BBook 2: Chapter 29: Gone but not forgotten.
Dragons, gods, the ability to shift between forms at will, apocalyptic wars once waged eons ago. I was not wholly shocked by this all, once the raw surge of memories had passed. If anything, I would have been bbergasted <em>if</em> the history of this world were mundane.
My next words came after several moments of careful consideration.
Youre a dragon.
Perhaps I could have worded that to be less blunt, yet I merely stated the obvious.
Oh no. Lerish shook her head, a tinge of regret and wistfulness in her voice. Dragon-spawn at best. And even then among the weakest there might have been. See, I only ever found a sliver of the egg, a fraction of the intended power.
And that <em>alone</em> turned you into the Apex?
Forcibly.
One thing did leap to mind upon hearing that.
Why tell <em>me</em>? Why..now?
Silence reigned for a moment.
You were the first to uncover the truth. Kept the secret. Saved my life again. She spoke hesitantly at first, conviction growing with every word.
Not to interrupt, but Velton and-
They suspected. Never knew, I dont think. Lerish interrupted. For the several years that have passed since my transformation happened, I left them alone and they returned the favor. My nose was kept out of <em>their</em> business and theirs out of mine.
This lined up with everything I had learned about the elf and his family. Lerish was very much a loner, and they in turn had left her to her solitude.
Why now? I repeated.
The dungeon is stirring. Again.
Words that I dreaded to hear.
Velton has spent almost no time in this house since I was ced here. Tehalis has not been home once. They refuse to tell Ish anything, but I know what is happening.
So suddenly tired was I that the need to ask her vanished. Only evermore trouble came from the mountain.
The other fragments of the egg stir inside the dungeon. I can feel it. They <em>demand</em> to be made whole again. So that Ash-Tuls specter can return.
And what, pray tell, do <em>we</em> do about that?
Lerish stopped mid-pace and shrugged, just as lost in all this as I was.
Are we required to do anything about it? She asked. What obligates us to intervene? For my part, if not for Ish, I would pack my things and leave.
An option Ick.
I was now <strong>Godtouched</strong>. Of interest. Expected to provide entertainment to the Gods Above.
Some part of me wondered if this new stirring, this sudden development was not their doing. Had one of them decided the proverbial pot needed be shook and new vor made to rise?
The great revtion that they were outsiders did not phase me, I found. The simple fact that Gods lived above and dictated this world had been a shock, yes. But their origins were irrelevant. They simple <em>were</em>. Perhaps this knowledge might upset those who believed otherwise, but what was in the past remained firmly there.
To leave the farm would be the safe, sensible option here. Travel somewhere safer, set up again and continue my toils.
Was there anywhere truly <em>safe</em>, however? That was the first and smallest inquiry.
The second was that I, on some level, utterly refused to be driven from my home. This I had shown before and would still do again. In the face of danger, I would persist, no matter the price.
Andstly, I felt as though Icked that choice. If this <em>was</em> an intervention from the Gods Above to stir the area and provoke conflict, to run from it might lead to disastrous consequences. I had been gifted power -albeit unwillingly-, and they expected entertainment in return.
My farm tied me to this ce. Here, I had already dug my grave. Now, I would triumph or die. In the face of this or any danger.
Lerish was bound here by Ish, who in turn stayed because of her parents. Why Velton and Tehalis stayed instead of vanishing into thin air I could not discern. I suspected once more it had to do with the dungeon.
Everything these days did, it seemed.
It was a small whileter that I actually returned to <em>why</em> I hade to visit. My problems, Iid before Lerish and asked if she could be the solution.
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You dont know <em>where</em> these warbands are currently? She repeated, one of Veltons maps unrolled before her.
No. Came the rumbled confirmation as I leaned over the table and for the first time glimpsed aplete map of the surrounding territories. But I do know <em>where</em> they are likely toe from.
My finger traced down the barons territory to a small corridor of markednd squashed between tworger kingdoms. A disputed no-mansnd constantly at war, home to ouws and periodically hit by necromantic surges that reanimated those dead on its battlefields.
My trail led through that to another grey section that was marked as the Pits of Drogoss, where monsters were spewed periodically into this world. A ce of constantbat where little grew and even less survived.
One of the great minotaur migrations sat at its edges, made perpetual camp there, and waited for every new spawning season to whet their des in ichor and blood.
All of this, I knew. This was where I had made the journey from when I had first taken control of the old Gareks body.
They wille, or have already came, through the Roil-snake crags into Ironmoors territory. From there, what roads they follow here is anyones guess.
Only two that lead toward Hullbretch. Ones the longer way around, would take them a couple extra days to reach the redtip. Course, nobody would know that it they werent already familiar with thesends.
In conclusion, we put together ces where they <em>might</em> be, but the divided trails left us unsure.
If they take the long route, the warband <em>will</em> have to pass within sight of Hullbretch. Station a man there with a fast horse and orders to ride hard once the watch sees something. In fact, put two.
And the other road?
Lerish sighed, deep and slow.
Ill watch that. Truth be told, I feel like Ive been in here too long already. I feel trapped, but I stay because ish wants me to. Its time for me to slip back into the wild and stalk the forests once more. Could say im only doing this because I owe you for savin my life. Truth is, Im doing it because I want to.
Dont do anything stupid. I fretted over her a whileter as she packed and prepared to leave with me. Justy in wait and alert them once you see them. Dont engage, dont block their path. Just scout and scoot.
Mmmm. Came the nonmital hum. The best I would get from her.
The pack she carried was smaller than mine. A bow at her side, dull clothes and some rations was all Lerish saw fit to pack. I did not question her, merely apanied her down the road, back towards my farm. There was some relief from the constant stress now that I had her as a living rm.
If there was anyone I trusted to excel at this task, it was her.
One more thing. I spoke as we walked.
It was with some painful winces that I recounted the ambush on the road. Just to fill her in on the possible danger. She, however, had other intentions.
Want me to track them down?
And just like that, I had a painful choice in front of me.
What did I prioritize? The ambushers killing the baron''s men, or my own safety?
So far, none of my people had been targeted by whoever had ambushed the riders. All of my workers showing up unscathed could attest to that. I had little doubt that if I set Lerish onto the trail, she could find whoever was responsible, or at least give me a decent idea of the threat.
But the threat of the warband wasrge, and, worst of all, unknown. I <em>knew</em> they were out there somewhere. I <em>knew</em> they wereing, but not from where. And if they arrived while I was unprepared, the consequences could be disastrous.
The decision was almost made <em>for</em> me. In all ways but one.
The ambush site is not farm from the farm. I would appreciate it if you could look around quickly, tell me what you find and then move on. Dont waste any time picking it apart or trying to chase the danger. In. Look. Out. Ille with you so you can ry the information and continue onwards.
This we both agreed on. Trees fell away and we emerged into the barren area around my fortress-farm.
Lerish eyebrows raised at the changes, but she declined toment. Gates were hauled open and we entered to find Ish with her arms crossed, her expression miffed.
Off to risk your life again? We talked about this.
There was tension in those words, a tone that made me wary enough to tread carefully.
Not in particr, Lersih muttered. Just a scout job.
Not really helping her own case there.
It took precious time to ry everything to Ish, and even longer to convince her that I absolutely <em>needed</em> Lerish for this. No one else would do. Tash waved as he went past, the satyr <strong>Beastmaster</strong> off to deal with unruly cows once more.
My train of thought mentally crashed to a halt and my eyes slid around once more. Wasnt he a drow-
Garek? <em>Garek!?</em> Ishs voice broke through the haze.
I blinked, trying to remember what had just been said. Anything past Tash waving at me was a nk, and he was now down by the pens, the stubborn taur-cows firmly his problem.
Sorry. I apologized. Must be more exhausted than I had reckoned.
Thats fine. Hard work does that to a man. Ish reassured me.
Yet, the thought of <em>something</em> nagged me. The feeling persisted through the conversation as ish forcibly joined the party to travel to the ambush site. Eventer, while we searched the dead riders and walked through fields of arrows, the sensation that <em>something</em> had happened once I had glimpsed Tash remained.
It seemed to fade from memory every time I thought too hard, and soon a massive headache thudded behind my eyes.
So, good news and not-so good news. Lerish dered as she stepped from the bush.
I waved at her to let me what it, one hand against the side of my head as the migraine pounded away.
You dont have to worry about a mass of highly-trained archers or raiders on the edge of yournd. Thats the good news. What youll hate hearing is that whoever killed everyone here, She broadly indicated the now hours-old carnage with a sweeping gesture. Was a single individual.
Well, that was just fabulous to here. With that, her mission here wasplete. Farewell said to me and embrace shared with Ish, the huntress turned and vanished into the undergrowth, her own trails to be found amidst the choking greenery.
Migraine too intense to stay here and keep searching for some long-vanished archer, I too turned and trod my path back to the farm, my head clutched all the way.