inn?” The individual behind the bar was a squat, broad-shouldered Dwarf. He wiped his hands on a greasy cloth and scowled at us like we’d spilled something.

We’re looking for someone,” Carrie replied. She leaned in closely, “Someone who is in danger.

So, you’re not just passing through,” he said flatly.

Not just,” Din replied, nodding politely.

The dwarf didn’t answer. Just kept wiping, one eye narrowing.

Umberto set his tankard down. “You wouldn’t happen to know a Travok, would you?

The wiping stopped.

Depends who’s asking.

We’re friends of Yun,” I offered. “And Tufulla.

He grunted. “Figures.” He threw the cloth down. “So, you church folk.” He glanced at me.

We’re not with the Church,” Din said.

We’re an independent group, ” Carrie cut in “No political affiliations. We’re the Damaged Buttholes.

The inn keeper raised a brow. “That’s not a real name.

Unfortunately, it is,” Din muttered. 

Travok looked at me again. “So what’s he doing with you then?” He jabbed a thick finger in my direction.

I’m just a scribe,” I said quickly. “A note-taker.

He squinted at me like I was some kind of fungus growing on a loaf of bread.

I cleared my throat. “They – can’t write,” I added, eyeing Umberto pointedly.

Umberto scowled, raised his mug and drank again.

We’re trying to find out about Castle Ieyoch.” Yak added, “About what happened there.

The dwarf stared long and hard at Yak. He leaned forward slightly, squinting into the hooded shadows. “You been in here before?” He asked, “You look kind of familiar.

Yak just smiled. “Me? No, first time patron. I just have one of those faces.

The Dan’del’ion Court is rising again.” Trunch added with conviction, “Yun said Travok was part of a scouting team that made it back from the castle. We just want to ask him a few questions.

Travok’s eyes tightened.

I don’t talk about that,” he said. “Didn’t then. Don’t now.

Why not?” Din asked gently.

Because I don’t remember.
The words dropped heavy and bitter.

So, you’re Travok?” Carrie asked, eyes wide. “I thought you’d be … bigger.

He scowled.

That explains the crossbows,” Yak said casually.

Travok’s eyes snapped toward him.

Trunch frowned. “What crossbows?

The traps,” Yak said, still not looking at anyone. “Button-triggered, I’d guess. I noticed three separate clicking sounds when we mentioned his name. Above the door, under the bench, and,” he leaned sideways a fraction, “behind that barrel over there.

Travok stared at him. Then, slowly, he reached below the bar and flipped a small switch with a heavy clunk.

Built most of them myself,” he said gruffly. “Harmond helped. Old friend. 

Harmond of Beastly Bits. In Dawnsheart?” I asked.

That’s him. Mad as a goat. Knows his contraptions though.

Expecting someone?” Din asked.

I always expect someone,” Travok snapped. “After I got out of that cursed place, I started having visitors. Mostly at night. Always hooded. Always wearing one of these

He reached beneath the bar and pulled out a small lockbox. Inside were five identical medallions — the unmistakable emblem of the Dan’del’ion Court.

Pffft. We’ve got like a dozen or so of those,” Carrie scoffed as she reached into her pack and dumped a cloth wrapped heap on the bar. There was the distinct clink of metal as the cloth parted exposing a pile of medallions. “What’s your point?

I moved to quickly cover the pile of medallions with the edges of the cloth, “Don’t wave these around in public,” I hissed at Carrie, “They’re highly illegal.

No one here gives a shit,” Travok snarled. Then, raising his voice to the room:
Hey — these…” he glanced at us quickly, “…buttholes have killed a bunch of Dan’del’ion scumbags!

There was a cheer and the clink of glasses in celebration.

You’ll find no love for the Dan’del’ion Court here,” he added, with something approaching joy. “May they all die fucking painful deaths.

Umberto, Yak, and Carrie raised their mugs in silent salute, joined by the majority of scattered patrons throughout the room.

Travok leaned back behind the bar, crossed his arms, and looked us over.
Right. We’ve done introductions. Now we’re best fucking friends,” he said with a smug curl to his lip, “What in Bragmire’s name do you want?

There was a beat of quiet. A shuffling of feet. The uncomfortable scrape of barstools. Ale being swallowed a little too loudly.
No one wanted to be the first to speak.

Eventually, Din stepped forward.

We came to ask you to come with us,” he said. “Back to Dawnsheart.

Before Travok could respond, the door burst open behind us.
A loud cheer erupted from the patrons as Wikis faceplanted into the dirt just inside the threshold.

A mug of ale was quickly thrust into her hand. She clutched it instinctively, eyes wide, body tense and coiled like a spring.

Friend of yours?” Travok asked, one eyebrow raised as his hand slipped under the bar.

She’s with us, yes,” Din answered, calm and steady.

Travok snorted and pulled his hand back. “‘Course she is.

Your name is on a list,” Trunch said calmly. “Found on a Dan’del’ion assassin.

Travok didn’t move.

There were three of them,” Trunch continued. “Assassins. Working together. The other two are still out there.

We took care of one of them,” Carrie added cheerfully, like she was announcing free cake.

Din stepped forward again, locking eyes with Travok.
The list had names. Members of your team. You. Yun. Hothar. Svaang. And High Reader Tufulla.

Travok’s jaw clenched.

Tufulla and Yun both think it’ll be safer if you’re all in one place,” Din finished. “Strength in numbers.

They’re killing off anyone who knows anything,” Trunch said. “That’s why we need to get you to Dawnsheart. Tufulla and Yun—

I’m not going,” Travok cut him off. “I have this place rigged tighter than the King’s vault. You want me in a safe place? You’re in it.

Travok,” Din pleaded, “if we don’t work together, none of us are going to be safe. We’ve already been attacked. People are dying. We need answers.

I don’t have answers,” Travok snapped, this time slamming his hand on the bar. “I told you. The Castle was strange. Wrong. We went in… I don’t know what we found. Just pieces. Flashes. Screaming. Fire. A light that wasn’t a light. They took my leg. We made it out. I call that a fair trade.” He stepped back from the bar and tapped his peg-leg against the floor.

We’re not asking you to fight,” Trunch offered. “Just talk. Help us fill in the gaps.

I can’t,” Travok snapped again, this time slamming both hands onto the bar. “That’s what I’m trying to tell you. My memories are… gone. Or missing. There’s gaps I don’t remember. They messed with our heads!

He looked up slowly and gestured at his tavern.

Did you stop to wonder why the floor here is just dirt? It’s because I think about that place every time I hear this peg knock against stone or wood,” he said brusquely. “What they did to us. How she didn’t make it out.” Then he drained the last of his ale, stared into the mug like it might refill itself, and muttered, “Go find the others. If they’re still breathing maybe they’ll help.

You’re not going to?” Din asked quietly.

I just did,” Travok said, and turned away. “Now drink up, and get out before I decide you are looking for trouble.

We started to gather our things. There was an edge to the silence now, like a conversation that had closed too hard.

Carrie lingered by the bar, eyes still on Travok.

What was her name?” she asked softly. “The one who didn’t make it out.

Travok didn’t look up. He just exhaled through his nose, like the question had pulled something sharp from deep inside.

Adina,” he said. “Her name was Adina.

There was a pause. Then:

She and Svaang were close. Real close. He can tell you more. If you can find him.

He didn’t say anything else. Just stared into his empty mug like it held a map to somewhere better.


We stepped out into the mid-afternoon air and found Day casually petting our overly-decorated mules at the C.A.R.T. stand. One of them now had glitter on its ears. The other had feathers stuck to its tail and looked like it wanted to die.

So,” Day said, not looking up, “I take it he’s not coming with us?

He said it in that calm, matter-of-fact way that made it sound like he’d known all along.

No,” Din replied, setting his hammer on the cart with a weary thud. “He’s too stubborn to move and too broken to help.

Carrie fluttered over and landed lightly on the cart’s edge. “He gave us a name, though,” she said. “Adina. She’s the one who didn’t make it out.

Day nodded slowly. “I guess that’s something.” He unhooked the mules from the hitching post and tossed the attendant a silver.

Yak stood nibbling a dried biscuit. “He said Svaang would be able to tell us more. Where did Yun say we’d find him?

The Briars,” Wikis said, eyeing the nearby treeline. “Somewhere near the bridge.” She climbed onto the cart without breaking eye contact with the trees.

I say we don’t even bother,” Umberto growled, stomping up to the cart. “Let them get hunted. Fend for themselves. We know where the damn castle is — let’s just go. Kick the door in. End it now.

Carrie lit up like he’d suggested they crash a royal wedding. “Honestly? That kind of energy is very appealing right now.” She fluttered down beside him, poked his bicep, and grinned. “We storm the gates, you rage, Wikis looses some arrows — boom. Instant legends.

I’m in,” Umberto said, flexing his fingers. “We’re wasting time. All this walking and talking — for what? Another name on a list? Another paranoid old fart who won’t help us?

No,” Trunch said gently, climbing aboard. “We don’t even know what we’re walking into. Too many variables. Too many unknowns.

You’re assuming we have time to figure everything out,” Umberto snapped. “Right now, we’re just dithering around the countryside, talking to ghosts and cowards.

And what if we’re walking straight into a trap?” Din said firmly, turning to face him. “The only information we have about the castle came from Dominic — when he was pretending to be Jonath. We don’t know what’s real and what’s bait.

Umberto scowled, jaw clenched. But he didn’t argue.

Day spoke from the front of the cart, still adjusting the harness on the mules. “We move faster,” he said simply. “Find Svaang. Find Hothar. We go through the Dell on the way to the Briars anyway. We gather what we can.

He looked back at the group. “The more information we have, the better our odds.

Umberto exhaled through his nose like a bull barely held at bay. “I swear, if this ends with us back in a tavern discussing feelings—

It won’t,” Din said, resting a hand on the haft of his hammer. “You’ll get to hit something soon. Lots of things, probably.

Umberto snorted, then gave a grudging nod and hoisted himself onto the cart. “You better hope so,” he said, eyeing me as he settled in. “Or I’ll take it out on something else.

I promise,” Din said gently, patting him on the shoulder.

I shifted uncomfortably.

Carrie tossed a flower behind her like it was the end of an opera. “Onward, to glory,” she declared. “I feel it in the wind.

That’s probably just glitter,” Yak said, brushing some from his collar and climbing aboard.

We urged the mules into motion, hoping they’d pick up the pace now that time actually mattered.

They did not.

If anything, they seemed personally offended by the idea.

The one with glitter on its ears stopped to chew a particularly unappetizing patch of grass. The other let out a deep, sorrowful sigh — the kind that sounded like it had just remembered every bad thing that had ever happened to it.

This is ridiculous,” Umberto muttered, shifting his weight. “Can’t they move faster?

Wikis glanced at the mules, then the cart. “Next time we’re in a hurry, maybe we spring for the upgrade and hire horses instead.

The mule with feathers sneezed.

We arrived at the Dell in the late afternoon. The air had gained a bite, and cold winds began to creep down from the mountains. We hitched the mules to a post near the lake, letting them drink to their hearts’ content.

Wikis, ever alert, tapped Day on the shoulder and motioned toward a patch of wildflowers near the tree line — not far from where we’d inspected Hothar’s hut earlier. A shape sat still among the blooms, a silhouette woven of shadow and subtle movement.

Hey,” Day said, quietly. “Looks like he might be here.

We approached carefully, and found ourselves standing before a tangle of limbs and stillness.

He sat cross-legged in the dirt, surrounded by wildflowers, as if the patch had grown around him. Long, lanky legs folded beneath a wiry frame, more sinew than muscle. His arms draped at his sides like vines left untethered. If he stood, he’d have easily cleared seven feet.

A pipe — not carved, but formed from a naturally hollowed curve of wood — rested between his lips. Thin ribbons of smoke drifted lazily skyward.

His face was soft and broad, almost bovine in its shape, with wide nostrils and heavy-lidded eyes. It was the kind of face built for peace. At that moment, he seemed entirely lost in it.

We all eyed each other, waiting for someone to speak.

Umberto stepped forward.

Trunch immediately threw out an arm and pushed him back, clearing his throat softly as he stepped in front.

Excuse me… are you Hothar?

The figure didn’t move at first. Just sat there in the wildflowers, pipe balanced between his lips, smoke curling lazily toward the clouds.

Then he spoke — a slow, low rumble, like tree roots stretching in the earth.

Mmm.

A long pause.

Names’re a funny thing… don’t you think?

He blinked slowly, eyes still fixed on some distant thought.

Like a coat. You put it on. Wear it a while. Sometimes it fits. Sometimes it’s jus’ heavy.

Another slow drag on the pipe.

But aye…” He tilted his head toward Trunch. “Folk call me Hothar. So… maybe I am.

Trunch took a careful step forward.
We were hoping to talk to you,” he said. “About the Dan’del’ion Court. Castle Ieyoch. We’re friends of Yun.

Hothar didn’t answer at first. Just breathed slowly through his nose, eyes still on the flower between his fingers.

Mm. Yun,” he murmured. “Bright flame. Burns careful.

A gust of wind stirred the wildflowers, brushing his sleeves.

But that place… that name…” His voice softened even more, almost a whisper. “It don’t belong in mouths no more.

He set the flower gently down on the earth beside him.

Some things don’t grow back, friend,” he said. “Not right. Not really. You can try to mend the branch, but the scar’s still there — and it don’t bear fruit the same way.

Then he looked at Trunch for the first time. Not unfriendly. But heavy.

Why would you chase rot in the root, when there’s still blossom on the tree?

There was a beat of silence.

Then Umberto exhaled, loud through his nose. His jaw clenched. His shoulders rose. His fists opened and closed at his sides like he was wringing out an invisible towel.

Steam, in the shape of a man.

Are you kidding me?” he muttered. “We’re out here chasing whispers while they’re raising the dead and sharpening blades—

Day put a hand on his arm. He shook it off.

Umberto,” Din warned quietly.

But Hothar didn’t flinch. He turned slowly, pipe still balanced between his lips, and looked up at the boiling gnome.

Mmm.

He took a long draw, then let the smoke curl from his nose.

Boiling water don’t see the stars,” he said.

Another pause.

Too busy bubbling.”

Then he turned back toward the flowers, like that was explanation enough.

Trunch stepped forward again, voice steady but gentle.
We’re not here to stir up old wounds. We just… we need to understand. What you saw. What happened in that castle.

Hothar didn’t look up. He pinched a stalk of wild mint between his fingers and inhaled deeply.

The wind don’t tell the tree where it’s blowin’,” he said softly. “But still, the branches bend.

Trunch opened his mouth. Closed it. Looked to Din.

Din cleared his throat and tried a different tack.
Hothar. You’re in danger. They’re hunting people. Everyone who went to that place. You included.

At that, Hothar gave a slow nod. Not surprised. Not moved.
All things are hunted,” he said. “Antelope knows the lion. Tree knows the axe. Seed knows the frost.
He looked up at Din.
You call it danger. I call it rhythm.

But if we work together,” Din tried again, “we can stop this.

Wikis stood unblinking, head cocked to one side. Watching the firbolg intently.

You can’t stop winter no matter how hard you try,” Hothar murmured. “You endure it. Let it pass. Plant again come spring.

Umberto paced a few steps away, muttering curses to himself.

Trunch tried once more. “Please. Just something. A memory. A glimpse. Anything that can help.

Hothar’s voice dropped into near reverence.
Some soil ain’t meant to be turned.
He tapped his temple lightly.
Sometimes, it’s best to leave it be, don’t give the wrong things a chance to grow.

That’s it,” Umberto growled, stomping forward. “You’re just gonna sit here spouting gardening riddles while the rest of us are bleeding trying to fix this?

Hothar didn’t move. Didn’t blink.

Mmm.

He took another pull on the pipe. “The sun can’t reach everything” he said. “Some things naturally grow in the dark.

Gods, I hate gardening,” Umberto muttered. He walked over to the road and began kicking at stones and pebbles, cursing.

A quiet giggle cut through the tension.
An elderly woman perched on a rock by the roadside called out, “It’s no use. All he does is talk in riddles. I reckon it’s the pipe what does it.

Din turned toward her, exasperated. “You mean there’s no way to get a straight answer out of him?

“’Fraid not,” she said with a shrug. “He’s always like this — unless there’s a threat to the Dell. A fire, a hunter, someone pickin’ too many flowers. If he feels the land’s in danger, then he speaks.

Din rubbed his forehead and sighed.
Well,” he said, loud enough for the rest of us to hear, “we are not starting a forest fire.

The way he said it made it very clear — that wasn’t a suggestion.

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Wikis — still watching the druid — nudge Day and motion silently toward something I couldn’t quite see. I turned to follow her gaze toward Hothar, just as Umberto pulled my attention elsewhere.

The place needs to feel threatened for him to act, huh?” Umberto snapped. “That’s fucking great.

He stepped toward the old woman.

Is this threatening enough?”

His clenched fist connected with her jaw with a loud crack.

She slid from the rock, head hitting the ground with a sickening thud.

Umberto spun toward Hothar. “Is that threatening enough? Are you going to talk now?

Spit flew from his mouth as he began striding toward the still-meditative druid.

Carrie’s wings stopped mid-beat — she dropped to the ground in stunned silence.
Trunch’s mouth fell open.
Oh gods,” Din cried, rushing to the old woman’s side, his hands already glowing with healing light.
Yak dropped the daisy chain he’d been weaving and stepped between Umberto and Hothar.

Ah—little help, guys? Shit. Help,” Yak called out, struggling to hold the fuming Umberto back.

Hey, guys,” Day said calmly, beckoning. No one listened.

Hothar didn’t flinch. Didn’t even blink.

If you leave a kettle boilin’ too long without watchin’ it,” he said slowly, “it’ll burn down your house.

Din propped the groaning woman back up against the rock, pressing a healing potion into her hand before turning — eyes blazing — and striding through the flowers.

He hit Umberto in the face with a full gauntlet swing.

What the fuck, Umberto!” Din roared. “A defenseless old woman?

Hey, guys,” Day said again, louder this time.

I need answers,” Umberto snarled, holding his jaw. “Not fucking riddles!

You need to walk away,” Din growled, pointing back toward the injured woman. “And you need to be ashamed.

Guys!” Day called. He and Wikis were both staring at Hothar. “Watch.

He pointed toward the ground beside the lanky firbolg.

Between the aftershock of Umberto’s outburst and the thick air of held-in fury, it took us a moment to follow his gaze. But then we saw it.

Hothar, still seated, still puffing gently on his pipe, had been running his long fingers through the wildflowers around him. Not idly — reverently. Stroking the stalks of some, gently patting the heads of others. A kind of absent-minded affection in every motion.

But when his hand neared a cluster of dandelions, it twitched. Recoiled slightly. And carefully avoided them altogether.

Wikis noticed it,” Day said as she stepped across to Umberto “He’s been avoiding touching the the whole time.” Wikis whispered something to Umberto and they both stepped away, he seemed to sag as he so. Day continued. “I think there’s something locked away in there,” he said pointing to Hothar’s head. 

Din returned to the old woman’s side, speaking softly as he helped her back onto her rock seat. His voice was low, steady — a quiet reassurance as he guided her into place and checked the bump on her head.

The rest of us remained still, watching Hothar.

He continued to weave his long fingers through the grass and wildflowers, each movement slow and thoughtful. His hand skimmed over bluebells, traced along buttercup stems — but every time it neared a dandelion, it paused, shifted, and moved around it. Not fearfully, but with quiet, deliberate avoidance.

Something about it felt… intentional.

Umberto and Wikis returned in silence, each cradling an armful of dandelions plucked from the edges of the Dell. The wildflowers swayed slightly in their arms as they approached. Even with Hothar seated cross-legged in the grass, the two stood nearly eye-level with him.

Umberto didn’t look at any of us. Not Day. Not Din. Not even Carrie, who stepped forward as if to speak but was halted by a gentle hand from Trunch. She stopped, frowning, wings twitching in confusion.

Wikis turned to Umberto. Her voice was quiet but certain.

I think… this is how we’ll get answers.

She gave a small nod.

Together, without another word, they lifted their dandelions and blew.

A cascade of white tufts burst into the air, drifting gently forward—soft and silent, like tiny parachutes. The seeds danced between them before settling across Hothar’s face.

He blinked.

A single twitch flickered through his cheek.

Then his eyes snapped wide. The pupils dilated instantly—huge and dark—and for a moment it looked like he’d forgotten how to breathe.

He inhaled sharply, as though the air had just returned to him after years underwater.

Then he exhaled. A long, shuddering release of breath.

Adina,” he whispered.

His voice cracked.

I’m sorry.

And then he wept.


Everything Is Under Control

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXIII


And so it was that I found myself, once again, alongside this dysfunctional yet inexplicably effective group of misfits who called themselves ‘The Damaged Buttholes.’

Each of us may be damaged,” Wikis had once said, “but at least we’re whole. For the most part.

For the briefest of moments, I’d managed to slip the net—found a sliver of peace, a breath of quiet, a return to the predictable safety of scrolls and silence. I told myself I needed space. Clarity. Distance from the fireballs, the undead cats, the barroom interrogations.

Tufulla, apparently, disagreed.

It was subtle. Infuriatingly so.
A gentle nudge here. A quiet suggestion there. And now here I was inking my quill, packing my satchel, and preparing once again to risk my life so the chaos could be… documented. Properly.

Was I also damaged? Undeniably. I suspected the emotional toll of the past few days would take years to unpack.
But I had to admit — I was still, for the most part, whole.

And more than that, perhaps – I was wanted.

I’d begun to suspect that Tufulla was playing a much grander, more complicated game than he let on. That we were pieces, and he was moving us about the board with purpose. Not malice. No, never malice. But precision. Intent. As if he saw threads connecting events we hadn’t even noticed, and was quietly tying knots we’d only feel once we tripped over them.

Of course, there was the prophecy.
Tufulla believed in it. Truly, deeply. And if he believed it could be steered toward a better ending, he would do whatever it took to adjust the sails.
Even if that meant tugging the chronicler back into the storm.

It had barely been twenty-four hours since I’d stepped away. Now I was lacing my boots again.

I wasn’t sure I was ready for what was coming.
I was absolutely sure they weren’t. But for the first time, I felt like maybe, just maybe, I was a part of something world-changing.

It wasn’t formal. Nothing ever was with them. But the moment I sat back down at the table, inkwell open and quill in hand, Yak reached beneath the bar, retrieved a dust-covered bottle of Goblin’s Nut, and began to pour.

A toast,” he said, raising a shot glass. “To the return of our chronicler. May he tell the story right.

The group raised their glasses. Even Bones, curled by the hearth, let out a faint skeletal rattle that may have been celebratory. Or indigestion. Hard to tell with undead cats. I looked down at the full mug of ale Umberto had just given me.

To Klept,” Carrie smiled.

To correctly documented chaos,” Trunch added with a wink.

And then Umberto leaned forward and looked at me with something bordering on sincerity.

Every story needs a witness, Klept. And every witness needs the courage to capture truth, even when it’s veiled in chaos.

I blinked. “That was… unexpectedly eloquent.

He shrugged. “I’ve read. A lot.

I stared at him.

Just, make sure you do this story justice,” he added, leaning back on his chair and raising his glass, “especially when it comes to the complicated but brooding leading man of the tale.

Which would be you?

Obviously.

We drank.

Yak smacked his lips and studied the bottle’s label like it had personally offended him. “That was bottle six. I’ve got half a one stashed under the counter, but that’s it. I’ll need supplies if we want more.” He rubbed his chin. “Also… I’ve got an idea. Something smoother. Or fizzier. Possibly both.

Day, ever the multitasker, had already relocated to a corner table. He didn’t say much, just gave me a small nod of welcome and returned to his spellbook, lips moving, fingers sketching silent runes into the air.

Din stood and stretched, the joints in his shoulders cracking like splintering wood. He stepped behind the bar, opened the cupboard, and cautiously lifted the lid of the egg box.

No change,” he muttered. “Still pulsing slowly.

I chose not to ask.

He let the lid fall shut and turned to us. “Right. We need supplies. Potions, mostly. And prep time. Meet back here in two hours?

There was a chorus of nodding heads.

What about you?” I asked.

I’ve got an idea,” he said, eyes gleaming in a way that made me nervous.

Trunch rose, brushed crumbs from his sleeves, and adjusted his cuffs. “I’m going to speak to someone about the windows. And maybe a carpenter. Some of the stools have… suffered.

Din nodded and pulled out a couple of small pouches of coin from the shelf next to the egg box. He threw one gentle to Trunch.

Yak grabbed a few coins, muttered something about fruit peels and experimental fermentation, and ducked out the front door with an alarming amount of enthusiasm.

And just like that, the Grin emptied.

Everyone gone, except Day, hunched in the corner, surrounded by parchment, whispers, and quiet sparks of light.

I watched him work for a moment, then turned and followed the others out the door.


We’d just picked up the last of Yun’s potion stock and were making our way back to the Grin when Umberto stopped dead in his tracks and sniffed the air like a bloodhound on the scent.

She’s here,” he whispered.

Who?” Wikis asked, already reaching for her weapons. “Naida?

No.” His eyes scanned the square, wild and searching. “Barbara. She’s -” He pointed suddenly. “Over there!

And sure enough, across the bustling square, Barbara Dongswallower stood in conversation with a tall, cloaked figure. We couldn’t make out their face, hood pulled low, posture deliberately unmemorable, but Barbara was unmistakable. The hair, the poise, the faint, distant glamour of someone who’d never once been singed by an ill-timed fireball.

Barbara! Over here! It’s me! It’s Umberto!” he shouted, sprinting toward them. But the square was loud – crowded with market stalls, musicians, and hagglers. His voice barely rose above the din.

Barbara nodded. Her companion leaned in. They both turned and began walking briskly away, ducking down a narrow alley and disappearing from view.

Umberto returned a few minutes later, winded and visibly distraught.

I lost her,” he said. “They turned a corner and just… vanished.

Probably ducked into a shop,” Carrie offered with a smirk. “To get away from the crazed fan chasing her.

I am not a crazed fan,” Umberto growled. “We have a connection. A real one. She gave me this.

He reached into his loincloth. There was a collective recoil.

From within, he pulled a folded piece of parchment; creased, worn, and suspiciously damp at one corner.

She gave this to me personally,” he said, reverently. Then, without warning, he brought it to his nose and inhaled deeply.

We all recoiled again.

He shuddered. Eyes closed. A moment of pure, unsettling bliss.

You wouldn’t understand.” He murmured.

That is definitely true.” Wikis replied through gritted teeth. She suddenly spun on her heel and loosed an arrow in one fluid motion.

Thunk.

A startled squawk echoed through the square as a bird—small, black, and previously unremarkable—crumpled dramatically onto a vendor’s stall, scattering bundles of dried herbs and startling a nearby child.

Umberto snapped out of his reverie. Everyone froze.

Wikis didn’t blink. She looked up, unfazed, as the rest of us stood slack-jawed.

What?” she muttered. “It’s been following me all morning.

Then she went right back to scanning the rooftops.

The silence that followed was long and deeply concerned.

We began walking back toward the Grin. As we passed the stall, Wikis casually retrieved her arrow, bird still attached.

Are you gonna be wantin’ that?” the vendor asked, peering at the feathered corpse. “There’s decent eating on a bird like that.

Wikis yanked the arrow free with a wet shluck. “Ten silver,” she said flatly.

The woman narrowed her eyes.

What? You know it’s fresh,” Wikis replied, holding the bird up as if demonstrating quality produce.

With a weary sigh, the vendor reached into her apron and dropped the coin into Wikis’ outstretched palm. Wikis tossed the bird back onto the pile of dried herbs and practically skipped away. 

I leaned toward Carrie. “I think we’re all going to die,” I whispered. 

Without looking at me, she flicked a hand in my direction. “You’re always so dramatic,” she said, then gave the vendor a polite curtsy as we passed.


We returned to the Grin to find Day helping Trunch unload a cart piled with basic, serviceable furniture. Nothing fancy. Half of it looked like it might snap itself to pieces at the faintest whiff of a bar brawl, but it would do.

Din stood nearby, calmly breaking the remains of shattered chairs and splintered tables into smaller pieces with his hammer. “Should be perfect for the hearth when it starts getting colder,” he smiled.

Yak was flitting between the bar and the kitchen, a blur of purposeful chaos. He moved like a man in the middle of a deeply personal ritual – one part alchemist, one part bartender, all mischief. Bottles of Smelt and other dubious spirits were lined up on the counter like a parade of willing victims. Into them, he dropped dried fruits, crushed herbs, slivers of bark, whole spices, and the occasional mystery root pulled from somewhere deep in his apron.

Every now and then, he’d pause, sniff a bottle, mutter something unintelligible, then either nod with satisfaction or dump the entire contents into a waiting bucket with a disgusted noise.

He scribbled frantically on the bottles with chalk, charcoal, and bits of parchment stuck on with wax. Some labels bore cryptic names like “Goblin’s Whimsy” or “Sapfire No. 3.” Others just had question marks or ominous warnings like not for breakfast.

One bottle was gently swirling on its own. I didn’t ask.

The glazier’s coming by tomorrow,” Trunch announced, carrying a couple of stools through the door. He gestured to the jagged remnants of the front windows—the scars of the molotov attack. “Funnily enough, he has a stockpile of panes that are the perfect size. Said the previous owner of the Grin was a frequent customer.

Umberto and Wikis each scooped up an armful of the more interestingly-shaped debris from Din’s growing pile; splintered legs, half-seat planks, a chunk that vaguely resembled a snarling goose, and carried it over to the hearth.

They stacked the pieces haphazardly beneath the stairs, just out of the way but close enough for firewood duty. The moment they stepped back, Bones leapt onto the pile with the bony enthusiasm of a cat rediscovering a childhood haunt.

He clacked and scrambled up the mess like it was a jungle gym built in his honor, his tail rattling as he perched atop the apex and began swatting at a hanging splinter like it owed him money.

Wikis folded her arms, watching with mild satisfaction. “Well. He approves.

The last of the furniture was being shuffled into place. Chairs creaked reluctantly into position, and Carrie stood in the center of it all, hands on hips, directing like a general with a passion for rustic ambiance.

That one by the window,” she called to Trunch. “And the round one near the hearth. No, rotate it. Perfect.

She moved from table to table, placing candles inside old jars, adding what little charm she could with what they had. A few tables remained bare, just empty jars waiting for purpose.

We’ll need more candles,” she murmured. “Or fewer tables.

I reached into my satchel and pulled out a small bundle. “I picked these up this morning,” I said, offering them out. “I’d intended to replace the ones at the church altar. They are scented – I hope you don’t mind sandalwood.

Carrie blinked, then beamed. “Klept. You’re a delight.” Before I could protest or deflect, she wrapped her arms around me in a brief, warm hug. “Thank you.


There was a low, familiar rumble as Din emerged from the cellar, rolling a fresh keg across the floor.

Are we through the current one already?” Umberto asked, surprised but also just a little proud.

No,” Din replied, steering the keg toward the door. “This is for… something else.

Yak, now lounging with his feet on the table near the hearth, looked up from the last of his cocktail scribbles. “Where are you taking it?

Din paused, resting an arm atop the keg. “Well, we’re about to head out and find the people on this list.

If we can,” Carrie muttered, not quite under her breath.

You want to take a whole keg with us?” Umberto’s eye grew wide with joy. “I mean , I love the idea – but who’s going to carry it?

Din’s thought cracked for a moment and there was a quick, contemplative smile. “Oh I wish,” he said quietly, then. “We have to leave, but clearly, we can’t leave the Grin unmanned.” He gestured broadly to the broken windows and the scorch marks still clinging to the floorboards. 

Trunch was solving a puzzle internally. “So, you’re buying off some of the city guard, with ale, to keep watch,” he asked “In case Thornstar’s goons show up again?.

Or Naida.” Day added, “She could come back.

Din gave a sly smirk. “Something like that, yeah.

There was the unmistakable snap of a blind being hastily drawn somewhere outside, followed by the heavy thump of approaching footsteps.

A shadow passed the broken window. A single figure filled the doorway, so tall we could only see a broad chest and the suggestion of shoulders before he stooped to enter.

Az. The massive orc from the fight for the Grin.

He stepped across the threshold, ducking his head and straightening to his full, formidable height. The floorboards groaned under his weight.

Everyone instinctively took a step back.

Umberto unclipped his axe.

Az grinned as he scanned the room. He locked eyes with Umberto, gave a slow nod, and said something guttural and sharp-edged.

Umberto relaxed his grip and replied in kind, just as rough, just as guttural.

I blinked.

Az’s chest shook with deep, silent laughter before he turned to face the rest of us. “I like him,” he said simply. “He’s funny.” Then to Din: “You said you had an offer of work?” His voice was gravel and thunder, but there was an earnestness to it, like he was genuinely curious to hear more.

Sorry,” I blurted, holding up a hand. “Just. sorry, hold on. Umberto, speaks Orcish?

Umberto shot me a look. “What? You don’t?
Then he turned back to Az, muttered something in that same guttural tongue, and jerked a thumb in my direction.

Az roared with laughter, loud and echoing.

I narrowed my eyes. “What did he say?

Nothing to worry about,” Az rumbled, clearly still amused. He turned his attention back to Din. “The work?

I kept glaring at Umberto. He just smiled.

I – we – would like to hire you as security for our bar,” Din said. “We’ve had a few issues lately. One of them involves your former employer. Mr. Thornstar.

Az’s face wrinkled like he’d caught a whiff of spoiled milk.

Five gold a day,” Din offered, rapping his knuckles on the keg beside him, “and your own personal keg of ale. Replaced every other day.

Trunch smiled faintly, eyes half-closed, and added, “Free meals included. When the kitchen’s ready.

Az said nothing at first. His eyes moved from face to face, then around the interior of the Grin. The bloodstains. The scorch marks. The boarded windows.

Then his gaze slid upward.

They hadn’t taken it down.

The mural. The Damaged Buttholes in their moment of victory. Umberto standing atop Az’s unconscious body like a conquering hero. Carrie, mid-bagpipe-blast to the face. Yak, gleefully bongoing the orc’s rear. Din, calm and divine. Wikis, torch-like. Trunch, shadow-wreathed. Day, radiant and detached at the edge.

Az’s brow rose.

A single question, simple and heavy: “Is that… me?

A roomful of hesitant nods answered.

He stepped forward for a better look. The room held its breath. We waited for the flare of anger. The insult. The punch.

He studied it.

And then he laughed.

A deep, belly-shaking roar that filled the tavern and knocked dust from the rafters.

You hung that above the bar?” he asked, eyes still on the mural.

We nodded, cautiously.

That,” he said, jabbing a thick finger at Yak’s triumphant drumming, “is hilarious.

Another round of laughter. A slap to his thigh. We all exhaled.

You honor me by hanging this,” he said.

We glanced at each other, mildly confused.

I’ll do it.

A round of drinks welcomed Az into the fold. The group explained how they were about to go in search of some people that were in danger. Az guaranteed the safety of their establishment. He picked up the keg as if it were a baby and gently placed it outside, next to the door and sat on it, as if he were riding a horse. He filled a large mug with ale and looked up and down the alley. The blind across the way opened, just a little and he smiled and waved at the unknown, faceless women behind. He blind snapped shut once again. Yak grinned.

Az,” Trunch asked, “how did you know? About Umberto. Speaking Orcish?

In the fight,” Az rumbled. “He holds his axe with the Orcish grip. He was trained by a blade master.

I was actually raised by Orcs,” Umberto said, casually. “Found abandoned in a mine.

My brain broke.

Huh,” Yak shrugged, taking a swig like it explained the weather.

Trunch and Day exchanged a glance.

Wikis leaned toward Carrie and said, just a little too loudly, “That actually explains a lot.

Carrie nodded, completely serious. “So much.


The group continued to prep for their next venture into the unknown.

We’ll have to wait until we come back to open,” Carrie sighed, eyeing the freshly placed furniture with reluctant fondness.
At least we know the place’ll be secure,” Yak said, twirling a dagger between his fingers and nodding toward Az, still perched proudly atop his keg outside.

For a moment, Umberto frowned—deep in thought, like he was working out the weight of the world. Then, with sudden clarity, he dropped his pack and marched outside.

Why wait?” he muttered.

He cupped a hand to the alley. “Yo. Kid? I know you’re there.

Sure enough, Iestyn emerged from the shadows like he’d been waiting for his cue.

Hello, Mr. Umberto, sir,” he said smoothly. “I see you’ve found time for clothes today.

No time for sass,” Umberto barked, then softened. “Look. I know Tufulla pays you to keep an eye on us.” Iestyn nodded.

And I know you handled that… situation.” He waved vaguely, like brushing away a smudge on a window. “Wanna earn more coin?

Before Iestyn could reply, Umberto clapped him on the shoulder and steered him inside, straight behind the bar.

Yak. Come here a sec.

Together, they showed Iestyn how to work the keg—pull the handle, tilt the mug, no foam overspill, no half-pours.

Carrie stared, scandalized. “You can’t leave a kid to manage the bar.

What? We know he’s capable,” Umberto said, jerking a thumb toward the open door. “Ain’t nobody messing with this kid. Not with that out there.” He nodded to Az, still outside, sipping contentedly from his tankard.

Then he tousled Iestyn’s hair. “You’ll be fine, kid. Remember: ale only.

Yak pointed at the row of experimental bottles behind the bar. “The other stuff isn’t ready yet. Don’t even sniff them.

Iestyn saluted with mock solemnity. “Understood. Ale only. No sniffing.

Carrie groaned. “He’s just a kid,” she muttered as she fluttered past Day.

A kid who made a decapitated body in an alley go away without blinking,” Day replied. “I think he’ll manage.

I watched as Umberto trained a child to run a tavern. As Yak carefully rearranged his concoctions and muttered dark warnings about untested fermentation ratios. As Carrie lit candles in old jars and tried not to hover. As Az, a massive orc they had previously knocked unconscious, lounged outside with a smile on his face and a keg beneath him like a throne.

It was absurd. It was comforting.

Din appeared beside me, polishing a gauntlet. We stood in companionable silence for a moment, watching Iestyn mimic Yak’s exaggerated hand gestures behind the bar.

You’re okay with this?” I asked.

He put the gauntlet on and flexed his fingers. “Honestly, I was going to do the same thing,” He said. “I think he’ll be fine. Plus, Az.” He gestured to the door.

Mm. Right.” I nodded slowly. “A child tavern manager and an overly large orc with a personal keg. What could possibly go wrong?

Umberto leaned over the bar and jabbed a finger toward the tap. “Four copper a mug. No more, no less. Payment goes in the box under the counter – not in your pockets, no matter how trustworthy your face looks.

Iestyn nodded solemnly.

If the keg runs dry,” Yak added, sliding a coaster under a mug, “ask Az to fetch another from the cellar. Don’t go down there yourself. Not unless you like the smell of damp and regret.

Got it,” Iestyn said brightly. “Ale only. Four copper. No regret.

Kid’s got promise,” Umberto muttered.

Din chuckled as we walked toward the bar. He crouched behind it, checking the cupboard near the coin stash. With a flick of his hand and a low incantation, a faint shimmer passed over the severed head of Dominic—still resting disturbingly close to the egg box.

Decay prevention spell,” he muttered, more to himself than anyone else. “Last thing we need is that starting to stink.

He grabbed a cloth, tossed it over the head like he was covering a particularly offensive casserole, and nudged it farther into the back of the cupboard.

Right,” he said, straightening up and turning to Iestyn. “Listen. Most of the upstairs is off-limits. Patrons can use the  just at the top of the stairs, but everything else is still under construction.

Iestyn nodded with careful seriousness.

Also, whatever you do, don’t open that.” Din gestured to the metallic box holding the egg.

Iestyn nodded again, eyes wide with curiosity.

If it makes a noise, or moves, or does anything weird… just throw it down the well out back.

Iestyn’s eyes changed from curiosity to fear. He  opened his mouth to say something. Then paused. Din patted him on the shoulder. “It’ll be fine,” he said reassuringly. Iestyn nodded again, faster this time.

Din and I walked back across the room.

…You know. To be honest, I think I missed this,” I admitted. “The way none of you ever seem to question what you’re doing, or whether you belong together.

Do we?” Din asked.

I glanced at the mural above the bar, at the cracked windows, the scuffed floors, the uneven stools, the wax-dripping candles.

At Yak and Umberto, teaching Iestyn how to properly wipe the taps with a clean cloth.

At Wikis, who had emptied her pouch onto a corner table and was now whispering to each of her trinkets, one after the other. At Trunch who was fast asleep and snoring on an armchair near the hearth.

Yes,” I said softly. “I think so.

Din nodded. “Then write it well.

I’ll try,” I said. “Um… and I’m sorry. About your people. The Sparkwhiskers.” I saw the sadness and uncertainty flicker in his eyes. “I hope you find some answers soon.

He placed a hand on my shoulder. “Thank you. I hope you’re there when I do. To write it. So others will know.

We both looked over to see Yak experimenting with a jar labeled Smoked Lime Rum with Pickle Clove Brine.

I gripped my journal a little tighter.

Final preparations were made. Potions clipped to belts, sleeping mats tied to packs. Last instructions were given to Az and Iestyn, and then we stepped out the door, bound for the Kashten Dell, the very place where all this had begun during the harvest festival, just a few weeks ago.

We stopped at a C.A.R.T. stand, then made our way through the North-East gate.

Leaving behind a twelve-year-old to manage a barely functioning tavern. Guarded by a very large orc. While a master assassin likely still skulked through the alleys of Dawnsheart… and a second lurked somewhere out in the valley.

Everything, as always, was clearly under perfect control.

Surprise!

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XXI


There’s a peculiar phenomenon that occurs when a group recounts a shared event—particularly when they’re a few mugs deep before the telling even begins. Certain voices rise. Others drift.
Arguments flare over the inconsequential: what color someone’s socks were, whether it was raining, or who tripped over the barstool. But there’s always a shared certainty when it comes to the crucial parts: who threw the first mug, which chair was sacrificed, and the role the skeletal cat played.

So it was with this lot, as they described what happened after Jonath revealed himself to be very much… not Jonath.

As a scribe, I have spent years recording a large number of recounted events.
Some were miraculous. Others, less so.
I once documented a farmer’s sworn testimony that his barnyard animals had begun speaking fluent Dwarvish at dawn. Another time, I transcribed no fewer than seven witness accounts of a berry crop that bore the unmistakable smiling likeness of Jovian, the god of merriment and mischief.

But none of those stories involved quite so much flying furniture, secondhand bravado, or fire.

This is what happens when the man unconscious on your bar turns out not to be the man you thought he was.

He was fast,” Umberto cut in, standing and nearly toppling his chair. “Like really fast. One second he’s clapping like a smug prick, next, bam!, Tufulla’s about to get his throat rearranged.

He mimed the lunge, tipping over a stool in the process.

Furniture went flying,” Carrie added, hand to her chest like she was giving testimony at a murder trial. “I leapt over the table and threw a candleholder at him. Saved Tufulla’s life.

You tripped on the stool,” Day corrected. “The candleholder missed.

But it drew his attention away from Tufulla” Carrie retorted.

Wikis winced. “He moved like he knew where every piece of cover was. Slid behind the bar, rolled across the table, flipped a stool in Umberto’s path.

I’m not sure he was ever really unconscious” Trunch countered, “He seemed to have a pretty good understanding of each of us, and of the place. I think he’d been awake and listening.

Yak stood suddenly. “I was here,” he said, dramatically stepping onto a nearby bench. “He was there.” He pointed at nothing. “The air was thick with tension. The molotovs hadn’t even…

No molotovs yet,” Din interrupted.

Right. No fireball cocktails. But the energy was electric.” Yak leapt down, spun, mimed drawing twin daggers. “I vaulted the bar, caught the edge, swung around, landed silently behind him…

Molotov cocktails?” I asked raising an eyebrow.

Not yet” Din replied flatly

Anyway, I vaulted the bar, caught the edge, swung around, landed behind him and…

You fell on him,” Day said. 

It was a strategic and well considered attack. I keep forgetting that bar isn’t regulation height.” He looked at it with a mixture of pride and betrayal.

I raised a hand in interjection, quill poised above the page. “Did someone try and burn down the bar? Where did the molotovs…?” 

Not. Yet.” Din and Trunch chorused in unison. 

He kicked a mug into my face,” Wikis said, rubbing her nose. “My mug. I was still drinking from it.

I got him with a barstool,” Umberto said proudly, miming the swing. “Full overhead. BAM.

You shouted, ‘SURPRISE, BASTARD!’” Trunch grinned. “To be fair, the bastard was surprised.

Umberto raised his glass in triumph. 

I shook my head and rubbed my temples, “And Tufulla? What was he doing in all of this?

There was a beat of silence.

Day leaned forward. “Dodged the first blow. Barely. Got clipped in the ribs and stumbled into a table. Trunch pulled him out of the way while the rest of us tried to keep ‘Jonath’ occupied.

Carrie bolted upright and gasped “Not Jonath, that’s what we’ll call him.

Yak nodded. “Not Jonath, or whatever his real name was, had caught us off guard.” He said. “He used the furniture to his advantage, making sure we couldn’t all try and attack at once.

But we didn’t want him breaking any of the furniture,” Umberto added, chest puffed up.  

I looked toward the pile of broken barstools, tables and chairs recently stacked on the stage area then looked back at Umberto. 

You said you hit him with a barstool?

Umberto placed one hand on the table and leaned in, pointing to his own chest with his thumb. “I said we didn’t want him breaking the furniture. We can break as much as we want, it’s our tavern.

The group nodded in collective agreement.

Anyway,” Umberto continued, “we worked together to keep him away from Tufulla and draw him away from furniture.

Trunch pointed around the room as he explained. “We started moving like a pack, slowly herding him toward the far corner. Limiting his options. He was very well trained, able to take us all on.

I saw Redmond and Osman hiding under a table with the grace and usefulness of two decorative ferns” Day added, “So I quietly shepherded them out the door.

Yak looked at Din, who nodded approvingly, and then looked at me with a wide smile. “Moments later, the molotovs came.

Thrown from outside, through the windows.” Umberto scowled. “They were accompanied by a voice saying ‘Thornstar sends his regards!’. I knew we should’ve properly taken down that scumbag in the fight earlier.” he spat on the floor in disgust.

Not Jonath took the chaos as an opportunity.” Wikis added. “He grabbed a full bottle of spirits and lobbed it low toward a growing flame on the floor, right near where Tufulla had ducked.

At first I thought Tufulla had started dancing” Carrie giggled, “but then I realized it had ignited and caught his robe.

I paused to picture the scene: the group, still wounded from the forest battle the day before. Redmond and Osman, once again, cowering behind something inanimate. The bar rapidly filling with flames. Tufulla flailing, trying to smother his burning robes. And in the middle of it all, a smiling master assassin, toying with them.

Wikis placed a hand on my arm “Tufulla managed to put out his robes” she said reassuringly, “And then Din put himself between the two of them.

He wasn’t getting past me,” Din thumped the table with a fist. “Not while I still had a beard on my face and spells left in my fingers.

Wikis raised a finger. “There was a moment, though. Just before the fire started. When they were face to face.” She frowned. “He said something. Whispered, cool, calm, like a cat toying with a trapped mouse.

Din didn’t look up. “It wasn’t how he said it.

He shifted in his seat, eyes dark and distant.

It was what he said.

A beat passed.

He looked right at me,” Din said. “Smiling. And he said he’d never expected to see one of my kind again.

Silence.

He said he thought they’d wiped us all out.

He meant Sparkwhiskers,” Yak whispered to me.

Din nodded once, his jaw tight. “After that, I stopped trying to kill him. I needed him conscious. I needed answers.

But while all the fighting was going on I heard something upstairs.” Wikis hissed, “Someone else.

Carrie fluttered dramatically onto the table. “Wikis and I bolted upstairs,” she said, miming the dash mid-air. “There was someone else. She was poking about in the rooms upstairs, like she was looking for someone. She was wearing these unflattering long, dark robes.  The slouch didn’t help. Terrible posture for someone of her figure.

I threw a dagger at her, but somehow it missed” Wikis scowled, “And then she started running toward the stairs.”

Day rose from his chair and headed behind the bar. He poured a round of ales and returned to the table, hands filled with handles, and slid one over to me. I’d barely touched the first, listening and writing as they laid it all out for me.

Bones chose that exact moment to dash out from behind the bar and head for the stairs.” He said calmly, as if a skeletal cat dashing across the room was a normal occurrence in a tavern.

Not Jonath saw Bones and hesitated.”

The look on his face! He was all … what the? You people are messed up” Yak laughed.

Trunch raised his head. At first it was hard to tell if he’d been sleeping, or just intently listening. “In that moment, when everything else could have gone even more wrong.” He said “Tufulla acted.

He stood up straight, brushed his robes with his hands and shook his wrists like a motherfucker.” Din’s face was full of reverence. “He raised a hand.
Spoke a single word in a voice that cracked through the room like old timber splitting.

And Not Jonath vanished.” Day finished. “Gone. No smoke. No flash. Just gone.

We all fucking panicked” Umberto said.

I didn’t” Carrie replied smugly. “I didn’t see it happen.

Umberto glared at her “We ALL panicked. Thought he’d made a run for it

He hadn’t,” Din added calmly. “Apparently Tufulla just cast a banishment spell. Told us he’d be back. About a minute from then. Right there.

Trunch silently pointed to the corner of the room, we all turned to look. There was an eerie little scuff mark on the floor, as if something had been suddenly pulled away but not without resisting first. 

We sat in reflective silence for a moment before I dared to ask what happened with the intruder upstairs. The woman. 

Trunch caught my eye, a look of candid seriousness in his.

You have to understand, Klept. This all happened so quickly. Choices were made, in the spur of the moment. There wasn’t time to think things through.

I nodded, signaling to the group I was ready for whatever gruesome chaos was about to be delivered.

I was told that the woman, busy trying to avoid Carrie and Wikis, noticed the cat coming up the stairs at the last minute. She recoiled, raising a foot and putting herself off balance.

I saw an opening and shoved,” Carrie said, sending her hand forward with flair. “She tumbled down the stairs in an undignified tangle of limbs.
She bowed and dusted her hands.

A beat of silence followed. The group nodded in unison. 

She landed hard. Didn’t move,” Day rocked his mug in small circles.

Yak raised his mug. “Fires still going.

Plus an unconscious intruder,” Carrie added cheerily, as if checking items off a list.

We had to make sure she really was unconscious first,” Umberto pointed out. Punctuating the point by jabbing his finger into the tabletop. “So I whacked her on the back of the head. Wikis tied her up and threw her into the kitchen.”

Wikis gave a confident thumbs up, paired with a paranoid grin, like she was proud of her handiwork, but also half-expecting the woman to burst out of the pantry at any second.

Which left the fires,” Day said with dry inevitability, “and the potential return of Not Jonath.

Umberto and I ran outside,” Trunch added quickly.

Trying to catch the bastard who set our tavern on fire,” Umberto growled.

But Umberto ran out stark naked,” Carrie giggled, nearly spilling her drink. “He used his loincloth to put out one of the fires on the table near the door – on the way out!

She was practically weeping with laughter by the end of the sentence. I refrained from asking Umberto how often he used his loincloth as fire safety equipment.

All this happened so quickly,” Wikis said, rubbing her forehead. “We almost forgot about Not Jonath.

We had the fires under control, and the mystery woman tied up,” Din said, more to himself than to the group. “For a moment, we let our guard down. We forgot.

He popped back,” Day sighed. “Right where Tufulla said he would. Then he promptly vanished again.

We thought Tufulla had bought us more time,” Carrie said. “That, maybe he’d cast something else to give us a window.

But when we looked at him…” Yak stood, adjusted his posture, and shifted his face into a passable imitation of Tufulla. He shrugged with just the right amount of weary dignity and said, in an unnervingly accurate voice:
I didn’t do that one.

Carrie nodded solemnly, gesturing toward Umberto.
We all panicked,” she said, as if it were an official statement. “Din and Day went to see if he was outside, Yak checked upstairs. Wikis and I stayed here.

And Tufulla poured himself a drink.” Wikis added matter of factly.

Day leaned forward, hand steady on the handle of his mug. “Din I had barely made it through the door before we heard shouting from in the alley.

Trunch began punctuating his points with wide hand gestures, spilling ale across the table and floor. 

Umberto and I had gone out to see if we could catch whoever threw the molotovs. We ran straight into young Iestyn—the boy who’s been hanging around.

I gave a small nod. “Ah yes, Iestyn. Sort of acts as Tufulla’s eyes on the street, him and his little band.

He remarked on Umberto’s lack of attire. Quite astutely, I might add, before telling us the culprits ran off toward the square.

He said, ‘Um, Mr Umberto, Sir. Do you realise you are not wearing any pants?’” Umberto grinned. “I told him I didn’t have time for pants, I needed to catch the bastards who tried to burn down my bar. Then I turned to the window across the way and told that nosy old broad to get an eyeful and mind her own business.

Wikis buried her face in her hands at that part. Carrie went scarlett.

We were about to run after them when we heard the shouts from inside,” Trunch said.

Then, right there in the alley, bampf!” Umberto shouted, slamming his mug on the table. “Jonath reappeared. Right in front of me.

Trunch chuckled. “You surprised him. Again.

It’s my impressive stature,” Umberto said, raising his eyebrows with a cheeky grin. “Like Thistlewick, in Barbara’s All Choked Up.” 

Din groaned. 

Wikis giggled.

Carrie snorted.

Trunch smiled and shook his head. “I think it was more to do with the fact that he didn’t expect us to be there than your physical appearance.” 

That was about when we ran outside.” Din motioned across the table to Day. “He tried to make a run for it. But we were ready.

Eldritch blasts from the left,” Day said, ticking it off on his fingers as Trunch sat back and crossed his arms. “A witchbolt to the ribs.

And this,” Umberto said with relish, miming a full axe swing, “to the spine!

He swung an invisible axe over his head and flung it with a grunt. His drink narrowly avoided disaster.

Din, however, did not look pleased.

I wanted answers,” he grumbled. “Real ones. About who he was, where he came from. About what happened to my people.

There was a pause as Din’s voice lowered. “So I used a little spell to keep him alive.

And that’s when I –” Umberto began.

Beheaded him,” Din finished flatly. “While I was kneeling. Mid-spell. With your entire naked body blocking my vision.

– dangled my nuts in his face and then took off his head,” Umberto declared proudly. “I regret nothing.

That could change later,” Din muttered.

Then, more quietly:
I picked up what I could salvage. Figured the head was all I really needed.

Trunch folded his arms, frowning. “I was more concerned about the corpse in the alley. Public street. Early morning foot traffic. Potential legal issues.

We were all concerned,” Day added, “until Iestyn shrugged and said ‘Don’t worry. I’ll take care of it’.

He winked,” Trunch whispered. “I saw him wink. Normal kids don’t wink like that!

A brief silence followed. Even Umberto nodded slowly at that.

And then?” I asked.
Then we walked back into the Grin,” Din said. “Carrying the head. I set it on the bar while I thought about what to do next.” His beard filtered bread crumbs from his ale as he drank deeply.

I glanced over at the bar. A dark stain lingered in the corner, spatters trailing down the side and onto the floor. Or perhaps it was just the lantern light, playing tricks on my mind.

Trunch cleared his throat. “Just as we crossed the alley, there was a faint gasp.

Oh yeah,” Umberto grinned. “The old busybody.

Blind swung shut like a mousetrap,” Yak added, pleased. “Followed by a thud that I assume was her fainting.

I resisted the urge to peek through the alley window. Some things, I decided, are better left undocumented. I made a final note in the margin, though I wasn’t entirely sure what to label it: ‘Victory?’ ‘Tavern Incident?’ ‘Wednesday?’

Some stories don’t end with answers. Just with slightly less fire.

Unsure, Unconscious, Unprepared

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XX


The road back to Dawnsheart was slow.

The mules walked at their own pace, unhurried and unconcerned, as if they knew more than we did. I didn’t bother to urge them on. No one wanted me to. The cart creaked softly over ruts and roots, wheels catching on stones with tired little jolts. The night air hung cool and still, and the moon lit the path like a watchful eye.

We didn’t talk. Not much, anyway.

The fight had emptied them. Blood crusted over cuts. Muscles burned. Armor pinched in all the wrong places. Redmond, Osman, and I had barely contributed to the battle. Redmond and Osman had stood over Jonath the whole time. I might’ve swung the sword once or twice, aimless, at what turned out to be nothing but air.

But still… we were exhausted.

We’d watched the others take every blow meant for us.

And maybe, just maybe, the toll of watching is just as bad. It sure felt that way

Beneath it all, a shared silence held us steady. Too tired for chatter, too wary for sleep.

Jonath lay nestled between packs in the cart’s bed, still and pale, breath shallow but regular. Redmond and Osman sat close beside him, wordless guardians. They hadn’t said a thing since helping to carry him from the clearing, but their eyes didn’t leave him once.

Maybe next time, you’ll think twice before throwing someone into the dark.” Day said quietly, breaking the silence.

Redmond said nothing.
But his hand moved just enough to rest gently against Jonath’s shoulder.

Trunch rustled in his robes and passed Din a pair of battered potion bottles. Din uncorked one, sniffed it, made a face, and took a swig before handing it to Umberto, who handed it to Wikis, and on it went. The other followed. The stuff wasn’t strong but it numbed some of the pain and sealed a few of the more gruesome tears. No one complained.

Later, Yak reached into his pack and pulled out a familiar looking bottle with the unmistakable, scorched-edge labels of Smelt. He held it up, gave it a tiny shake, and popped the cork.

A ripple of silent relief moved through the group, shoulders eased, eyes closed. Umberto gave a single, solemn nod. No one said a thing.

Osman took the bottle first, eyeing it warily. “If ever there was a time for a swig of Smelt,” he said, grim and brave, “it’s probably now.

He drank.

He paused.

Eyes widened.

He swallowed, blinking like someone seeing colors for the first time. “That’s… actually good?

Redmond raised an eyebrow. “Impossible, It’s Smelt. You’re hallucinating. That’s trauma talking. Give it here.

He took a swig.

Another pause. Then: “Bloody hell. Where did you get this?

Carrie leaned forward and plucked the bottle from his hand with a grin. “This, gentlemen, is only found at the Goblin’s Grin,” she said. “One of our many in-house specialties.

Yak folded his arms, leaned back against the side rail, and grinned like he’d just personally saved the kingdom.

The bottle made its way around and for a few quiet minutes under the watchful moon, we passed warmth from hand to hand.

The city gates loomed through the mist, pale in the moonlight. We rolled in through the northwest gate, the mules slow, heads low, hooves muffled on the packed dirt. Dawnsheart slept beneath the moon, its lanterns few and far between, its windows shuttered tight. 

Din broke the silence this time.

We take him to the Grin,” he said softly, nodding toward Jonath. “Let him rest. That’s the safest place right now.

No argument,” Umberto said, voice like gravel. “If anything tries to take him tonight, it’ll have to get through us first.

I’ll stay with him,” Day added. “Keep an eye on things. Let the rest of you breathe.

Wikis stretched her neck, cracking something that sounded like it had been waiting hours. “I need a pillow. Or a stiff drink. Or both.

Yak raised a hand half-heartedly. “I can supply one of those.

At the Goblin’s Grin, we stopped.

Day, Umberto, Wikis, and Yak climbed down carefully. Jonath was lifted from the cart and carried inside, still unconscious, breath steady but thin. They didn’t say much. No goodbyes. Just nods. A quiet agreement that this was safest for him, for now.

We’ll stay with him,” Day said. 

Get him to a bed,” Din said, touching the doorframe as if that alone might ward off another fight. “And no one answers the door unless they knock three times, then once.

That’s not a thing,” Carrie muttered.

It is now,” Din replied.

I glanced up instinctively, across the way.

The old woman’s blind was drawn, thank the gods. No tut. No disapproving shake of the head. Just silence.

The door to the Grin shut with a dull thud.

We turned the cart around and returned it to the C.A.R.T. stand, the nightshift attendant blinking at us over his mug of Waker’s Brew, the scent of vinegar cutting through the crisp night air.

Then we walked.

Back through the quiet streets of Dawnsheart, toward the square. The church. The mayor’s office. The only sound was our footsteps… and the soft, uneven clink of Dan’del’ion medallions swinging from Trunch’s belt.

The streets were mostly empty. A few sweepers worked by lanternlight. A watchman nodded as we passed, his eyes lingering, confused, on our strange little group: three bloodied, battle-worn adventurers, a church scribe, and two exhausted scholars.

Tufulla stood on the steps of the church, exactly as if he’d been expecting us at that precise moment.
Above him, his familiar, Solstice, fluttered down onto a dimming lamppost, head tilted like it was already judging our story.

Solstice informed me of your impending arrival,” Tufulla said. His voice was calm, but tired.
Come. There’s tea. And I’d like to hear what you’ve discovered, starting with where the rest of your crew is.

We climbed the steps.

Carrie spoke first, brushing her fringe back with the back of her hand. “They’re at the Goblin’s Grin. Watching over Jonath. He’s unconscious. Still breathing. But out cold.

Tufulla’s brow creased. “Shall I summon a healer?

Redmond shook his head. “Not necessary. He’s not wounded. Just… collapsed. Exhaustion, most likely.

Tufulla looked at him for a long second, something unreadable in his eyes, then gave a slow nod.

Trunch stepped forward, unhooked the small pouch from his belt, and handed it over. The medallions clinked softly inside.

Thirteen medallions,” he said. “One that raises more questions.” He paused. “It’s been quite a day.”

Tufulla took the bag with slow, tentative fingers. The weight of it pulled slightly at his arm. He opened the mouth of the pouch, peered inside, and raised a single eyebrow.

So it would seem,” he said quietly.

Solstice shifted on the lamppost, feathers ruffling in the cool air.

We were ushered into the church’s side chamber, the Mayor’s office. There was tea. No one touched it.

Redmond and Osman gave the full account. Not a word spared. No dramatics, just clean, clipped retelling. What they saw, what they didn’t, what they thought they understood. Redmond’s voice was steady until he reached the part about Jonath. Then it caught.

Din, seated with one arm across his bruised ribs, spoke up. “Tell it straight.

I am,” Redmond said. “I am now.”

There was a beat of quiet.

Then Tufulla spoke, calm, but not soft.

The pursuit of knowledge is a noble thing. But it must be tempered with care, with respect, with kindness. Without those, it’s not discovery. It’s vanity.

He looked at Redmond, not condemning, just measured. Disappointed, but not unkind.

Wisdom is not measured by what we learn,” he said, “but by how we choose to learn it.

Redmond lowered his gaze. Gave a small nod. 

And that was that.

Then Osman leaned forward, hands clasped. “We believe the stump is a portal. A kind of fixed-point teleportation gate. The runes, the activation, the disappearance—everything fits. Advanced magic, but elegant. If it’s stable… it’s fast. Instantaneous, even.

Carrie, slouched half sideways on a bench, blew out a breath. “Honestly? If that’s true, I don’t get why these evil types always think so small. Like, that could change everything. No more weeks in carts. No more bandits. Just, ‘pop!’ Capital in seconds.

Tufulla exhaled slowly. “Assuming it’s not just a glorified trap.” He adjusted his sleeves, gaze flicking toward the darkened windows. “Castle Ieyoch is the most likely destination. And if that’s true, it’s not for trade. It’s for troops. What you faced tonight… that may have been a test run.

The thought settled like a stone in the middle of the room.

Trunch leaned back in his chair, lifted the ornate medallion from where it rested on the table, and let it turn slowly in the light. “This one’s different,” he said. “We took it from the big rider.

Tufulla leaned forward. He didn’t touch it. Just looked.

I’ve seen one like it before,” he said. “Years ago. Back in my early White Raven days. Higher rank, I think, maybe command-level. I haven’t seen another since. Nor have I seen a gemstone like that anywhere else.” He squinted. 

He looked up. “There’s someone who might know. Holadamus. Dragonborn. Owns the Dragon’s Hoard. Bit of a hoarder, bit of a sage. Knows his stones.

Trunch gave a thoughtful nod. “We’ve met. Nice fellow, very knowledgeable. I’ll ask him

Tufulla folded his hands. “Either way, we wait for Jonath. If he made it through, and back, he’s the only one who’s seen what’s on the other side.

We should start searching the valley,” Redmond said. “If one stump’s a portal, there might be more. Linked, hidden. If they’re staging something…”

We need to know where they can come from,” Din finished.

Tufulla’s eyes shifted toward me. “Klept,” he said gently. “You’ve been quiet.

I shrugged. “I don’t have much to add.

He waited.

I sighed. “Truth is… I don’t think there’s much I can add. Out there, I’m just one more thing for them to worry about. I can’t fight.
I looked at the others. At their cuts, bruises, the way they carried themselves like every movement hurt.
I nearly died holding a sword the wrong way around. I think… I think I’m done.

Carrie opened her mouth, brow furrowed. Trunch shifted in his seat. Din looked like he was about to object.

But I held up a hand. “It’s not about loyalty. Or fear. I just… I’m not helping. Not really. If anything, I’m slowing them down. They deserve better. I’m a scribe, an archivist, not an adventurer. If things go south and I need to defend myself, what am I going to do? Pour ink on an attacker? I mean, we nearly died, and all I could do was throw onions.

Din placed a hand on my shoulder. “Yeah, but in the end… the onions did help. A little.

Tufulla leaned forward. “You’re questioning your role in this. You’re not sure where you fit. But believe me when I tell you, Klept, there is a part for you in this.

How can you be so sure?” The words came out sharper than I meant. “From where I’m standing, my part seems to be dying a painful and probably embarrassing death.”

Tufulla started to rise, but I waved him off and stood.

Carrie straightened. “Maybe you need time to think about it?

Maybe,” I said, reaching for the handle. “Maybe I’m just in the way.

Klept, don’t … ” Trunch called as the door shut behind me.

The last voice I heard from the room was Tufulla’s.

Let him leave. He just needs time. He’ll understand his place. Now… about these stumps.

The walk to the dorms was longer than I remembered.

Every step echoed louder in the empty alleys and streets. My legs felt like stone, each joint reminding me that I wasn’t built for battle, not physically, not mentally, not in spirit. I didn’t limp, exactly. But my gait had a dragging weight and the cobbles seemed to clutch my boots with every step.

I opened the door to my room and stared at the same sad, lumpy mattress I’d complained about a dozen times. Tonight, it looked like home.

I didn’t undress. I didn’t light a candle. I just sat on the edge, elbows on knees, surrounded by shelves of half-sorted parchment and musty old scrolls that smelled like mildew and knowledge.

I let out a breath I hadn’t realized I’d been holding.

Ink and dust. Paper and silence. No blades. No blood. Just… stillness.

I didn’t cry. I didn’t sleep, either. I just sat there, staring at the floor.


As Din tells it, the meeting with the investigators and Tufulla only lasted a short while longer. Plans were drafted to organize search parties, small groups to sweep the valley for other stumps or signs of Dan’del’ion infiltration. A detailed description of the stump was agreed upon, and Osman provided an illustration. According to Trunch, it was “a remarkably accurate sketch.” According to Carrie, “it was suspiciously good for someone who claimed they weren’t an artist.” According to Din, “it was fine, but lacked Yak’s artistic flair.

Once that was done, Trunch, Din, and Carrie left the church and returned to the Goblin’s Grin. Redmond, Osman, and Tufulla remained behind to discuss the Dan’del’ion revival and other grim White Raven business.

Carrie insists that, upon arriving at the Grin, the others were already partying.

They were several drinks in,” she said flatly. “Jonath was sprawled across the bar, still unconscious. Wikis was dancing on a table.

I was keeping watch.” Wikis scowled from across the table.

We’d placed him gently,” Yak said. “We thought it would be safer to have him in the open, where we could see him, rather than in one of the rooms upstairs.

You were doing body shots out of Jonath’s navel!” Carrie shrieked.

We’d run out of clean glasses,” Day replied, sheepish. “In hindsight, it probably wasn’t the most respectful thing to do.

We took care of him,” Umberto added, leaning back in his chair. “He was never in danger. We laid him down. Made sure he was comfortable.”

We put rags under his head,” Wikis offered helpfully.

I’m sorry,” I interrupted. “Did you say you were doing body shots off an unconscious individual?

We had a couple of celebratory drinks,” Umberto corrected, “to mark the fact that we didn’t fucking die thanks to the boneheaded decisions of a couple of stuck-up academic arsewipes.

Yes, I understand that, but did you actually drink from…

What matters,” Din said firmly, cutting across the conversation with the tone of a man insisting this was never spoken of again, “is that when we got back to the Grin, Jonath was still unconscious, and the others were watching over him. We all managed to get a decent amount of rest before the chaos of the morning.

The group recalled how Tufulla, Redmond, and Osman arrived at the Grin the next morning, looking like none of them had slept. Their clothes were still in order, but their faces told a different story, drawn, pale, eyes rimmed in red and shadow. Apparently, they’d been up the entire night combing through records, old reports, forgotten maps. Making plans. Drawing up contingencies. Looking for anything that might help, some hidden clue, some precedent, some dusty detail buried in the archives that might shine a light on what the Dan’del’ion Court was planning. There were no smiles. Just quiet nods. The kind that passes between people who all know that what’s ahead is going to be worse than what came before. 

Jonath was still unconscious. 

But not for long. And that, by all accounts, was when someone kicked the chamberpot square at the wall.

Jonath started to stir not long after they arrived,” Trunch said, licking sauce off his fingers and reaching for another snack. “Panicked at first. Didn’t know where he was. Didn’t recognize anyone.

He seemed to come around after seeing Tufulla,” Carrie added, swirling her drink. “Settled a bit. Focused up once Tufulla asked how he was feeling.

They all nodded. Slowly. But no one elaborated.

I waited.

And then?” I asked.

A pause.

Then,” Day said, “we asked him what happened. What he saw on the other side.

He looked confused,” Yak said. “Like… not dazed confused. Like he was playing catch-up. Trying to piece something together.

So we reminded him,” Wikis said. “The stump. The circle. The glowing medallion. The part where he vanished.

Didn’t say much at first,” Umberto muttered. “Then he started giving details. More than we expected.

He said it was dark,” Trunch continued. “Somewhere open, but walled in. Castle grounds, maybe. A structure in the distance. Big. Barely lit. There were guards, he said. Armed. A lot of them.

A garden,” Wikis offered. “Maybe a courtyard. Stone statues. Lanterns without light.

He said twelve,” Carrie nodded. “Lanterns. Scattered. White stone where there should be light

Jonath’s answers had been steady, they said. But his eyes kept drifting. Back to Tufulla.

Every time Tufulla spoke,” Yak said, “Jonath would just… look at him. Hard. Like he wasn’t sure he was real.

Or like he was real, but shouldn’t be,” Carrie added, slowly.

I felt a prickle behind my ribs. “Did anyone ask why?

He dodged it,” Day said. “Every time we tried to pin down what he saw or who, he changed tack. He said he was trying not to get caught. That some of the people, soldiers, whatever, weren’t alive. Or at least, not entirely.

Undead,” Umberto said, tone flat. “That was the word he finally landed on.

I scribbled notes. “What about time? Did he mention a difference? Felt longer? Shorter?

He asked us how long he’d been gone,” Trunch said. “We told him five minutes. Maybe a few more. He said that felt about right.

Carrie sipped her drink. “We asked what he heard while he was there. Said he caught mention of something happening three nights from then. Didn’t know what. But everyone there was getting ready.

And coming back?” I asked. “How did he return?

He said he got spotted,” Wikis said. “Someone saw him sneaking. So he ran. Hit the circle again as moonlight came through. Same way he went in.”

And then he came back through the stump?” I asked.

Yelling, and running” said Umberto. “Caught up with us moments later. You were there for what happened next.

I Remember. And then?” I asked again. The room had gone quieter than before. More still.

Day leaned forward. “Then… we started asking follow-ups. Normal stuff at first. Then somehow the questions started to shift, from what he saw, to who he was.

Not aggressively.” Trunch added,  “Just… out of curiosity. Clarifying details. Redmond had said all White Ravens were orphans, with no family, no ties.

I asked if that was true for him too” Carrie added, “He nodded. No hesitation.

I think I was the one who asked if he remembered who trained him.” Din said through an ale soaked beard. “He gave a name. Osman seemed to recognize it.

Everything checked out.

It all checked out. Too smoothly, maybe.

So Trunch asked where he was from,” Wikis told me, rubbing her temple like the memory still stung.

I blinked. “What’d he say?

Hearthsholme,” Din said flatly.

I frowned. “I’ve never heard of Hearthsholme.

Neither had Tufulla,” Day replied.

They said Tufulla’s brow furrowed, not with doubt, but certainty.

Tufulla said Hearthsholme doesn’t exist,” Carrie said.

And then, and this is where every person at the table told it the same way, Jonath smiled.

Not nervously.

Not sheepishly.

Just… slow. Deliberate. A little too wide.

That’s when his face changed. 

It was a bit like when Yak does his thing” Carrie added “but with more …

Menace?” Trunch asked.

Yeah” Umberto growled. “ More menace. Like a lie untied at the corners and peeled away. He wasn’t Jonath.

And then he clapped.

Once.

Twice.

Three times.

A slow, mocking applause that echoed off the tavern walls like a spark waiting for oil.

And he lunged. Straight for Tufulla.

Onions and Other Weapons

Chronicles of Klept: Chapter XIX


Branches whipped our faces. Roots reached for ankles. The underbrush roared with panic, snapped twigs, crashing footfalls, panting lungs.

Behind us?

Nothing. No footfalls. No breath. Just silence. And yet, something followed.

Shapes in the trees. Movement without noise. Shadows that didn’t obey the moonlight.

Osman went down hard, crashing through a patch of thornbrush with a strangled yelp. Trunch was on him in a heartbeat, hauling him up by the collar.

Move!” he hissed, barely audible over the chaos. “Don’t stop. Don’t stop now.

Carrie tried to gain altitude, wings beating in time with her curses, then slammed full-force into a low-hanging branch. Her body spun mid-air like a dropped pennant.

Carrie!” Wikis shouted.

But Umberto caught her mid-fall, an arm looping under hers, dragging her bodily through the brush as she blinked the stars from her eyes.

Keep going,” he grunted. “Breathe later.

The forest felt endless. Everything scratched. Everything tore. It was dark, only scattered moonlight shining between the canopy and the clouds. 

Just that quiet. That intentional quiet.

Like we were being hunted, not chased.

Inevitably, Jonath staggered. The exhaustion caught up to him and he collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut, falling hard against a moss-covered rock, gasping. I slid to a halt beside him. “Jonath, by the light of the Prophet, you returned, how are you even…”.

Jonath looked up. Smiled, face strained with effort. And then slumped forward onto the rock, unconscious.

Carry him!” Din’s voice, raw and distant, rose through the trees. “Carry him if you have to, just keep going!

We turned and saw him.

Fifty paces behind. Alone. Falling behind fast.

Plate armor gleaming in moonlight. Breath coming in wheezes. A wall of steel losing ground with every step.

No,” Umberto growled. “I’m not running all night.” Still holding Carrie half-slung across one shoulder, he dropped her gently onto her feet and turned to face the shadows.

He glanced at Day. They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to.

Day nodded once. He stepped toward the investigators, voice low but firm. “Stay here. Lay low. Use the rock.

Redmond was doubled over, hands on knees, eyes wide. Osman was pale, clinging to his belt like it might anchor him to the world. Jonath lay against the rock, chest rising shallowly. Day didn’t wait for a response. Neither Redmond nor Osman gave one, just wide-eyed nods and the clumsy shuffle of terrified men trying to make themselves smaller than they were.

Everyone, drop your packs,” Day said, already unshouldering his own. “Use them to cover the investigators.

The others followed without question. Tossing their packs toward the cowering investigators before bracing themselves for what was to come. Trunch’s pack landed with a thump, and a handful of onions tumbled out, rolling across the moss like they were also trying to flee. He muttered something inaudible as he kicked them back toward the pile.

Day didn’t pause. He stepped forward, sword in one hand, the other already tracing faint sigils in the air. His gaze swept the treeline, not nervous, not uncertain. Just calculating.

Steel in one hand. Spell in the other.

The moment something moved, he’d be faster.

Wikis!” Umberto barked. “Your sword!

She dashed up a nearby tree, tossing it as she moved, stringing her bow before he caught it.

Carrie took to the air again, wings pulsing dimly in the moonlight as she vanished into the canopy with a sharp intake of breath and a muttered, “Well, this is not how I typically plan moonlit evenings in the forest…

Trunch and Yak flattened themselves behind the trunks of thick old trees, their silhouettes melting into the underbrush.

A hand slammed into my chest. Umberto pressed the sword into my grip.

It was heavier than I expected. Colder too.

I stared. “Wait, what? You don’t expect me to… I don’t…

No time,” Umberto snapped. “Writing won’t help us now, chronicler.

I opened my mouth to argue again, but the look in Umberto’s eyes was the kind that doesn’t tolerate footnotes.

I can’t believe I’m saying this,” he growled, jabbing a finger toward the huddled investigators, “but, keep them safe, and you’ll earn yourself a drink. On me.

Din crashed through the last of the brush, armor clanking like a slow-moving forge. He bent over, panting hard, sweat shining on his brow.

So…” he rasped, “we’re fighting?

Umberto cracked his neck and glared toward the dark beyond the trees.

I hate running,” he said.

There was silence.

Not peace. Not quiet. Just, silence
The kind of silence that waits.

The forest, once filled with the crashing panic of flight, now stood still. No birds. No wind. Not even the whisper of leaves. Just shadow, and moonlight.

The group held position. Blades drawn, bows nocked, spells just behind the teeth and crackling at fingertips. 

And the only sound now… was breathing.

Deep, controlled, steady.

The kind of breathing you do when you’re trying not to panic. Trying to regain control of your lungs.
Trying to stay sharp.
Trying to live.

I gripped the sword awkwardly. Too tight, too loose, unsure where my hands were meant to go. The hilt was already slick with sweat, and the weight of it pulled at my wrist like it knew I had no business holding it. Behind me, Redmond was whispering. Soft, rapid words. A prayer maybe, or a long, muttered catalogue of regrets. Osman had curled around Jonath, shielding the unconscious scribe with his own shaking body. He had arranged the packs to form a meager protective wall. 

In the trees, Wikis was stone. She didn’t blink. Didn’t breathe. Her eyes flicked from shadow to shadow. Scanning, calculating, waiting. 

With a smooth, deliberate motion, she notched and drew. String taut, arrow resting lightly between her fingers. Her fingers brushed the fletching, and something shimmered across the arrowhead.

A sharp glint. Then another.

Tiny needles of silver light bloomed from the arrowhead, spreading down the shaft, then hanging there, suspended, ready.

She tilted her head slightly, exhaled once, and aimed.

The forest hadn’t moved yet.

But Wikis had already chosen her target.

In the branches, Carrie was anything but still. She crawled and adjusted, wings twitching, shifting from one perch to the next like she was auditioning for a better view. She muttered to herself under her breath, more concerned with angles and potential applause than threats. I could hear her, just barely: “No, too exposed… no, too low. Ugh, these branches are the worst.”

Yak had been behind a tree.

I saw him, plain as anything, flattened against the bark, half-hidden, head low. His hand rested lightly on a dagger as he took a swig out of a bottle from behind the bar, one he’d refused to leave behind. He was still. Focused.

Then I looked away.

Just for a second. A breath. A blink.

And when I looked back, he was gone.

Not moved. Not shifted. Gone.

No rustle, no shuffle, no sign of passage. The forest hadn’t even noticed.

My eyes darted around, scanning trunks, branches, the brush at my feet. Nothing. Not even a scuff in the dirt.

“Yak?” I hissed.

No reply. Just trees. And shadow. And the vague, creeping sense that somehow, this was exactly what Yak had meant to happen.

Din adjusted his stance with the heavy breath of a man trying not to fall over. His armor creaked with the effort. Then, slowly, deliberately, he took one hand off the hilt of his hammer and curled it into a fist.

With a dull clang, he thumped it hard against the faded Sparkwhiskers sigil on his breastplate. The old metal groaned beneath the blow, echoing faintly in the stillness.

His hand returned to his hammer.

And then his beard began to spark.

Tiny arcs of lightning danced between the bristles, lifting the strands in a slow, unnatural rise, as if they were searching the air for something to smite. The hairs twisted upward like wary tentacles sniffing a storm.

He muttered something low and guttural, lost beneath the crackle of rising sparks.

And just behind him, with a sudden flash of white-blue light, a spectral anvil silently slammed into existence, hovering at his shoulder.

Trunch watched the darkness from behind a tree. Still. Calculating.

He didn’t move. Just stood, one hand low at his side, the other loosely clenched, as if holding a thought more than a weapon.

Energy crackled faintly across his knuckles. Thin threads of light curling between his fingers and flickering up his wrists. It was quiet, contained. Controlled.

The undergrowth around his boots seemed to shift. The shadows at his feet seemed to stretch, just a little too far. Just a little too wrong. Like the moonlight had missed something. Or like something had bent the light to make room. I shook my head. It could’ve been the angle. A trick of nerves and moonlight. Trunch didn’t look concerned. If anything, he looked composed, like a gentleman at the theatre, waiting for the second act. But still, the way the dark edged closer to him… it seemed to draw in.

Like it knew him.

Umberto stood like a nobleman at the top of a staircase, welcoming guests to the event – except this one had no wine. No music. Just blood waiting to be spilled.

His axe, competing with him for height, gleamed in the moonlight, every edge catching silver. He rolled his shoulders, loose and ready, then shifted his stance. His chest rose and fell in deep, steady pulses, like a drum counting down.

He spat into the dirt. Looked back at the rest of us. There was a fire in his eyes. A slow, controlled burn. I thought I’d seen fury in him before. I was wrong. This was something else.

Rage. Pure. Unfiltered. Fighting desperately to be freed.

And then he let it loose.

He roared, deep and guttural.
A sound that tore through the forest like it didn’t care what answered back.

He took a step forward, axe rising, the moonlight dancing madly across the blade.

Umberto was done running.


For a moment, the silence was deafening.

Then it shattered.

Snapping branches. Rustling underbrush. The shadows peeled from the treeline. Eleven hooded figures, dark-robed and fast, sweeping in from all sides. Their blades glinted wickedly, too thin, too long, like fangs drawn from cloaks.

Thunk.

One of them collapsed instantly as an arrow from Wikis buried itself just below the throat, splintering mid-impact into a hail of silvery thorns that shredded through cloth and flesh. Dozens of glowing shards embedded in his face and chest. He crumpled with a wet rattle.

A dagger whirled through the air –clang– glancing off Din’s armor in a spray of sparks. He didn’t flinch.

Umberto was already in motion, axe swinging in a brutal arc. The first unfortunate soul to reach him never had a chance, cut clean in half before he even realized he’d been targeted.

Day was a storm made flesh, blade and spell moving in perfect tandem. He ducked, twisted, slashed, the tip of his sword catching one figure in the thigh before a blast of force sent another tumbling into the brush like a rag doll. He moved like fire through a dry forest, relentless, consuming, inevitable.

But the attackers weren’t made of smoke and fear alone.

They struck back. Fast. Silent. Coordinated.

One slipped Umberto’s guard, driving a curved blade deep into his shoulder. He snarled, spun, and cleaved the assailant in half on pure rage, blood pouring down his arm like a sleeve.

Another caught Trunch across the ribs, steel cutting through the folds of his armor. He staggered, breath hissing through his teeth, shadows curling tighter around him even as blood soaked into the dirt.

The moon vanished behind thick cloud. The world shrank to movement and breath. The forest became a blur of black and motion.

Din roared, “Can’t see a damned thing!” as his hammer swung blindly through a shape that vanished at the last second.

Wait!” Carrie called from above, sharp and clear. “I’ve got something!

She raised one hand and flicked her fingers. Small, comet-like sparks darted from her outstretched palm like playful stars on the hunt. They struck the nearest attackers with flickering pops of silver starlight. One by one, the robed figures began to glow, dim halos of silvery shimmer clinging to their forms like they’d been dipped in starlight. Each lit figure cast pale light in all directions, breaking the dark into uneven fragments.

One glowed and froze, disoriented. Another flinched mid-strike, caught off guard by the sudden glare outlining their form.

Who dresses like that on purpose?” Carrie called sweetly from her perch, launching another spark with a toss of her wrist. “You look like a haunted curtain.

The man she insulted actually paused, blade faltering, just long enough for Wikis to bury an arrow in his thigh.

The field lit up in pulses, spotlights thrown from Carrie’s hands, one by one. Not perfect, but enough.

The group surged.

Wikis shot, an arrow slicing through a throat before exploding into a spray of silver thorns that ripped through the two nearest. One collapsed instantly. The other clawed at his eyes, staggered, and toppled, twitching.

Day launched forward, blade flashing with controlled fury. He drove his sword through one glowing figure’s ribs and hurled a burst of force at another, sending the attacker crashing into a tree.

Din’s hammer crushed a jaw, then a knee. He moved through the field like a forge with legs, his armor gleaming with scattered sparks from Carrie’s magic, his beard whipping in static-charged arcs.

Trunch stood calmly behind the line, flicking bolts of energy like he was teaching a lesson on consequences. One enemy dropped mid-lunge. Another staggered toward the investigators, blade raised …

…and crumpled as a blast from Trunch hit him square in the chest. His weapon clattered against the stone by Jonath’s feet.

Up in the trees, Carrie kept up her relentless barrage.

Oh please, you call that a swing? My grandmother flails harder when she drops her knitting!

A glowing figure sprinted for Yak’s last known location, then abruptly stopped, eyes wide. Yak reappeared behind him, slitting his throat in one fluid motion. Another followed, and another. The only sounds were wet gasps and the quiet clink of a belt pouch being lifted mid-drop.

Umberto, wounded but furious, tore into another enemy with a roaring overhead swing, splitting skull and spine in one blow. Blood streaked down his arm. He didn’t seem to care.

The last attacker turned to run.

Wikis put an arrow in the back of his knee. Day closed the distance. The end was swift.

Eleven down.

The group pressed together. Panting, bloodied, running on willpower and the last fumes of adrenaline.

No one had fallen. But everyone had felt it.

And still…

Beyond the battlefield, three figures stood at the treeline.

Taller. Broader. Unmoving.

Watching.

Waiting.

Like the real fight hadn’t even started yet.

The glowing battlefield had fallen silent.

Only our ragged breathing remained. Blades lowered. Bows held. Spells simmering just behind teeth.

The two shapes on the edges began to move.

Slowly. Deliberately.

The third, taller, broader, still, remained where it was. Watching.

The approaching figures were mounted. Cloaked, hunched over snarling shapes that slinked forward on padded paws. Not horses. Not men. Wolves. Dire wolves. Each beast easily the size of a cart horse, eyes gleaming like twin coals under hoods of matted fur.

The riders were draped in black, faces hidden, blades long and cruel. The wolves didn’t charge. They circled. Low. Slow. Taunting.

Umberto took a step forward, blood still dripping from his axe. “You want something? COME GET IT!

Trunch tilted his head. “Who are you? What do you want?

The only reply was a hiss.

And the sound of silent laughter.

Then the riders struck.

The first wolf lunged, but a bolt of energy from Trunch caught it mid-bound, tearing it from its mount and sending it crashing into the dirt. It yelped once before Din’s anvil dropped from above like a hammer, smashing its skull into the forest floor with a sickening crunch.

The dismounted rider rolled through the impact and came up fast, charging toward Day with twin blades drawn. Day parried the first strike, boots skidding against moss. He twisted, reversed, and drove his sword clean through the rider’s gut. Two arrows thudded into his spine a breath later. Wikis above, calm and lethal. The figure collapsed without a sound.

The second wolf didn’t hesitate.

It hit Din like a boulder, knocking him flat, snarling and snapping at his face. He roared, struggling beneath its bulk, armor scraping earth, arms locked against jaws lined with fangs.

Umberto charged, grabbing at the wolf’s thick neck, but was flung aside like a sack of flour, crashing into a tree with a grunt.

Then Yak moved.

He ran three steps up a low trunk, flipped into the air, and came down hard, daggers first, onto the rider’s back.

Steel sank deep. The rider screamed, twisted, and backhanded Yak off his perch. He crashed into the leaves and rolled, only to be pinned beneath the wolf’s other paw, its teeth inches from his throat.

Din and Yak were both pinned now, crushed beneath the beast’s limbs, struggling to breathe.

Trunch raised a hand and fired again, then again, blasts of energy slamming into the rider, staggering him sideways.

Day ducked low, blade flashing as he turned from the corpse at his feet and drove his sword straight into the wolf’s neck. Blood fountained.

Wikis loosed arrow after arrow, her breath steady. Three shafts buried into the beast’s flank. One pierced the eye.

The wolf howled.

It collapsed sideways, with a groan, on top of Din and Yak both.

The rider tried to rise.

Carrie, from above, offered help in the form of a sharp insult that questioned his mother’s lineage and fashion sense.

Trunch’s final blast hit him.

The forest went still again.

But Din and Yak lay trapped beneath the twitching corpse of the dire wolf.

The wind shifted.

It started low. Rustling leaves, stirring cloaks.

Then the smell hit.

Rot.

Decay.

Something ancient, long dead and recently disturbed.

It swept across the battlefield like a curtain being drawn, and even the bravest among us staggered.

Wikis gagged and turned away. Day covered his mouth. Umberto took a half-step back, scowling.

From the treeline, the final shadow moved.

A towering figure emerged, easily seven feet tall, shoulders like stone walls beneath a tattered cloak. His mount was worse: a massive, undead dire wolf, far larger than the others, its eyes glowing a dull, fetid green, its body held together by what looked like wire, rot, and pure hate.

It lumbered forward with slow, deliberate steps. Every footfall sinking into the forest floor with a wet crunch.

The group didn’t charge.

They stepped back.

The stench was unbearable. Osman retched behind the rock wall. Even Din grunted something that sounded like a prayer.

Then. Sound.

Chains.

Slow. Relentless.

The clink, clink of unwinding metall, followed by a heavier metallic clatter as the figure dropped his arms. Twin chained blades spilled from his sleeves like dead snakes, their weight dragging arcs in the dirt.

He began to spin them. Slowly at first. Wide, sweeping circles over his head, effortless, hypnotic. Then…

With a crack, one chain snapped forward, knocking Day’s sword clean from his hand. It spun away into the dark, landing with a sharp clang against a rock.

The second chain followed a heartbeat later, thudding into the earth just inches in front of Umberto’s boot. A warning. Or a challenge.

Umberto didn’t flinch.
Din, still trapped beneath the dire wolf’s bulk, groaned.

I think I’d like those when this is all said and done,” he wheezed, eyeing the chained blades. “Focus on that thing. We’ll get ourselves out from under this thing.

Carrie raised a hand, eyes narrowing, voice sharp. “Leave.

The figure didn’t even twitch.

The spell fizzled uselessly against whatever dark force kept him upright. Carrie frowned. “Well. Rude.

I swallowed hard.

Then stepped forward.

Not far. Just enough.

My sword still felt too heavy. Too cold. I looked at Day, barehanded but still steady.

Here,” I said, holding the hilt toward him. “You’ll probably be a little better with it than I would.

Day took it silently.

I stepped back toward the rock and the wall of packs.

I believe in you,” I said.

The words felt stupid the moment they left my mouth. But true.

You’ve got this.

And I hoped to every gods-damned power in Elandaru… that I wasn’t lying.

The battle didn’t start with a roar this time. It started with a plan.

A bad one, maybe, but it was all we had.

Wikis and Carrie focused on the undead wolf, hoping to distract it enough to shake the rider’s focus. Arrows flew, spells sparked. The wolf snarled, snapping at the air, unfazed. 

Up in the trees, Wikis fired in tight, calculated bursts, three arrows in quick succession, one striking just above the beast’s sunken eye. It didn’t blink.

Carrie hurled more silver wisps, each one sparking light across its rotted frame. “Come on, you ugly corpse rug!” she shouted. “Over here! Bite someone with better fashion sense!

It barely looked her way.

Meanwhile, Umberto and Day charged the rider.

The chained blades spun again, deadly arcs of iron and rot. Day ducked one, barely catching it with the sword. The impact rattled his wrist.

Umberto roared and caught another with the flat of his axe, but the force still drove him back a step. He growled through his teeth.

Trunch stood behind them, teeth gritted, hands glowing with unstable power. One eldritch blast after another flared from his palms, striking the rider in the chest, shoulder, neck. The hits staggered him, but he never stopped attacking.

This would be easier,” Trunch muttered, “if he’d just go down already.

Behind them, Din and Yak were still very much under the dire wolf.

On three,” Din grunted, shifting his armor and kicking at the dirt. “One, two, three!

They rolled.

The wolf didn’t budge.

Maybe four next time,” Yak wheezed. “Four might be the number.

They tried again, feet scrambling, muffled swearing erupting under the mound of fur.

The rider pressed forward.

Carrie’s next bolt went wide. Wikis hit the same leg twice, but the beast kept moving.

Day was tiring, his blocks slower. Umberto had a cut above his brow now, blood in his eye. Trunch’s blasts were getting erratic.

And me?

I did the only thing I could.

I reached into the pile of packs behind me, and my hand closed around something round and firm.

An onion. I stared at it, then stood up, and hurled it.

It hit the undead wolf squarely in the snout with a wet thud.

No reaction.

So I threw another.

Then another.

Why,” I muttered to myself, “do we have so many onions?

I got them in Nelb,” Trunch called out “Couldn’t resist. The price was too good for produce of that quality.

The fourth onion bounced off the rider’s shoulder.

He paused. Just for a moment. A small moment. But a moment.

It was enough for Trunch to land a shot square in the jaw, snapping his head to the side.

Umberto seized the opening with a bellow, charging low, axe flashing.

And in the dirt, Yak shrugged, “Onions.”

Then, finally, a breakthrough.

Carrie’s voice cut sharp through the din, more serious than before. No witty jab. No airy sarcasm. Just quiet, focused spellcasting.

A flick of her wrist. A spark of silver light.

The undead dire wolf began to shrink.

It didn’t roar. It didn’t flail. It simply collapsed inward, bones creaking and limbs contorting as its hulking mass shriveled. In mere seconds, the towering monstrosity had shrunk to something more akin to a sickly greyhound. Still hideous, still snarling, but far less threatening.

The rider wobbled, awkward on suddenly too-small footing.

He had no choice but to dismount, hitting the ground in a roll that broke some of the eerie poise he’d carried till now.

There was a beat of stunned silence.

Then Carrie, from her perch in the trees, put her hands on her hips and said, “You’re welcome.

The rider hit the ground with surprising grace.

For a man of his size, he moved with unnatural speed, a blur of shadow and muscle, twin blades hissing as they retracted and reformed into a pair of wicked, scimitar-like swords.

He didn’t roar. He didn’t speak.

He simply advanced.

Din and Yak had finally rolled free of the collapsed wolf carcass. Din staggered upright, wincing as his armor creaked, one side caved in slightly, movement limited.

Yak gave him a look. “You alright?”

Functional,” Din growled. “Mostly. I really want those blades.

They took down the shrunken wolf first. Carrie blasting it with a final wisp of light while Umberto cleaved its head from its shoulders. It twitched once and stilled.

But they were spent.

Umberto bled from multiple wounds, his breathing ragged.
Day’s tunic was slashed, his ribs heaving, but his braid, somehow, remained perfect. Trunch leaned against a tree, face pale, arms shaking. He fired one last eldritch blast that fizzled out halfway. 

That’s me,” he said. “I’m done.

Wikis reached for another arrow, and found none. She threw the empty quiver down in disgust. Carrie, standing unsteadily on a branch, lifted her arms and sighed. “I’m out. Nothing left. I’m just a cheerleader now.”

They formed up anyway.

A final, desperate line.

Blades drawn. Breath shallow. Bones screaming.

The rider came in hard.

His swords were a blur, striking in cruel, perfect arcs. Day blocked one, barely, and was thrown backward. Umberto caught another across his side and roared, swinging his axe in reply. Din’s hammer crashed into the rider’s hip, knocking him off balance. Yak darted low, slashing across the hamstring. Wikis picked up a fallen dagger and hurled it. It sank deep into the rider’s back.

The assault continued.

He fought like a dying storm, brutal, relentless, refusing to end.

Until finally he collapsed. The twin blades fell. His body hit the forest floor, coughing blood. Laughing. Wet, broken laughter that sent shivers through the trees. They stood above him. He looked up at them, still grinning.

Umberto staggered forward. His chest rose and fell like a bellows. He turned to me, hand outstretched.

Chronicler,” he said. “Give me a fucking onion.

I reached back, found one in Trunch’s pack, and gently pressed it onto his palm..

Umberto took it. Looked the rider in the eye. Then shoved the entire thing into the man’s mouth. The rider gagged, his eyes wide. Umberto stomped once, hard, forcing the onion deeper. The laughter stopped. And then Day stepped forward, sword in hand. He didn’t speak. Just raised the blade, calm and precise, and dropped it clean across the rider’s neck. The head rolled. So did the onion, sliding free from the severed throat, perfectly intact.

No one spoke.

We just stood there. Breathing. Bleeding. Somehow still alive.

Eventually, we moved.

No orders. No plan. Just the quiet, aching shuffle of survivors who knew the work wasn’t done yet.

Wikis descended from the trees and began reclaiming her arrows. She worked in silence, one by one, pulling shafts from bark, limbs, and moss. She tested the fletching, checked the tips, slid the whole ones back into her quiver. A few were too warped to keep. She left them behind without comment.

Carrie drifted above the clearing, casting faint silver flickers to light the field. Din set about prying the blades free from the attacker’s wrists. He managed to undo the bolt holding one and settled with cutting off the hand to retrieve the other. Trunch moved through the dead, quiet now, his hands shaking as he worked, prying medallions from necks, gathering what little the fallen had. Each attacker wore the same thing: a Dan’del’ion medallion, unmistakable even in the dark.

Thirteen in total.

The final rider’s was different. A little larger. More ornate. Edged in silver filigree, the metal veined around the rim with faint crimson. And in its centre, a gemstone, milky white. We exchanged glances, no one quite ready to touch it for too long.

We took them all.

Then we turned to Jonath. Still breathing. Still unconscious.

Din and Umberto moved first, lifting him between them, a mismatched pair of limbs beneath too much weight. They bore it for only a few paces before Redmond stepped in, silent. Osman followed, nodding once, his face pale and tight with something close to shame. Wordlessly, they took over, cradling Jonath with surprising gentleness. Gratitude passed unspoken between them.

The cart waited where we’d left it.

We climbed in slowly, as if our bodies were still catching up to the fact that the fight was over. Trunch collapsed against the sideboards. Carrie folded herself beneath spare cloaks. Wikis sat with her back to the driver’s bench, scanning the woods. Din groaned as he pulled his dented armor into something resembling comfort. Yak climbed up beside me and said nothing.

Redmond and Osman laid Jonath carefully across the packs, arranging him as best they could.

No one spoke.

I took the reins.

A gentle flick. A whisper to the mules. And they began to walk.

Slow.

Blessedly slow, along the long, moonlit road back to Dawnsheart.