Thursday, November 26, 2020

Chapter 33: The Southern Forest






Varhi tilted the bowl up to his lips, barely having used his spoon at all so far to gobble up the stew which Nayleen had handed him.

Food.

Real food.

And not just something like stale bread or salted meat.

Real. Food.


A proper, piping hot meal… just how long has it been since he had eaten one? He was insistent on Jimmy not giving him money or helping him; the man had already done so much and he wanted to take care of himself, which… had some moderate success, he supposed. In other words, that basically meant that he missed being able to eat actual good cooked food properly for many, many months, possibly nearly a year by now. This, combined with the fact he was currently starving to near death, made this bowl of stew he was currently slurping down with gusto the tastiest meal he ever remembered having. Not a hard thing to remember when he couldn’t really remember the past ten years of his life until he had become cognizant for what he assumed could only be a second time.

“H-Hey, slow down.” He heard Sairek caution him.

Varhi ignored him. The Prince probably got to eat stuff like this on a daily basis. There was no way he could understand what he was experiencing right now. Varhi slurped and chewed on the bits of meat and vegetables as he went, basically draining the bowl of all of the contents in almost one entire go.

Finishing the meal in record time, he licked his lips and lowered the bowl down, swallowing the last of the contents in his mouth. His stomach which had been in dire straits within the last couple of days was quite pleased with this succulent treat. A few seconds later, he let out a hearty belch, covering his lips in one hand. The other three were just watching him, barely having touched their food.

“B-Blimey, that’s good...” He said, breaking the silence between them. Then he eyed the other three bowls, his eyes soon settling on Sairek’s bowl.

The Prince slowly moved his bowl in his hands away from Varhi, using his arms and body to hide it from his view in a protective gesture from the hungry lad. Varhi sniffed in disappointment.

“Give it here.” Nayleen sighed with a grin, gesturing to Varhi’s empty bowl. He passed it over and Nayleen reached a ladle into the pot to begin refilling it. The fire was still going, though lower this time so to not overcook the food but still keep it heated and hot. They did not really need heat anyway to keep themselves warm. It was another hot summer evening and while the light was low, it was still enough for them to see at least well enough in the clearing for now. Nayleen refilled his bowl up and passed it back over to him, which he accepted graciously.

“You’re the best.” Was his thankful comment before he began to dig in for a second time, attacking the contents in his bowl with the same slurping strategy as before.

Nayleen smiled sweetly while Sairek rolled his eyes. The Prince moved to settle his bowl evenly on his lap again while he also reached with his left hand into a pocket of his pants and pulled out a flask of water, which he leaned over and set it on Varhi’s lap. The boy in his slurping of the stew gave him a thumbs up in acknowledgement and thanks, but never stopping his vigorous feasting.

When Varhi had finished his second helping, his stomach was protesting that it couldn’t hold much more. However, he still forced himself to drain the entire flask of water which Sairek had provided him. Fresh water was just as important to fill himself up with as good food, even if it wasn’t as tasty.

When he finished that as well, he let out a relieved sigh. “Thanks guys, I seriously feel a lot better already.”

“No prob—woah!” Nayleen let out when Varhi abruptly moved to stand up completely, stretching his body as if he had just woken up from a long nap.

“A-Are you sure you should be moving around like that? You could barely walk no more than a few hours ago…” Cyial stammered.

“The bruises hurt but they’re not crippling, except this particular one at my side…” Varhi commented, pointing at the first one he had gotten on his left side since he got here. “It’s probably that medicine you gave me, but once I get a good night’s sleep or two, I should be good. Well, good enough anyway.” He moved to kneel back down, then looked back towards Sairek who was eating his meal and was just finishing it up, now. “Prince, may I borrow you and your staff for a little bit?”

“Eh…?”

“You had said that you can make water, right?”

“Yes…?”

“How much water?”

“Uh… a lot?”

“It’s been nearly three weeks since I had a chance to clean myself and since then I’ve been pissed on by these things—literally... I've been rained on by the weather, caked in mud and practically stuck in my armor the entire time during all of that. I must smell awful to you guys right now.”

Sairek blinked and it took him a moment to register what he meant. “O-Oh. You want me to...” He paused.

Varhi blinked at him, genuine confusion etched on his face. “What?”

“No, it’s nothing.” Sairek said, shaking his head. The Prince couldn’t wonder if Varhi was just that comfortable with himself, or just had no shame. He wasn't unsure anymore when the boy moved to unfasten the armor from his legs, then pull his leather pants down and everything else with it down.

Sairek nearly fell backwards as Nayleen burst out laughing and Cyial made a mock gesture to cover his eyes with a hand. “W-What–!” Sairek let out. Though it was true, the boy did smell a bit foul, it had been a few days since he and the rest of his group had gotten a proper cleaning themselves, other than washing their faces and hands now and then. Still, this was... "You seriously meant right now?"

“I don’t see why not. We’re not going to be going anywhere tonight for sure.” Varhi blinked with a small tilt of his head. “Unless making water is too tiring for you?”

Sairek slowly rolled his eyes to his right side as he heard Nayleen cover her mouth, trying not to laugh at this even further. “Go on, go for it...!” She giggled, giving Sairek a small shove with her hand to his shoulder to get him going. Sairek inhaled and then exhaled deeply, setting his bowl aside, he moved to stand himself up. Varhi wandered a few feet away, positioning himself next to a large tree trunk as Sairek followed him. The Prince couldn’t help but stare a little to compare himself. Surprisingly, they looked actually quite a lot the same, at least when they were ‘normal’, anyway...

Sairek also saw that the bruises did not extend to just Varhi’s upper body, but down below as well, although much fewer in number, he still had a few bruises along his legs and a couple of small scratches on them too. Interestingly, each and every bruise was on the front of his body. “Wow, they really did take a piece out of you, didn’t they...?” He grumbled. With a closer look, he saw that not all of these wounds the boy had were necessarily new, some looked much older than just a couple of weeks old, like long-time scars. He supposed this wasn’t his first job after all, the boy probably had experienced a wide variety of injuries from a bunch of other things before coming here.

Varhi shrugged, non-chalant. “I did do more damage to them back.”

Sairek moved to position his staff, trying to concentrate. “...For the record, abruptly stripping yourself right in front of anyone, but especially a girl, is really bad form...”

Varhi blinked, looked towards Nayleen who had a wide amused grin on her face while she watched from a distance, then looked back to Sairek. “Really? It doesn’t look like she seems to care. Looks like she's enjoying me if anything else.”

“Oh for the—” Sairek bit his bottom lip, dropping his staff down from his ‘aim’ when he heard Nayleen burst out laughing from behind him. “Will you just please turn around, at least?”

Varhi shrugged non-chalantly again. Sairek huffed, raising his staff again, his concentration was soon pierced yet again by Nayleen letting out a cutting whistle from behind him when Varhi’s rear came into view. “W-Will you cut that out!” Sairek yelled at her, spinning around to face her. Nayleen simply stuck her tongue out at him. He grumbled.

When he spun back around, he half jumped, with Varhi having turned his front around to face him, one hand on a bare hip in impatience. “Does it usually take you this long to cast magic? At this rate one of those things might actually come and I'll be standing here—AHHBUBULBPFF–?!

Sairek didn’t let him finish his sentence. A strong jet of water began blasting against Varhi’s face, forcing him to turn back around to avoid it and step right up against the tree . “WOW! Rude!” Varhi spat out a couple of times. “Geez… I think some of that got up my nose…!”

“Deal with it.” Sairek huffed. He still heard Nayleen cackling behind him in the background. “Now if you don’t mind, turn around please.

“Damn! You’re savage...!” Varhi whined, turning himself back around.

“I may be new at this, but you have not seen anything from me yet.”

"And threats? I'm starting to think I should have taken my chances with the stream instead!"

Sairek continued to spray Varhi down until the other boy seemed satisfied that most of the mud and dirt or whatever else that may have gotten stuck to him and his hair was off of him. Now dripping wet and shivering a little, they both returned back towards the fire which Nayleen had once more stirred to full life again now that their meal was finished. Varhi sat closer to it, seated on the blanket the sleeping bag was on, allowing himself to dry up… with all of himself more or less in glory, though he kept his legs pulled tightly to himself.

“You’re looking real nice.” Nayleen giggled at him.

“You’re enjoying this a little too much.” Sairek grumbled at her.

Nayleen shrugged. “Not like anything I’ve seen before. At least on other animals, anyway.“

“See? I told you she doesn’t mind.” Varhi retorted to Sairek, fingers roaming through his wet hair, gingerly combing it back into place. His mouth opened in a big yawn which he talked through. "So if you don't mind, want me to put my legs back down?"

"No, we would not...!" Sairek cut in quickly, face flushed. "Put your damn pants back on already!"

“Come on, we may be dead within the next couple days, mm? I think we’re past caring about society’s norms. Let’s enjoy this little camping trip while it lasts, shall we?”

“I’m out of here…” Sairek groaned, bringing his posture like Varhi’s, but burying his head into his arms to hide, which raised yet another laugh out of Nayleen to the point she was holding her sides.



* * *




Sairek sat up from his sleeping bag with a frustrated groan. He just couldn’t get to sleep. The sound of Nayleen and Varhi gently snoring to his side though informed him that they were already gone. Varhi had fallen asleep within minutes when they retired, though he couldn’t blame him. The boy probably hadn’t had a proper sleep in a long time and now finally with relative peace with proper food and cleaned, his body had clearly wanted only one other thing: Rest.

Sairek looked to see Cyial still sitting at the fire, like he had said he would, with plans to keep it going the entire night to help ward off those creatures away, but listening to any movements otherwise. Sairek pulled himself out of the sleeping bag and moved to wander over, sitting right next to Cyial on his right side.

“You really need to get to sleep, you know.” Cyial warned him, using a long stick to poke at the flames while he tossed a couple of shorter ones in, then he set the stick down and moved to lean gently against Sairek, head resting on the Prince’s left shoulder.

“I know, but I just can’t seem to fall asleep. Not yet.” Sairek answered, his head turning to look at Varhi’s sleeping form, a subtle frown on his face, which Cyial picked up on.

“Don’t like him?” Cyial asked.

“No. He saved Nayleen and I when we were in trouble despite being in that condition. He didn’t have to. I’m more worried he doesn’t like me.”

“I think he likes you.” Cyial reassured him, his hand moving to rub his back slowly in that reassuring gesture. “I think he’s just been scolding you because he does care. Someone who didn’t care wouldn’t do that. Try to look at it from his perspective. A lot more pressure did just get put on him now.” He tried to explained, though frowned himself. "I think you had gotten the point already though and what he was saying did start scaring me..."

“Yeah…” Sairek sighed. “Deep down I knew how stupid doing this was, but the curiosity got the better of me.”

“Come on. I know it wasn't just curiosity. Nayleen knows, too. You wanted to help him.”

“That’s… not good enough.” Sairek said through gritted teeth. “Varhi is right. I didn’t think about the consequences if something happened to me or you guys... I only thought about the consequences of me not going.”

“Why did your father try to form that contract with you in the first place, Sairek?”

“I honestly don’t know. It was very unlike him, I will admit…” Sairek mumbled in thought. “I just took the chance before he changed his mind. Meeting you and Nayleen, it wasn’t something I regret doing at all, even with the couple bad experiences I’ve had, it’s been easily worth it. Ceareste is different though. Yeah, there’s a few monsters, but even most of them are something I should be able to handle alone, I’d think. People however are more dangerous, as I found out pretty quickly.” Sairek snorted, but frowned again. “This, though…? What have I done, Cyial...?”

Cyial shifted, moving to hold Sairek in a reassuring hug. “You've done nothing wrong at all. This time it will be my turn to keep you safe, alright?”

“This isn’t a competition…”

“It doesn’t need to be.”

“Haah… Alright.” Sairek relented, moving his arms to hug Cyial back. They gave each other a tight reassuring squeeze before pulling away. “Thanks, Cyial...”

“Of course. Now are you going to go back to bed?” Cyial asked with a smile.

“Ugh, do I have to?”

“Well, I don’t mind talking if you still aren’t comfortable… We can talk about Varhi some more.”

“Eh? What else did you want to talk about him? Sairek blinked.

“Well… how does he look to you?” Cyial asked, a smirk forming on his face. “Does he compare to you okay?”

“W-What–! Not this again…! Okay, I’m going!” Sairek raised his hands up in surrender, pushing himself up to his feet and dragged himself back to his sleeping bag. He heard Cyial let out a soft chuckling sound behind him, but still wishing him a good night regardless.



* * *




Cyial sighed, resting his head in a palm that was resting on one of his knees which sat cross-legged, watching Varhi gobble up his breakfast with little to no mannerisms or regard. “Here I thought he needed probably a week of bed rest, but no. Apparently he just needed Nayleen’s cooking.” He grumbled, but it was through a smile of mild amusement. He didn’t think watching someone stuff their face with gusto would be somewhat entertaining.

Ish gewd…!” Came Varhi’s muffled reply.

“Stars and stones…” Cyial let out in yet another sigh. At least the boy had put his boxers back on again and was loosely covered up in a blanket now draping from behind his back, though he supposed he couldn’t blame him too much. Wearing that much armor when they were more or less “safe” was pretty cumbersome and they had just woken up.
Nayleen being the early bird as she usually was, fixed breakfast early and was nearly done by the time Varhi and Sairek were beginning to rouse. Sairek as usual being the very last one to get up, had managed to get to sleep in the end.
He was sure the smell of the food had awakened Varhi. Then again, not many could resist the smell of pancakes in the morning in the middle of the forest, even if they did lack the sweet syrup to coat them with. Varhi had easily been more than grateful to devour such a fluffy treat anyway, even if each one Nayleen made didn’t look as good as being made over the usual stove top, the taste was still the same in the end. Nayleen could fairly quickly make them and could make a lot of them too, which was beneficial because Varhi just kept eating them. It had been a great idea on her part. His stomach apparently had made a lot more room for food over night.

However, after eating several of the pancakes, any potential doubt that his stomach may have been bottomless was put at ease when the boy finally said that he could not eat any more once he was done finishing what he had in front of him, anyway. That thinned look he had gotten on his body from only yesterday was starting to disappear rather quickly and fill back up to a proper weight level.

Cyial was very impressed. This was an incredibly fast recovery. No ‘patient’ he had seen had been in such a condition that Varhi had been and made such a fantastic and speedy bounce back. The boy was quite literally in danger of losing his life only fourteen hours ago, yet with only a bottle of ethereal to give him a temporary energy boost, two hearty meals and a good night’s sleep had this boy already rebounding back amazingly fast. Varhi's constitution was quite remarkable.
He realized that Jimmy had been right but had neglected the details of exactly what he meant. There was... something about Varhi that made him quite special and a prodigy indeed. This couldn’t be normal… could it? This level of recovery could rival that of even a troll. It was certainly faster than a normal human and even demons on their home turf, from what he understood of the Underworld denizens, at least.


“...Why’re you staring at me, like that?” Varhi asked Cyial abruptly.

Cyial blinked as he was snapped out of his thoughts. “I’m just thinking. Sorry.”

Varhi blinked back.

“About how fast you are recovering.” Cyial clarified.

“Oh.” Varhi let out. “Since you’re an incubus, I was just thinking you was—”

“No.” Cyial cut him off quickly.

Varhi tilted his head a little. “You feed on that stuff though, right? I don’t necessarily feel that way about you, but if it would increase our chances of getting out of here then I wouldn’t mind if—”

No.” Cyial cut him off again with more emphasis and he frowned when he heard Nayleen laughing again. “E-Even if I did, it would leave you utterly exhausted again and might hurt your… ah, miraculous recovery.” He grumbled.

“Ah, I see. That’s a shame.” Varhi said neutrally, resuming to chew and bite at the two pancakes he had left on his plate.

Cyial glanced at Sairek who was also looking at him. A faint smirk was on Sairek’s face. He realized he was blushing from Varhi’s ‘suggestion’.

Varhi was the last to finish his food, but only because he ate the same amount of pancakes as the rest of them did combined. Cyial was becoming a little worried about their stocks of food. He may require himself to neglect eating the human food for now. It’s not like he really needed to eat it anyway, at least not as much as he had been. It did still give him energy of course though and he had a feeling he’d be using a lot of that over the course of the next few days, so maybe it would be best if he kept eating…

“You’re staring at me, again.” Varhi said. "Are you sure you're not—"

“Don’t make me get Sairek to reheat those flasks again.” Cyial warned him.

“O-Oh. Uh, no thanks. I… I’ll be good.”

“Excellent.” Cyial replied. He could hear Nayleen stifling more laughter. He didn’t know why she found his interactions with them so hilarious, but he was glad she was having a good time and was in high spirits. They’d need that going forward.

After Varhi finished eating, he moved and began to fit on his armor again. Nayleen moved to help him put it all back on. While she did, Cyial moved back to Sairek, watching from a short distance away, talking to him in hushed tones. “Nayleen really seems to like him, doesn’t she?”

“Well, they both have a similar sense of humor.” Sairek drawled. “...And he apparently absolutely loves her cooking even more than I do.” He looked away from them and turned to Cyial. “Maybe they’re more of a match, hmm?”

Cyial chuckled softly. “You’re probably right. Maybe opposites don’t attract so well after all. Did you consider her at some point, though?”

“W-What? No…! Not even before you and I… y’know. And certainly not after. She’s a good friend, but I never looked at her romantically like that...”

“Sorry, I was just curious where you stand, is all.”

"Where... I stand?"

"With girls."

“I… I haven’t even really thought about genders or… or people, like that…” Sairek mumbled. “I mean, I like looking at you and… well, I don’t know. I haven’t even seen a naked girl yet so... I don't know how I would respond? It feels weird and rude to visualize Nayleen like that though, you know…? I don't even do it to you... well, unless the dreams—”

“I get it, relax.” Cyial smiled gently. “Just do whatever feels comfortable to you. You’re at the age where every boy and girl begins exploring their sexuality.”

“...So I’ve noticed.” Sairek mused.



“So, what’s the story with the pot lid, anyway?” Nayleen asked Varhi, holding up the circular plate of cast iron in her hands. It was dented in several spots and the coating of paint on it which was black, had more or less been peeled off in several places by now, more than likely from many applications of use that go far beyond the culinary variety.

“I was doing a job with Jimmy when I was first becoming a mercenary. It wasn’t my first gig necessarily, but it was my first ‘big job’ and we were still in Kior at the time.
“One of the more political Wardens in the city was doing some smuggling and the both of us were sort of doing an undercover job looking into it.” Varhi explained, fastening his pants up his legs and securing them with his belt. “Lots of details go into how we ended up there, but the short of it is that the Warden knew we were undercover. The entire job ended up being a set up. We both got trapped and the bastard had us sent to jail on a bogus charge we obviously did not commit.”

“W-What?” Nayleen blinked. “Huh. That reminds me, I just got out of jail recently myself.”

“What was that for?”

Nayleen shrugged. “I punched a guy and broke his nose because he was an asshole and was insulting demons.” She answered, glancing towards Cyial who was in the middle with conversing with Sairek.

Varhi snorted in amusement. “Ah, I see… Well, this was a prison, not just some small little town jail. There’s lots of those in the city. It’s where most demons end up, after all.” Varhi explained, slipping and fastening his steel greaves for his feet and legs.
“Anyway, we were in there for a few days after having done nothing wrong. A few of the other people in there were also in there for something they didn’t do as well and some others for some legitimate crimes, err, point is, we were basically sent to the same prison block with some other people. Every morning we would be brought out of the cells and forced to do rounds of physical labour and menial tasks as part of our ‘punishment’ within the walls of the prison.
“One of those menial jobs included carrying boxes of “cargo”, which now and then contained stuff the guy was smuggling. One day we and our prison buddies devised a plan that I would be the one to sneak into one of the boxes since I was small enough and be carried off with the cargo. The inmates devised a distraction where poor Jimmy would get legitimately pummeled by one of the bigger guys who usually had a short temper, so that multiple of the guards on watch would have to come to stop it and subdue him, and it had to look real so they wouldn't suspect the plot.
"So uh... while Jimmy got his nose caved in, that’s when the other guys quickly helped me into one of the boxes and carried me off into the caravan transporting the cargo while the guards were distracted. When the cargo was hauled off, it took me to the other side of the prison.”

He glanced at Nayleen and smiled gently. She was completely absorbing this story in. He reached for his leather shirt, pausing while he put it over his head, and then popped his head out through the neck opening, shaking his head a little to get his bangs of hair out of his eyes before he resumed. “A lot of prison supplies apparently get shipped there, things like blankets for the beds, or food for everyone in there; stuff like that. Sometimes in those cargos though, there would be the drugs the guy was smuggling, usually at the bottom of the boxes, under blankets or something else to cover it up pretty well. I checked the boxes while I was in the storage just to make sure.
“Anyway, security was pretty lax around the prison in general. They only really seemed to care about it around the inmates but they still didn’t keep a good track. I don’t think they noticed I went missing, or if they did they certainly did not cause much of a stir about it. I guess it was weird that I was in there in general. I was much too young to be in a prison like that and for the charge, it made no sense, so maybe they figured I got transferred, or me being there in the first place was a mistake or something, I don’t know.
“Well either way, I waited all day until nightfall to sneak out of that storage area, just hiding in that box the entire time, counting seconds in my head for a few hours because there were no windows or anything in the room to keep track of time.” Varhi continued, then gestured down at his leather armor. “As you can see, most of this is pretty dark, other than the platemail, obviously. I was fortunate to not be wearing my set of chainmail instead. It would have been a lot more noisy and the darkness of my armor helped me under the more unlit areas inside the prison.
“I basically snuck my way past most of the guards to make it back to the cells. Along the way, I made a stop to the prison's kitchen that was unoccupied and… grabbed that.” He said, pointing at the pot lid, which caused Nayleen to look down at it.

“So… this pot lid is something you stole from that prison?” She asked.

“Yup.” Varhi began fitting on his gauntlets as he continued with his story. “It wasn’t the guard’s faults. They were just doing their job and as ordered, so I wasn’t about to kill anyone, so a knife was out of the question and besides, they keep things like knives locked up because if a prisoner did escape, they could grab one and threaten the guards with one. But... nobody suspects something mundane like a pot lid, so I went and grabbed that instead and made my way to the cells and just… tossed it at the patrolling guy’s head when his back was turned. Bonked him hard from a distance and knocked him out cold. Of course, a pot lid hitting the concrete floor in the silence of a prison at night is pretty loud, so I had to be quick. I grabbed his keys, unlocked everyone, picked up the pot lid again and we started a prison break. I had to smack a few more guys with it when the alarm got raised when Jimmy and I moved to get our gear back from storage, but eventually we made it out with some of the other inmates joining us. I had to fight back a few guards but I made sure not to kill. They weren’t exactly trying to kill me either, just subdue us, but surprisingly, a helmet does not help stop a pot lid from causing problems if you smack them hard enough. It rang their heads pretty good, I reckon.” Varhi smirked. "If they didn't fall unconscious, they certainly got dazed."

“Wow. Isn’t releasing a bunch of random people like that dangerous though?” Nayleen asked.

Varhi slung his sheath over his shoulder, then reached for his cape and slowly fitted it over and through his head to put it on. “Nah. It was just a small time prison. People who end up there are people who did petty pickpocket or shoplifting or stuff like that. Half the time they did those crimes just so they could eat. Heck, some of them may have been safer in the prison. Not everybody wanted to leave. In the prison even though the food you get fed is garbage, it is technically free and you get a place to stay. There’s a lot of homeless in the city. Half the time I think most of them get caught on purpose.”
Finally for the last touch, he put his steel helmet visor on his head, completing his protective gear. “The justice system, especially in Kior is pretty corrupt as you can imagine. Jimmy and I were set up by a Warden, after all. Of course when we escaped, I kept the pot lid with me, but after the job it was pretty banged up, so I had some guy to kind of reinforce it and straighten it out a little bit again for the low, low price of one seru.
“Some of the inmates went with Jimmy and I to locate the guy’s office and the one of the more roguish guys volunteered to help us out as thanks for getting him out. He snuck into the building solo to dig up evidence that the guy was smuggling and that he had set us up. In fact, he was planning to have Jimmy and I transferred into a maximum security prison with a ridiculously long sentence, because he knew we were on to him. With that evidence being collected, we were in the clear after reporting it, showing the documents and absolved of our ‘crimes’. The Warden went to his own prison in our stead, was demoted from leadership over it and that was a wrap. Job complete.” Varhi said. “That roguish guy was actually pretty cool and wholesome. I believe his name was Elwin or something like that. Even had a pet rat that he snuck into the prison with him. He used that rat to help him steal small things, but eventually got caught and sent into that prison a few times. If I’m lucky, maybe I’ll run into him again.”

“Man. Are all mercenary jobs like that?” Nayleen asked, handing Varhi back his pot lid.

“Ehhh, not all of them. Some are pretty dull. A couple of others have been pretty interesting, though. There was another time when I was sent on a job with a small group; not with Jimmy this time. My group was tasked with sneaking into a guy’s mansion to—”

“Varhi,” Sairek interjected from a short distance away.

“Ah right, sorry, I seemed to have gotten carried away. This isn’t the best time. I didn’t mean to make you guys wait for me.” Varhi apologized sincerely. He moved down to grab his sword. “Instead, I should be talking about what we’re going to be doing today, shouldn't I.”

“...Yeah, why are you getting geared up again?” Nayleen asked. “I thought you were just getting dressed so you weren’t in the buff anymore. Not that I mind, even if they apparently do.” She hooked a thumb towards Sairek and Cyial for emphasis. Sairek stuck his tongue out at her.

Varhi blinked owlishly at her comment. "I was planning that we move on ahead so we can see what we’re up against. I haven’t been up to the bridge in about a week now. I’m sure some more of those things have migrated in from the mountains, especially after they chased me.” He said, shifting his posture to turn around and face the rest of them. “I hate to do this, really, but I think you guys need to see what we are up against first-hand. So I am going to do more of a... 'hands-on demonstration'. One where we for the most part will sit back and watch from a safe distance. Also, depending on how bad or clear it is, we can plan accordingly for tomorrow on how we will proceed on through. If it goes well, we can thin some of the horde today to make breaking through the mountains easier. Once we get through the mountain pass, Karvadean shouldn't be too much further. Then we can hopefully begin finally piecing together what the heck has been going on.”

“Are… you sure you’re up for this?” Sairek cautioned him. “It hasn’t even been a full day since you were unable to walk without help.”

“Bruises still hurt like a bitch, but I’m fine for now.” Varhi said. His eyes glared, but not necessarily because of what Sairek said. There was a particular glint of inner anger in his eyes. “Besides, I have some payback that needs delivering. I think I will be able to rest more easily once I get to… let myself go loose for a little bit. You understand?”

“No, but I have a feeling I am about to find out soon, if not today, then tomorrow.” Sairek replied.

“I won't do anything that is unnecessary, but… oh! I'd almost forgotten.” Varhi paused and moved back towards his tent, rummaging through gear which he had left inside of it. “Can I borrow you and your staff for a moment? I need some water.” He said.

“Oh Lands, not again... Didn’t you just get dressed?” Sairek drawled, causing Nayleen to chortle out a laugh.

“Not… for that.” Varhi rolled his eyes, though his back was to them. He pulled out two empty flasks and held them out. “I need these filled.”

Sairek blinked. “Drinking magic water won’t work. It disappears after a while, making it dangerous to drink large quantities of it.”

“Not for drinking.” Varhi shook his head, then blinked. “...Wait, it disappears...? How long?”

Sairek shrugged. “Depends on how strong the spell is. I can do… a few hours. Three, maybe four?”

“Hmm… yeah, that should be good enough. After all, I found out last night that it's still fine for rinsing yourself off with it.” Varhi nodded. “Fill ‘em up, please.”

Sairek shrugged, holding out his staff, pressing it against the lip of the first flask and releasing a short couple bursts of water into them with a chant, and then soon doing the same with the other. Varhi looked at them both, swirling them around gently. “Good, these will do just fine.” He said, moving to pocket both on his left belt. “These are just a precaution. Saved me before. I would suggest each of you have at least one handy on you. I'd use the magic water as well if you have any empty flasks. Save your drinking water.”

“But what are they for?” Cyial asked.

“These things can spray stuff on you. especially when you chop ‘em in two as they die. Spores explode everywhere and they can stick on you. Water washes it off. Don’t breathe it in and don’t keep it on you for long, you'll start getting nausea really quick. If you get any on you, hold your breath, retreat immediately, and rinse yourself off by dumping the water all over yourself.” Varhi explained, patting one of the now-filled flasks. “It’s probably the spore stuff that killed the other guys that came here, and may be what drove the other guy who made it back to the city to go insane and also may have been what ultimately killed him. For all I know, it might be what caused the people in Karvadean to transform. Whatever the heck the spores do, the simple fact is that I rather not find out. It obviously does something bad.

“Do… we have enough empty bottles for that?” Nayleen questioned, glancing at Sairek for an answer.

Sairek pinched his gem, half closing his eyes. “We’ve got… two, three, four... five. Five of them. I’ll go with just the one. I’m the one who can cast the spell to refill any flasks anyway if it came down to it.”

“Sounds good.” Varhi said. “You should be more in the back anyway, so you’ll be less at risk.”



Once Sairek filled each flask up, Nayleen and Cyial took two of them and pocketed them, the trio turned around to face Varhi again. “Now what?” Nayleen asked.

“Our marching order will be myself in front, of course.” Varhi began, pointing to himself, then moving his fingers to point at each of them in turn. “Cyial, you will be close behind me, because of your senses you should be able to detect them easily in the front. I want a fifteen-to-twenty feet gap behind the both of us. After that will be Sairek and Nayleen behind him, keeping an eye on the back line so nothing sneaks up behind us. The Prince will be safer this way and if things go badly and something manages to still catch us unaware, he can support either front or behind or retreat in either direction.
"March single file, but close enough to your partner that we're still in pairs.” Varhi instructed, bringing his hand back down to rest it against his hip and let out a sigh. “I don’t want any one of you to get hurt... or worse of course, but when it comes down to it... Sairek here is the most important out of all of us here. If something terrible happens to him, it’s going to quite literally change the world. If it comes down to deciding who needs help the most between anyone, he is the first priority. Does everybody understand?”

Sairek sighed, looking downcast, but he understood Varhi's point and didn't argue. “Yes, sir…”

“I got it.” Cyial nodded.

“Understood, boss.” Nayleen agreed.

Varhi moved to lift his sword up with both hands, reaching behind himself to push the sword into its sheath on his back, before letting his left hand fall to his side whilst he planted his right hand on his hip. “Good. Finally, I need to talk to you about the specific 'classes' these things are that I’ve seen so far. It would be better for us to actually name these things instead of just calling them ‘things’. It gets confusing and can make it hard to coordinate with each other, especially if there ends up being multiple ‘things’ at once, which there probably will be.”

“Well, we’ve only seen the one. What did you have in mind?” Cyial asked.

Varhi hummed in thought, crossing his arms over his torso. “Umm… uh...” It was clear he was at a loss. “Well… they need something that sounds distinct enough… Err...”

“That thing last night was herding us along the path as we ran from it and it has insane power with those vine whip things.” Nayleen commented.

Sairek replayed what she just said in his mind. “...How about we call it a ‘Herder’ then?” He suggested.

“Hmm, ‘Herder’, huh?” Varhi said out loud. “There’s another one of that type that’s kind of similar, but it’s more poisonous. It has a red spotted cap instead of the usual brown one. Less powerful in strength but just as large and still no pushover, those spores it releases are nasty.”

“Brown Herder and Red Herder, then?” Cyial asked.

“Sure. That’ll help keep it simple, especially if there’s any more variants with different colors of them around.” Varhi nodded. “Then there’s the last one I’ve seen. It’s a lot smaller, about… this tall.” Varhi gestured, flattening his right hand in the air to be about level with his chest. “They look a lot like any bush mostly stripped of its leaves, which a lot of this forest has. So just look around you, but it has mushrooms growing on the side. It moves a lot faster than the others, spits spores at you and can also run through the brush practically unhindered. It likes to camouflage itself, lying in wait. They’re the ones I’m really concerned about and what I want Cyial in the front to primarily look out for. They’re very springy in their steps and—”

“Spriggan.” Cyial said.

“Huh?”

“We’ll call them Spriggans.” He repeated.

Varhi cocked his head to the side. “Don’t those like… already exist?”

“Yes... well, no. Not really. They’re a fairytale monster.” Cyial explained.

“Oh. Hm. I guess it sort of fits. I’ve got no other idea on what to call them. So, with the power invested in me, I now announce that 'Spriggans' are now real and are totally redefined as something else. Spriggan it is.” He said, clapping both of his hands together. “Brown Herder, Red Herder and Spriggan. Got that, guys?”

“Yes.” The trio chanted together in near unison.

“And you all remember the marching order?” Varhi asked.

“Yes!” The trio chanted together again, this time in more sync.

“Then away we go... And Cyial, if something does pop up to attack us all of a sudden, I want you to default to backing up to the other two behind us unless I specifically say otherwise, alright?” Varhi said. "Unless we're terrible out numbered, I can handle myself for a bit."

“O-Okay.”

Varhi began marching off and Cyial followed behind him whilst reaching for his book in his robes and hugging it close to his chest. Nayleen got her daggers out into both of her hands. They walked mostly in pairs, with Varhi and Cyial no more than five feet apart, then a twenty foot gap between them, and Nayleen and Sairek together in a similar fashion. Varhi did a quick glance back behind them to inspect if they were doing what he told them. Satisfied that they were, he turned his head back around looking forwards.

They walked mostly in silence for several minutes, the occasional crunch of a leaf or branch under one of their feet, but for the most part, the forest was eerily silent, save for the wind now and then which gusted through.

“So… uh…” Sairek said in a hushed voice. “You and Varhi seem to get along really well, don’t you?”

“You don’t like him?” Nayleen asked him back.

“D-Do I really come off like that…? Cyial asked me the same thing last night...” Sairek responded with a frown. “I think he’s alright. He’s… harsh to me, but I don’t think it’s misplaced. I think he has our best interest in mind and I feel he’s just being genuine about it.”

“I’m glad you’re thinking like that.”

“You felt the same way, didn’t you? But you still went with me.”

“Well, I guess, but not as strongly. Granted, we did not know there were giant killer mushrooms here, but at the same time, I think you should still have the freedom to make your own decisions. Even if they can be a bit dumb at times. You went with me after all. It wouldn’t be fair to not afford you the same luxury.”

“Heh. Thanks...” Sairek grinned. “So…?”

“So, what?”

“You didn’t answer my first question.”

“O-Oh.” She let out. Sairek glanced behind him to look at her and he swore he saw the faintest of blushes on her for the first time.

“C’mon, you tease me all the time. It wouldn’t be fair to not afford me the same luxury, remember?” He smirked.

“I would shove you right now if we weren’t trying to be discreet with this little talk.” She responded dryly. With a deep inhale and exhale, she took a few seconds to choose her words carefully. “I… I think I am totally crushing on him.” She said, but it was pretty quick. "There. I said it."

“Yeah? Why?” Sairek asked in a ‘tell me more’ tone.

“I—I don’t know…!” She exasperated, a bit flustered. “He's uh, pretty cool. He’s pretty funny. He does what he wants, but in an… adventurous, free-spirit kind of way. He’s not a delinquent about it like how Balgira thought he was above everything and could treat Cyial however he wanted, you know? And I think he comes off as pretty genuine and down-to-earth.”

"And...?"

"...Okay, fine. And I find him cute. Really cute. He's good looking."

“Haha, I can see all of those things, yeah.” Sairek agreed. “All of those things kind of remind me of you, too.”

“Oh really?” Nayleen asked, then blinked. “Wait, you think I’m cute?”

“Th-That’s not what I... I just meant—”

“...So you think I’m ugly, then.” Nayleen said in a tone that was clearly a threat, albeit a playful one.

Sairek wasn’t sure if he stumbled on a rock, or a root, or his legs just failed him for half a second. Either way, he stumbled. “N-No…!” He shook his head and moved a little further away from her in his pace, looking back at her again. “I just meant… I just meant that I think you should go for it… if you feel that way. Maybe give it a little more time though, of course… see if he feels that way about you and get to know each other a bit better than just a day. But… otherwise, yeah. Go for it.”

Nayleen sighed, but smiled, moving closer and ruffling Sairek’s hair a little. “Thanks, Sai. I had forgotten my own advice to myself and you just gave it to me, even if it was probably by accident.” She said. “He’s still kind-hearted and even though I think he believes he’s better off alone because he doesn’t want to involve other people with what he does, I think he could really use a friend or three that’s not just Jimmy.”

“I think you’re right about that.” Sairek agreed with a nod, glad that the tension on him was released.

Nayleen then leaned in a little to whisper closely to his ear. “By the way... I think you and Cyial are a good match, too~”

Sairek spluttered a soft choking sound. “W-We—”

“Oh come on...! I see how you look at him and I see how he looks at you. You two clearly have some chemistry going on and care for each other on a level deeper than friendship. I don’t know what happened when I was locked up and it might be a bit weird for two boys, let alone a human and a demon, one who’s royalty and one who’s just a commoner to love each other... but meh. Do whatever your heart wants. That’s what I do after all. Who’s to tell you who or what you can’t love?”

“I... I know… but society would frown on it so much… if any of that was made public… well… I don’t know what would happen. It would start something for sure... something bad.” Sairek muttered. “I’m supposed to pick a girl, there’s supposed to be another heir after me… what happens if I just... refused to do any of that? Would anyone in my country understand, or would they all lose faith and riot?”

“Your relationship with him may not even last that long. You never know. If it does though, well, you two will face and deal with those challenges when you get to them, I’m sure of it. You never know, it might be the start of a whole different world view. Besides, Cyial was born on the Overworld, so it’s not that bad.”

“He is an incubus though… People are going to assume a lot of things from that for no other reason than just what he is...”

“From ignorance of course.”

“Yes…”

“You’ll just have to make them less ignorant and prove them wrong, then. Like I said, there will be lots of challenges, but I’m sure you two can do it.”

“Heh… thanks. Again.”

“Anyway… about Varhi…”

“Yes?”

“Um…”

“Come on, out with it. You know I won’t judge you, Nayleen.”

“He’s kind of cute when he’s not wearing any of that armor, isn’t he?” She grinned.

“What–!? Oh, Lands…” Sairek groaned.

“What? He’s clearly got some muscle~” She teased, gently nudging Sairek with her elbow. “Maybe if you keep training with Fuyiki’s regime, you’ll get like that one day, hmm? I bet Cyial would like that~”

“P-Pass. I don’t care about getting that built. Just healthy where I don’t get tired quickly to where it impedes what I need to do is good enough for me. Besides, my staff isn’t nearly as heavy as that sword probably is. I don’t know how he can even swing something like that around...”

“Guess we’ll find out soon~”

"C-C'mon, we don't want to fight the monsters here, y'know..."

"I didn't even get to see him throw the pot lid last time...!"

"You're so irredeemable..."



While Sairek and Nayleen were discreetly talking amongst themselves, Varhi and Cyial had fallen into their own little private conversation shortly after the other two had begun talking. Cyial, with his better hearing than a human, had been listening in for the first part. Resisting a snort from Nayleen practically singing praises about Varhi, he moved slightly closer to the other boy. “Why do you do this?” He asked him in a near whisper.

“Do… what?” Varhi blinked, looking back at him, matching his tone.

“The whole… mercenary thing.” Cyial reiterated. “Jimmy never went into much detail, only dropped little tidbits on why.”

Varhi looked back ahead of him, silent for a good moment. “I don’t remember much about my past, even now. I can only just remember little scraps here and there. I know I had a mother, a father and I was an only child. I know we lived relatively fine—upper middle class, I think. Not rich per se, but well off enough. They could afford to give me school; and an education… but… that’s about all I remember. I don’t remember where I lived, or if I even lived in Kior. I just assume that must be where I lived, because that’s where Jimmy found me.” Cyial waited as he paused again. Varhi turned around to glance back behind him. “Do you remember being born? Your birth?”

Cyial frowned and shook his head.

“What is your oldest memory that you can recall with relative clarity, then?” Varhi asked.

Cyial’s frown deepened, this time in thought. “I… When… When Father Abbot brought me to the monastery in Lamen for the first time…” He spoke slowly, concentrating hard and then nodded in reassurance. “I remember holding his hand as he brought me to the front doors… I don’t really remember much before then. I was really young, maybe two or three... well, as best as he and I can guess anyway. Everything before that is pretty blank or fuzzy. I don’t remember my parents or any family at all.”

“But see, you recall that those moments before then exist and that they happened, but despite that, you can’t recall them at all, right?” Varhi asked for clarification.

“That’s right.” Cyial nodded.

“It’s exactly like that for me—except only one year ago.” Varhi explained.

“But… that’s…” Cyial frowned.

“Weird, right?” Varhi smiled slightly. Cyial nodded. Varhi then turned to look back ahead of him. “And... very abnormal. I don’t know how it is with a demon like you, but for us humans at least, we’re usually not cognizant of our very existence at very early ages. Even at around the time of your first memory, do you recall being able to remember much before then, aside from general knowledge? Did you remember anything before arriving at the gates… or did it suddenly feel like you just… came to be?”

“...Like I just came to be.” Cyial answered. “Kind of like that sudden rush of consciousness when you wake up in bed from a dream. Or... even from a deep day dream.”

“That’s what it was like for me about a year ago… but even then, I was still very much out of it.” Varhi explained. “In fact… I still sort of am. I am getting better but… I just felt... felt so empty inside, until only more recently when I became a mercenary. I don’t know why… I just… couldn’t feel or care about anything. I couldn’t get angry. I couldn’t get sad. I couldn’t get happy. I couldn’t care about anything.
“That was until one day Jimmy showed me the sight of a sunrise on the ocean. Something… sparked in me then. I felt something then. Finally. It was faint, but I knew even back then that at that moment, I was feeling something, possibly even for the first time.
“I kind of became obsessed with seeing a sight like that again, trying to regain that—that emotion. It didn’t even take me two nights to wander off on my own to try and find another sunrise again. I think I waited hours on top of the highest hill I could find, just waiting for the sun to rise. Jimmy got pretty worried wondering where I had gone and upset when he finally found me.” Varhi chuckled. “I never did get to feel that emotion again like I had felt the first time, but I watched many other sunrises after that. I finally recognized after a while that the emotion I was feeling was... yearning.”

“...But, you don’t know what you are yearning for, do you?” Cyial asked.

“I do.”

“...You do? What is it then?”

“A purpose. There must be some reason that I exist. I… just don’t know what that is, yet.” Varhi chuckled. “Mercenary work is good for searching. I get to go a bunch of places all over the world, meet a bunch of different people... and besides, I’m pretty damn good at it, apparently.
“Ever since that sunrise and I started this work, my mental state has improved... but I haven't felt anything again yet. I still have this hole in me that I need to fill... but, I yearn to find out why that is.”

“That’s… admirable of you.” Cyial said with genuine sincerity. “I’m kind of envious in a way.” Varhi looked back at him with a puzzled look. “Ah no, sorry… I didn’t mean that I wish’d that…”

“Nah, it’s okay. I get it.” Varhi waved his hand dismissively and turned back around. “Why are you on a journey now, though?”

“I just want to be with Sairek. He’s…” Cyial began, pausing, trying to articulate his words properly. “I care a lot—” He paused again, frowning. What words could he use to describe it?

“He’s your world, yeah.” Varhi smiled. “Normally I hate royalty, but that’s because they all end up being corrupt, selfish bastards. He came to help me though, just because Jimmy asked him to. Well, with other reasons too, I guess, but regardless...”

“You were one of the first things on the forefront of his mind when he decided he wanted to go.” Cyial clarified. “I believe he said ‘If someone is in deep trouble and I have a chance, even if it’s slim to help them, then I have to try’... or something close like that.”

“Yeah, exactly. He makes mistakes obviously, but I can tell he’s got a heart of gold. He cares about people and not just those closest to him. He genuinely cares about people. If he keeps with that type of vindication, then he will be a beloved King.” Varhi said, then sighed. “So... I better not screw this up. It’s about more than my survival and five-thousand seru now.”

“He’s been worried that you hate him.” Cyial admitted.

“What–? No…! I’m just worried…! He has a heart of gold, but it clearly gets him into situations he has no right to be in...!” Varhi exasperated. “It’s just not something you can do without accepting the risks and the possible terrible outcomes. I’m quite flattered, believe me I am, but I’m not worth the risk of entering a dangerous place while tresspassing on Masirean soil...! Even I probably wouldn’t do something this insane.”

Cyial blinked. “Yes you would.”

Varhi rolled his eyes. “Okay, no sane person would, and neither would I still—unless the price was right.

Cyial chuckled. “Nayleen probably would, too. Actually, she already did I guess, for Sairek.”

“Oh brother. What happened?”

“She uh, ‘kidnapped’ Sairek out of the castle the first time, apparently. I still kind of don’t understand why. It was before they both met me, but that wasn’t too long after. A few days, I think.”

“Wait, so the Prince is an escapee?” Varhi blinked.

“Well, no. Sairek's father made a contract with him and apparently Sairek managed to complete the contract, on a technicality, ensuring he was allowed to leave... Or something to that effect from what I understand it. Neither of them have told me the specific details.”

“Huh. She may be a girl, but she has balls.” Varhi mused. Cyial’s face contorted into a slight puzzled expression at Varhi’s word of choice.

“Do you like her? You two seem to get along pretty well.” He asked him.

“I like all of you guys. I, uh… definitely like her though. She cooks well.”

Cyial cracked a grin. “That's the only reason?”

“She’s perceptive and seems to know what she’s doing better. Ah, no offense.” Cyial shook his head in dismissal at the comment. “And… well—wait...” He turned around to face Cyial, blinking several times. “...Is she interested in me..? Are you asking my opinion of her because she is interested in me?

Cyial shrugged. Varhi was perceptive indeed, but he didn't want to let on too much. “Well I never asked her outright, but I think may be. So I’m just asking you directly. She was eying you a lot when you were... uh... 'going for a shower', let's say.”

“Ohh, uuuhhhhh…” Varhi for once, looked unconfident even as he turned back around, marching and looking forward. “I don’t know. I’ve never really… thought or experienced anything like that before. At least from my short span of memory. I… don’t think anyone has even felt that way before about me. Huh. Awkward...” He soon shook his head briefly to clear it. “I don’t know. Would it even matter? It’s not like I stay in one place. Sorry, but even after we get out of this place, if we even can, I don’t exactly plan to stick around with you guys like you two have with the Prince. I’ve got places to be, places to go; you know how it is.”

“She’s not Cearestian like Sairek and I. She’s from Kior. I told you she trespassed, remember?” Cyial reminded him.

“Oh… I was planning to go there after this job was done. Well—after I got five-thousand seru, anyway...” Varhi muttered, rubbing the back of his head, before he bitterly added: "Doubt that's gonna happen now."

“Although, I guess she doesn’t live in the city.” Cyial rectified with a small frown. “She lives more close to the border with Ceareste. We were actually going to her house before we decided to stop and come here. Which means, yeah, we were going to Kior, too. Not the capital though, but her house is on the way, more or less.”

“Hmm… I feel like you are trying to persuade me into something here.” Varhi replied.

“Just telling you some facts.” Cyial said.

“You’re a coy one, aren’t you.” Varhi stated.

“Haah… I guess Nayleen did say I have changed recently. I guess she’s right. I was a lot more shut-in when I first met both of them, trying to hide my nature and everything.”

“Sairek caused that?”

“No, I think it was Nayleen... For Sairek and I both, actually.” Cyial laughed a little. “Sairek made me feel more at ease with what I am, but I think it was Nayleen that made me more confident. She’s like the sun. A lot of positive energy just comes out of her and if anyone did try to do anything or talk bad about Sairek or I, she wouldn’t be afraid to give them what for. She already has before.”

“She already told me about that.”

Cyial smiled. “See? There you go.”

Varhi was silent for a minute, thinking. “Well, one step at a time. We still need to get out of here, first, but uh…” He paused. “I’ll… think about it afterward… I guess?”

Cyial cracked a smile in amusement. “Right...”

Varhi moved to look slightly to his left, spying the large oak tree he’s passed a few times now. He pointed at it and called out louder so Sairek and Nayleen at back could hear. “This means we’re getting pretty close. Prepare yourselves for anything.”

“Kay.” Nayleen called back.

Varhi led them forward for a couple minutes more, when Cyial suddenly grasped his right shoulder hard. “Stop.” He ordered, his voice tense.

Varhi raised his left hand up and held it back, palm up, signalling the two behind him to halt. “Where?” He asked, voice calm.

Varhi watched as Cyial slowly scanned his eyes around in a general direction, northwest, he believed, so he turned to look there. “I see it, there.” Cyial said, pointing a finger in front of Varhi, who followed the direction of it. “Spriggan…?”

Varhi narrowed his eyes slightly and took a single step closer. He hated these things. Even when it was being pointed out to him, he couldn’t notice right away, but the mushrooms were usually a dead giveaway if they weren't blocked by all the trees and brush.

“I see it—I think.” He muttered. It was standing still, unsurprisingly, keeping itself hidden. He motioned back behind him with his finger for the other two to approach without leaving his gaze, which they did.

“What is it?” Sairek asked.

“Over there, it’s a Spriggan. It’s hard as heck to see. Looks like a regular bush, but it has those small little orange mushrooms attached to it over there. See?” Varhi said, and squinted his eyes harder. “That might actually be the same bastard that attacked me earlier. It was hiding around this side of the forest a few days ago. Gave me a good sudden slap in the face. Didn’t know they existed until then. After slapping me, it tried spitting at me and then ran off and disappeared. I was too hurt and exhausted to give chase. Doubt I could have caught it even if I tried, too much brush.”

“Want me to shoot at it back?” Nayleen asked.

“I'm not sure it would care much for an arrow.” Varhi mused thoughtfully, reaching for his sword and slowly pulling it out—just in case.

“What about an arrow that’s on fire?” Nayleen asked.

“Wouldn’t that burn the whole forest down?” Varhi asked.

“Not with this spell. It’s fire, but it doesn’t work like that.” Sairek said. “I can stop it from putting everything else on fire if I need to. Kind of like electricity, I can just have it sort of ground out on everything else.”

“Well shit, go for it then. Would love to see it try to hide away when its ass is lit.” Varhi smirked.

Nayleen sheathed her daggers and reached for the bow and readied the arrow, notching it and pulling it back. Sairek lifted up a finger, a small glow of energy reaching out from his index finger and he touched the tip of the arrow and stepped back. Slowly, an orange glow moved, growing from the tip to covering the head of the arrow until glowing with visible, albeit faint amber light.

“Oooh, you want to use this one? You’re nasty. You know, I still love that this works.” Nayleen smirked.

“Works on a lot of things. Could even work with Varhi’s sword, probably.” Sairek answered. "Thank Fuyiki for teaching me this trick, by the way."

“Seriously? That’s awesome. And could actually be useful.” Varhi blinked.

“Well, with this spell, it could have some consequences.” Sairek shrugged, "Well, it works okay if I use it on my staff, so you should be able to handle it, as long as your sword is durable enough."

“Here it goes.” Nayleen warned them, then released the arrow. She aimed just slightly left to the mushrooms, since it looked like the body of the Spriggan was just left of where they were attached. The arrow sailed past a few leaves and brushes, before sinking in. Despite looking like she just shot a simple bush, it had flinched at the impact of the arrow.

Sairek lifted his index finger that he had used to infuse the arrow. “Vulkenhai.” He chanted in a tone that was a statement with purpose and moved his fingers to close in a clenched fist.

Varhi blinked as there was a bright orange glow from where the arrow had landed and then a sudden small implosion of fire and force. There was a loud hissing screech that came from the Spriggan as it was abruptly bombed out of nowhere. When the light faded, Varhi watched as a good chunk of the Spriggan was missing, possibly burned to ash or had just exploded to pieces. The Spriggan was flailing through the brush, the rest of it currently on fire.

“Blimey!” Varhi blinked. “Oh shit, it’s coming this way, back up, you three.”

The trio quickly moved with haste on the path in the direction where they came, getting a good forty feet or so away. Varhi readied his sword while the Spriggan approached, tumbling and flailing thin limbs through the brushes as it squealed. However, it soon just collapsed before it actually reached Varhi, about twenty feet away.
Regardless, of it being seemingly dead, he still watched. After all, these things could abruptly stop moving mid-step to camouflage themselves. At least until it suddenly exploded in a plume of a yellow-green cloud above it, most likely spores, signalling that it was in fact, dead.

“Damn. It does that too when it dies, eh? That’s gonna cause problems in a couple of days. Going to spread the infection even more closer to the camp.” Varhi grumbled.

“...I guess I’m not getting that arrow back.” Nayleen stated dryly as the trio moved their way back towards Varhi.

“Hey Sairek, do you think you could spray that area with water?” Varhi asked.

“R-Right. Guess that’s worth a shot.” Sairek said, positioning and aiming his staff. “Waert.”

A steady plume of water released from Sairek’s staff and he moved it in such a way that he basically hosed the cloud of spores with his magic. It didn’t get rid of them fully, but it did dissipate some and washed whatever spores were coming back onto the ground away, making it hard for the spores to find purchase onto any of the nearby surface to grow and spread effectively... hopefully.

“Hmm. Not great. Guess that will just have to do, though.” Varhi frowned. “Come on, let’s keep going, and good work, guys. Maybe I won’t have to do most of the work after all. Would definitely make this a lot easier.”

They moved back into position, which then Sairek released a sigh, feeling a little more confident at their synergetic teamwork with each other.

“If we’re careful and take it slowly, maybe we can deal with this after all…” Sairek breathed, hopeful.






Monday, November 23, 2020

Chapter 32: Varhi







“Do you think we’re far enough in yet…?” Sairek asked both of his companions as they continued to move up the mountain trail.

“Why are you so insistent on changing out as soon as possible?” Nayleen questioned him. “It will be harder to climb this with those heavy clothes of yours.”

“It can’t be that much further more, we’ve been doing this for nearly two or three hours now.” Sairek argued. “Besides, if there is danger out here then I rather have my equipment on. I’m basically unarmed like this. Also I can finally ditch this blasted pack. It’s doing a number on my back.”

“Fine… go and change over there or something, I guess.” Nayleen motioned her hand in a shooing gesture at him and to a rocky outcrop that was to his right. “Make sure you don’t accidentally trip and slide down or something.”

“Come on, I’m not that hopeless.” Sairek sighed. He moved himself where Nayleen had gestured and began to strip himself down out of Jimmy’s clothes that he had been loaned. He stashed the clothes and the pack where he changed and stepped back out into his regular attire. “Feels good to be back to normal… and now you can stop calling me ‘Sam’ finally.” He added, glaring at Nayleen.

“Guys? I think we’re here.” Cyial called out to them, having moved on a bit ahead.

Sairek and Nayleen were about to quibble at each other as was their usual habit, Cyial’s voice however had disarmed both of them and they quickened their pace to catch up to him. The three of them were greeted with a vast view of a large forest that looked like it was surrounded by a ring of mountains; a couple of streams which ran through them and a few large rocky spires and outcrops dotted the green landscape.

“Wow, it’s beautiful.” Sairek gasped and he looked around more and eventually looked down. “That’s a steep drop though. Looks like somebody had already put a rope down.”

Nayleen knelt down to examine the rope, pulling it back up. “It doesn’t seem to extend down all the way. If we want back up, we’re going to have to use our own. Sairek, could you?”

“I got it.” He nodded, then paused. “How much?”

“Each one is twenty feet…" Nayleen began, looking back down, judging the distance. "...so two of them tied together should do the trick. We’ll tie it to the same tree as this one. If it worked for someone else it should work for us.” Nayleen said. "Looks like this rope has been here for a while though. Looks a bit weathered. I don't trust using it."

Sairek did just that, holding the jewel with his left hand and closing his eyes. Two separate bundles of rope formed in front of him as well as a flask of bottled ethereal. Sairek soon winced and stumbled as the pearly white of the Ceareste jewel began to change color, dimming down slightly to a bright yellow. “I knew that was going to happen soon…” He muttered.

“Are you alright?” Nayleen asked him, picking up the flask for him.

“Once I get some of that I will be.” He said, taking the flask into his hands as Nayleen handed it over to him. “Maybe we over packed after all… this thing is heavy and taking its toll on me… Maybe we should have left some excess gear back where the ship was.” He said.

“Too late now.” Cyial shrugged. “If we went back down now, it’d be night by the time we got back here a second time even if we hurried.”

Sairek tucked his staff under his arm, gripping the jewel out with his left hand and gently poured the flask as lightly as he could over the jewel with his right hand. He used about a quarter of it. Even though it looked like droplets would spill onto his shirt or over onto his clothes in general, the ethereal seemed to just drizzle unnaturally onto the gem as it absorbed whatever was poured onto it like the jewel was the liquid’s center of gravity. Before long, it was back to it’s usual pearly white again and Sairek sighed in visible relief and put the cork back on the flask again and had it vanish from his hand.

While he had been doing that, Nayleen had moved back to the tree and tied the two ropes together and in the meantime, Cyial had also moved to the tree and took one end of the two ropes to tie one to the tree. They tested it to make sure the knots were sturdy and everything was tied together properly before Nayleen tossed the rope over the cliff and watched as it dipped down.

“I’ll go first, then Cyial, then Sairek.” Nayleen ordered.

“Yes ma’am.” Sairek acknowledged with a nod. “Be careful.”

Nayleen gripped the rope and both Sairek and Cyial looked down as she gently slid herself down it and the face of the cliff. She didn’t take long to reach the bottom. She looked back up at them and gave them a thumbs up.

“Guess it’s my turn, then…” Cyial sighed. He gripped the rope and slid down just like Nayleen had, though at a little bit of a faster pace. He was lighter, smaller and since Nayleen tested the rope first, he knew it would hold. He landed on the pile of rocks and fallen tree debris down below.

“Catch!” Sairek yelled down to them, holding his staff sideways and then letting it drop down from his hand with a little bit of a push so it didn’t bonk down against any of the outstretched rocks from the cliff face on the way down. It was Cyial who held out his hands and despite the distance, managed to catch the staff in both of his hands.

“And now, my turn…” Sairek sighed, crawling over to grip the rope tightly in both of his hands. He was concerned about his weight, at least concerning his clothes and the jewel. “No, stop thinking grim stuff like that. Just do it… It’ll be fine.” He scolded himself. He crawled his feet off the ledge and began to slide down, though much more slowly than the others at first, but picking up speed by the time he passed the knot Nayleen had tied.

He landed on the rubble like the other two and sighed in relief...

...A sigh that was short lived as he felt the ground tremor underneath them and started to give way.

“MOVE!” Nayleen yelled, grabbing both Sairek's right hand and Cyial’s left hand which was free from Sairek's staff, yanking them forwards and she herself diving backwards over a fallen tree trunk. The sound of earth and stone caving in from where they had just been standing rang in Sairek’s ears as they landed on the dirt path past the fallen tree which soon began to move, falling in with the rest of the caving down rubble. After a brief moment, they slowly pushed themselves up and looked behind them, inspecting the damage as the dust cleared.

“What in the Flaming Lands just happened!?” Sairek demanded. The pile of rubble they had used to land on was gone, and now an additional twenty-five feet or so of ditch along with a fifteen to twenty foot gap now stood between them and their rope, along with a couple of fallen trees that had been bent and collapsed onto the cliff face, pushing a couple of other trees over, including the one they had used for their rope. While the tree still technically 'stood', Sairek wasn't sure the rope would be able to even support their weight anymore even if they could somehow reach it.

“There must have been a cave underneath. All of those rocks that fell over on top of it, possibly for years, plus all of our weight combined must have been enough to cause it to collapse.” Nayleen answered.

“Wonderful… so now we’re stuck here...!” Sairek groaned.

“Can’t you use magic to bridge the gap?” Nayleen asked.

“If I wasn’t crap at it. It wouldn’t hold our weight. Those boulders I launch may look big and pack a punch but they’re as brittle as they come and shaping the earth to the point of making a bridge is out of the question. Making a single spike out of rock is about the best I can do..." Sairek groaned. "Not exactly the best thing to stand on..."

“Damn… Well, so much for plan A.” Nayleen mused.

“What was plan B, then, exactly…?” Cyial asked.

“Push on through and find another exit, I guess.” Nayleen shrugged.

“...We should have tied three ropes.” Sairek sighed.

“Well obviously in hindsight.” Nayleen rolled her eyes. “How should we have known the stupid rocks would collapse? Don’t blame yourself. Come on, we better get moving before it becomes night. We definitely don’t want to still be here by then.”

She pushed herself up to stand and pulled the two boys to their feet. She gave them both two pats on their backs and turned around, leading the way. Sairek and Cyial followed after her after a quick glance at each other, and Cyial handed Sairek his staff back. They stayed about fifteen feet back in distance from Nayleen as she had ordered them during their climb up, with Sairek on the right and Cyial on the left. Cyial reached into his robe and pulled out his book, hugging it to himself tightly.

“Are you scared…?” Sairek asked him in a whisper so Nayleen couldn’t listen in.

“A bit…” Cyial admitted with a slow nod and his tail slowly curling around his waist as if hugging himself “...but I’ll be okay. I hope I will be, anyway…”

Nayleen led them forwards, following the path and drawing out both of her daggers into her hands as she did so. All three of them were now ready in case something jumped out at them.

“It... It kind of reminds me of the first time…” Cyial mumbled under his breath.

“First time of what?” Sairek whispered back.

“When I began making runs to that cave… the one I met you two in. I was always afraid the first few times, but it turns out the monsters just ignored me… so I guess that’s kind of why I’m not as scared as I probably should be… I think a part of me believes that the monsters will just ignore me.”

Sairek moved his left hand to grab Cyial’s right hand from gripping his book tightly. He gently pulled it away to cup it into his own hand, giving it a reassuring squeeze.

“Thank you, Sairek...” Cyial smiled. “If you’re not careful though, Nayleen might see…”

“I don’t think she’s the type to care, Cyial.”

“She would tease us both about it, though. We’d never heard the end of it.” He said in a hushed tone, cracking a slightly wider smile.

“...This is true… but she teases me all the time already as it is. So it makes no difference to me. Maybe if she targeted you for once, I’d get a breather.” He teased back.

Sairek cracked a smile of his own as Cyial looked at him with a mock expression of hurt. “Hey now, you both better keep me out of whatever trouble you two cook up together… If it weren’t for me, I would say you two were a match.” Cyial teased back, letting go of Sairek’s hand.

“W-What–?” Sairek exclaimed, blushing.

“What? What is it?!” Nayleen demanded, turning around quickly towards them.

“Ah—Err, n-nothing. Sorry.” Sairek stammered awkwardly.

“Sheesh, don’t make me jump like that…!” Nayleen pouted with a shake of her head, turning back around. When she did, Cyial took back Sairek’s hand into his own again as they resumed walking, giving the Prince a sly wink.

“Oh man…” Sairek breathed out, his face still blushing a little. “I guess you are feeling better after all…”

“Thank you.” Cyial chuckled gently.

"...There's no way I and her could ever be a couple anyway..." Sairek muttered even more quietly than he had been speaking before.

"In a way, you two always argue like a couple." Cyial commented with a side long glance. "They do say opposites attract. You two definitely fit that description."

Sairek snorted in amusement. "No, it's still not possible."

"If you insist." Cyial began with a wry smirk and then stammered when Sairek leaned in suddenly and kissed him on the cheek and released his hand. “Wh-Wha–?”

“Cyial?!” Nayleen demanded, spinning around.

“No, nevermind, it’s nothing.” Cyial said in more of a collected tone than Sairek managed to do.

“Ugh… you guys! Come on! You don’t have to freak out about every little thing. You’re both creeping me out now…!”

“Sorry, Nayleen.” Cyial apologized. She turned back around, grumbling and Sairek moved to grab Cyial’s hand who turned to send a glare at Sairek, who was smirking smugly at him.

“You’re right, teasing someone to see their cute reactions is fun. Maybe I’ll start doing it more, too.” Sairek whispered. "Finally, I get to see you be the one blushing for once."

“Are you sure you want to do that…? That’s a battle you are not going to win. Just like our little rough housing. You do blush at the smallest things.” Cyial cautioned him.

“We’ll see about that when this is over.” Sairek challenged.

“Fine, then.” Cyial smirked, releasing Sairek’s hand to pull him closer and he moved his grip up to more firmly take hold of almost the entirety of Sairek’s left arm.

“H-Hey…!” Sairek protested under his breath when Cyial pulled him closer, which caused him to stagger a little, making a bit more noise than he intended..

“See? You’re blushing already.” Cyial mused, sliding his hold on the Prince to move back down back to just their hands again.

“I, I am not…!” Sairek protested, though he could feel the heat rising in his face. "What if Nayleen saw...?"

"I thought she's not the type to care, remember?"

"Th-That's not the point...!"

They both knew why they were giving each other such a hard time. There was nothing mean-spirited at all about their teasing. It was because they were scared. Even through their teasing, they still kept giving each other reassuring squeezes into each other’s gloved hands. However as the minutes passed on and they fell back to being silent between them, they eventually let go of each other to return their hands to themselves.

They walked for nearly thirty-five minutes, when Nayleen suddenly hissed intensely. “Guys…!”

Sairek and Cyial glanced at each other and moved to rush up to Nayleen as quietly as they could, following behind her as she moved to press herself against a tree. They pressed themselves against the same tree as her. Nayleen moved her head to peer around from behind it, Sairek and Cyial again matched her in her movements, peering out from under one another.

All three of them choked on their breaths at nearly the same time. “What in the world is that…?” Nayleen whispered under her breath.

Ahead of them looked to be a giant walking brown mushroom tree… thing. Massive in size, it was probably around a whopping eight feet tall and nearly half that in width. It shambled along, thumping heavily against the dirt path slowly and was currently heading towards their direction, though it did not seem to have spotted them from peeking out beyond the large tree trunk they were all pressed up against.

Fear gripped Sairek. He couldn’t help but just stare at this terrible wonder. However, even though fear was coursing through him, he still forced himself to remain calm. “That—That is not a normal monster, Nayleen… What in the Flaming Lands is something like that doing in Masirean? Even monsters in Ceareste don’t get that… grotesque... Masirean is one of the cleanest countries of the four, too...!”

“Grotesque in more ways than one…” Cyial muttered. “I can sense ethereal from that thing… Most monsters tend to be magical beasts in nature… that thing is… different though…”

“What do you mean…?” Nayleen asked, unable to pull her eyes away to look at him.

“It’s hard to explain, but to put it in perspective, think of how humans and demons are different from each other…” Cyial tried to explain.

“...So that is from the Underworld?” Sairek questioned, confused.

“No, no. It has ethereal inside of it and needs it to function—I think… but try sensing it, and I think you’ll understand… it's like something is 'wrong' with the energy it has.”

“I don’t think I could try to sense that right now even if I tried…” Sairek said through gritted teeth. “It’s coming this way… we need to decide what to do. Quickly.”

“Well we can’t let that thing stand, that’s for sure…” Nayleen started, putting her daggers back into their sheathes quietly and reaching for the bow as she finally managed to pry her eyes away from it to look behind her to Sairek. “It looks all plant-like. Fire should do the trick… Can you make a small flame? I’m gonna light up an arrow and hit it with one.”

Sairek didn’t answer her, only staring forward, eyes widened.

“Saire—”

“NAYLEEN!!” He shouted.

She turned around and hesitated. That slow lumbering walk it had been doing had instead turned into a full on charge towards them. It was still slow by all standards, but the sudden aggression had not been something she had expected considering she only took her eyes off of it not even ten seconds ago.

“Move back!” She hissed. The three of them split off from the tree they'd been using for cover back onto the path and sprinted further towards the way they in came to gain some distance. Nayleen ran three dozen feet as she reached back into her quiver to notch an arrow into the bow, then she spun around, taking a second to adjust her aim and released it.
Her aim was true, although it didn’t take much skill to hit a thing of that size. The arrow sunk in—and went out the other side of the beast. She aimed right for the stem that looked like the neck, a spot she usually aimed at to incapacitate creatures or to stop them dead, if she was not aiming for the head specifically.
It flinched, but kept on stomping its way towards them, as if the arrow had done nothing.

“Okay, arrows don’t work!” Nayleen shouted back to them and turned back around to keep running with the two boys. She slung her bow back around her shoulders and once more reached for her daggers.

This time it was Sairek who turned around, skidding to a stop while Nayleen ran past him. He held his staff out, tilted forwards in front of him and holding his other hand near the head of the staff with an opened gloved hand. He took a couple seconds, concentrating through his fear to conjure the energy around him into something tangible. A rock began to form, floating in between the head of his staff and the palm of his hand. Then he added heat to it, surrounding the rock with the flames, before expanding its mass in size pulling his hand slowly back while he nurtured its growth, creating quite literally a large fireball. He moved his left hand, which held the rock adjacent to his palm almost like he was gripping a levitating bowling ball in his hand. He suddenly threw his arm out as if throwing the flaming boulder physically. “Ethirul–!” He shouted out, sending the final force of will to launch it from his hand to fling it forwards.

The fireball sailed through the air, just about to make impact into the abomination before him. It raised a vine-like tendril up into the air and swung, batting at his conjuration. Sairek was taken aback as his smoldering boulder simply crumpled into pieces mid air. A bit of the tendrils caught on fire from sparks of the flame and bits of flaming rubble landing against it, but the creature shook the limb frantically and the flames more or less petered out in seconds. Sairek took a couple of more steps back, eyes widened in shock. "H-How...?"

“Grr…! What IS this thing–?!” Nayleen seethed angrily. She moved back to position herself next to Sairek. “I know you said your rocks were brittle, but I know they aren’t that easy to just break like that–!”

“Watch out!” Cyial shouted from behind them. Sairek and Nayleen both watched as it raised its left tendril and though the both of them began to move back at Cyial’s exclamation, it still swung, the tendril, which expanded outwards to reach them.
Shenkalin–!” Cyial shouted, spreading his hands out while he still held his book in his right hand. Both Nayleen and Sairek raised their arms in a pathetic attempt to shield themselves from the incoming impact, but were saved as one of Cyial’s shields he conjured appeared in front of Nayleen before the tendril could impact her, smacking one of the shields instead.

“Ahhgh–!” Cyial cried out, stumbling as if he had just been nearly knocked off balance abruptly. He staggered several steps towards his left. The two shields he had summoned between the both of them staggered heavily to the side he was thrown towards and when Sairek and Nayleen both lowered their arms to look, they both were taken aback as the shield that had taken the blow suffered a massive dent into it and was cracked quite considerably.

“How much strength does this thing have–?!” Sairek demanded as he motioned his staff in front of him again, though more centered directly in front of him than before, and this time he placed his palm still outstretched towards the creature instead, wrist against the staff. “Ethirul! Ethirul! ETHIRUL–!!

Although it smacked one oncoming chunk of rock away, it could not stop a volley of moderately sized boulders constantly barraging it and for once, it finally showed a sign of weakness as the creature stumbled backwards while Sairek constantly pelted it in the upper half, though he could only do a series of eight boulders in total before his concentration was exhausted from him and he stumbled weakly in exertion from pushing himself so much so quickly. However, the force of that many boulders at once caused it to fall backwards flat and it lay still. Sairek leaned forward, using his staff to support his weight with both hands as he allowed himself to breathe out and back in with intensity.

It was a short lived reprieve as the creature twitched, then slowly moved to stand back up.

“What the? Are you kidding me–?” Nayleen demanded through clenched teeth.

“Piercing it doesn’t work, slamming it doesn’t work, guess the only thing we got left is cutting it or setting it on fire entirely…” Sairek breathed. “Just what the heck is this thing...?”

“I know I've got daggers but I don’t know if it’ll be too effective against that thing… maybe if I cut it at the stem thing there…  but how am I going to climb it to reach it?” Nayleen growled.

It fully stood up now, though its aggression seemed to be momentarily paused as instead of ‘running’ at them, it was taking a slower walk once more. That didn’t stop it from raising one of it’s tendrils up overhead, swinging it downward towards Sairek.

Cyial, having recovered his footing and positioning appropriately moved his left hand to position a shield again to block the tendrils, however, despite being more prepared on what to expect this time, he still cried out on the impact again and this time he was thrown off of his feet altogether and onto his his back. With the movements of both his hands and the shields being literally tied together, his hands were still impacted by the force of whatever the shields took and it still caused him to be thrown down onto the ground, which meant the shields defending Sairek and Nayleen were now woefully out of position to block another blow.

“Cyial–!” Sairek shouted, but he didn’t get much time to react as another tendril swung towards them to his side again and this time towards on his left rather than overhead.

Instinctively, and the only thing he could realistically do was hold out his staff, gripping it tightly with both hands and brace himself as best as he could in a blocking motion. The tendril hit his staff and being made out of a root from Yggdrasil, it took the impact itself no problem... however, the force of the impact was still strong enough that it knocked him off of his feet and he slammed into Nayleen with his back. It caused both of them to yelp out as they flew a few feet sideways off of the path and into the grass, separating as they both rolled a short distance.

They both groaned, momentarily dazed. Sairek felt something around his leg and suddenly was hauled up by it. He yelled out in surprise, dangling by one leg upside down from one of those vine-like tendrils secured around his ankle and calf, while Nayleen was facing similar trouble, having her waist be wrapped around as she kicked and squirmed, though she was still right side up.

The creature let out a gurgling hiss—a hiss that was soon cut off as some sort of disk of iron that was tossed from the west side of the forest came out from the trees. It aimed for the stem and decapitated it in half fairly cleanly. There was a hiss that came from the creature’s body, which lowered and lowered in pitch as the tendrils suddenly became lax, dropping Sairek and Nayleen back to the ground while the creature crumpled.

“Unmph…!” Sairek let out when he landed flat on his back, wincing and staring upwards, soon wide-eyed as the creature began to fall forward. Desperately, he flexed and shifted the weight of his body to the side and rolled sideways along the ground, until he was out of the way just in time as it slammed down on the ground where both Nayleen and he had collapsed together. He panted hard from the adrenaline, propped up on his left elbow as he stared in disbelief for a moment, fearing that this thing would somehow begin moving again.

Cyial immediately ran up to them. “Are you guys okay?!”

“Y-Yeah…” Sairek panted heavily. He slowly pushed himself back up to his feet. “What the Blazes was that, though…?”

Nayleen pushed herself up too. “That was close… thanks for the save, Cyial, whatever it was that you threw, I guess they cut easily enough after all.”

“Th-That wasn’t me.” Cyial said, shaking his head.

“Huh? Then who–?”


Hoi... hello, there…


A voice from the forest caused them to spin around at the ready, only to see a boy no more than around their age, half dressed in platemail and the other half in leather armor, stumbling out, a fairly sizeable greatsword in his hands being used as a makeshift walking stick, until he moved it to one hand and used his other hand to hold himself up against a tree for support. He was breathing hard, sweat coating his face. “Well damn, you guys came early… Or have I really been here for this long and just lost count of my days…?”

“Are...Are you Varhi?” Sairek asked, lowering his staff back down. The other boy looked so exhausted, there was no way he was a threat even if he wanted to be one.

“Huh…? Well, yeah, that’s me… Bet I'm not what you were expecting... then again... I wasn't expecting a few kids like yourselves either...”

“Yeah, well, we came to get you out of here.” Sairek said.

A look of genuine confusion entered the other boy’s face. “Huh? Don’t be bullshitting me… Weren’t you guys sent here by the request of—”

“Jimmy sent us here to come and find you!” Sairek interjected him before he could finish.

“Jimmy… sent you…?” Varhi creased his eyebrows, then chuckled softly, beginning to laugh. “That old bastard… so you’re not them after all…? Well, now I just feel guilty for just watching you at first…” He wheezed and then fell down to one knee weakly, letting go of his sword and clutching his left side with his now free hand.

Cyial immediately ran over, kneeling down next to him, putting his book on the ground. “What happened to you?”

“...Is—Is that a rhetorical question...?” Varhi asked dryly, despite his condition.

“Well I’d like to know what is exactly wrong with you so we can help. I—I specialize in medicine.” Cyial clarified, helping him back up to his feet.

Varhi managed to let out a snort. “What’s wrong with me…? Might be easier to list the things that are right with me, but let’s see…
“I’ve been here for nearly a week… by myself… fighting those things and other more things which are equally as horrifying or even arguably worse… I ran out of real food days ago… my only diet lately has been worms and a handful of berries of questionable origin… and I’ve been beaten and tossed around to a bloody pulp by those things… and I’m sure that green foggy crap I’ve been breathing in to keep these bastards back away from my camp hasn’t been exactly healthy, either…”

“...Fog?” Sairek asked.

“...You guys didn’t see the green fog when you guys jumped down here…?” Varhi asked.

The trio turned to look at each other, then shook their heads.

“Oh, that’s not good, then… maybe it’s starting to spread after all…” Varhi coughed. “It was pretty visible when I came here…”

Sairek looked up at the sky. He didn’t see anything abnormal, it looked pretty clear to him. He shook his head though and looked back down to Varhi. “Come on, we can talk about that later. For now, let’s get somewhere a bit more safe.”

Varhi weakly moved his hand and pointed with his thumb back northwards. “My camp is just a couple minutes that way, a bit off the path… it’s close enough from here that I heard you guys yelling, in any case…”

“Shouldn’t we get further away from here?” Nayleen questioned him.

“It’s kept me alive so far… and I’m not sure how far you plan to drag me, um... Miss? But as much as I am loath to admit it, I am fragile goods at this point…” Varhi winced.

“It’s Nayleen.” She corrected him, then pointed at Sairek and Cyial. “The one with the white hair and tail is Cyial, and the other one is Sairek.”

“Got it…” Varhi nodded.

“Sairek, you and I carry him. Nayleen, can you carry Sairek's staff and Varhi’s sword?” Cyial asked.

“Hey, don’t forget my pot lid…” Varhi interjected.

“Your… Your what?” Sairek asked.

“My pot lid… the thing that I threw to save you guys?” Varhi frowned.

“...A pot lid.” Sairek repeated, studying him carefully.

Stop giving me that look…!” Varhi warned. “Why does everyone judge me for using a pot lid as a weapon–?”

“But... But it’s, it’s a pot lid…!”

“When I get better, how about I throw it at your face and you can tell me first-hand if it hurts or not...?”

“That’s... not necessary.” Sairek backed up a little.

Good. Glad we understand each other...” Varhi grumbled, then forced a gentle smile. “Now carry me back to my camp, please—if you don’t mind...”

“Sweet Lands… Jimmy wasn't kidding about you."

“Okay fine, I’ll go search for your… pot lid.” Nayleen sighed, shaking her head as she walked to the forest on the side of the path near the corpse. While she did that, Cyial grabbed his book and put it back into his robe. He moved to help Varhi stand back up with one arm and Sairek moved to position himself under the boy's other arm to help him in the same fashion. They began to slowly walk back in the direction Varhi told them. He was breathing hard, sweat on his face the entire time, practically limp, though he still did use his legs to walk so the other two did not have to literally drag him, though Sairek and Cyial were still holding up most of his weight.

“I have to admit, when Jimmy was talking about a mercenary, I was not expecting someone around our age...” Sairek said.

“Y-Yeah… I get that a lot... “ Varhi grunted. “There’s… an age restriction law to become a proper knight in Masir... and it’s not like you can immediately become a knight just by applying, either… but there’s technically no age restriction or any regimen for mercenary work… it’s a pretty dumb loop hole... but it benefits me, so whatever…”

“Yeah, you seem to be doing great right now.” Sairek drawled.

Despite his condition, Varhi mustered the strength to lift his head and send him a glare. “You saw what I’m up against here… if you think that’s the only one, you’re in for a very, very nasty surprise… those things are the least worrying thing that’s here… at least, in my humble opinion anyway...”

“...There’s worse...?”

Much worse… not a day has gone by where I’ve slept in peace, imagining the multitude of ways I am probably going to die in. Ironically, I have to admit, starving wasn’t one of them… seems so… mundane now in comparison...” Varhi grumbled, then pointed with his left hand, which was Sairek’s side. “Turn here… yeah, perfect...”

Cyial and Sairek moved to turn him, carefully pushing themselves through a small bit of vegetation with the other lad on their shoulders until they came across a clearing where a well-used campfire and a tent were set up. Sairek examined the ground to see the dirt had been dug up—a lot. “What happened here?”

“Didn’t I tell you…? I’ve been starving to death and it rained fairly recently…” Varhi grumbled.

“...So?”

“So I’ve been digging up and eating worms… What else is there to eat here…?” Varhi explained and scrunched his face up in frustration.

“B-But--!” Sairek stammered out, his stomach doing flip flops as he looked at Varhi in horror. “There’s honestly nothing else you could have foraged around here?” He protested. There were a lot of dug up holes...

“If I could, do you think I would be eating fucking damn worms?" Varhi cursed. "Blimey, just how new at this are you...?”

“...No berries, no animals?”

“There was one berry bush I found a day or two ago. Didn’t sate me for long… as for animals, haven’t you noticed yet...?” Varhi asked.

“...Noticed what?” Sairek asked.

“There’s none of them. Not even in the distance. Not a bird, not a squirrel… nothing. Literally the only animals I’ve found have been worms... There haven’t even been any fish in the water... everything has turned tail and fled… and justifiably so. There is some serious 'bad shit' happening in this forest…” Varhi sighed as Sairek and Cyial moved to lay him down to sit, causing Varhi to groan out in pain and moving to clutch his left side. “Hell, even the worms are few in number… that’s why there’s so many little burrows I’ve made… It’s not because I’ve eaten that many—it’s because I can hardly find any...”

“...Sairek, can you get things to make him more comfortable? I’m going to work to remove his armor for him in the meantime. Obviously something is wounded underneath it since he keeps gripping his side.” Cyial requested as he eyed their new companion.

“Sure, one second.” Sairek answered, moving his left hand to pinch his jewel again as he closed his eyes.

Varhi eyed the jewel curiously, then widened his eyes a little. “...Wait a second, I knew that looked familiar… and ‘Sairek’... You are the Prince of Ceareste, aren’t you?” He asked, as Cyial worked to lift Varhi's cape up off of his head and took off his helmet visor.

“I am.” Sairek answered, opening his eyes to look at him.

“What the fuck is the Prince doing here?” Varhi demanded. “You said Jimmy asked you guys to come…?”

Sairek and Cyial both blinked at his free use of language. “Yes, that’s what happened. Well... ‘begged us’ would probably be more appropriate. So I... decided to come. We snuck in from the west side and came in through the north on his ship.” Sairek answered.

“You… snuck in…?!

“Yes?”

Varhi began to chuckle, then clutched his side and stomach with both of his hands as he began to full on laugh. “Ow, that hurts…” He giggled through his wincing as his laughter calmed down. “Ain’t this just perfect, then…”

“I must have missed the punchline.” Sairek commented dryly. Through the distractions while talking to Varhi, he finally found the items he was looking for, conjuring a blanket which he lay on the ground and a sleeping bag on top of that to boot. “Look, Jimmy told me already how you hate royalty. I get it. Even I hate royalty and how it functions. I suppose I have my own reasons to be biased, but really, I’m honestly nothing special. I’d rather you look at me as a person first and a Prince second, if you don’t mind.” Sairek moved to sit down to Varhi’s right side, bringing his knees up to himself and his arms wrapped around them as he sat in front of the unlit fire. “The only part of my position that matters right now is if I get found out that I’ve snuck in here.”

“That’s not quite true…” Varhi said.

“What makes you say that?”

“Well for one, if we die here, there is going to be a major shit storm.” Varhi answered.

“I don’t plan to have anyone die here.”

“I didn’t plan to die either...! I planned to come in, take a look at the village, then get back out in the same day... Now take a nice, hard, long look at me...!” Varhi retorted cynically, raising his arms—barely, as Cyial began to remove the leather armor off of his upper body. Sairek watched and then visibly grimaced at what he saw. The other boy’s body was covered in bruises everywhere. Actually, he wondered how he had even managed to still be standing, let alone had saved them. Still, he was surprised at how muscled a boy who looked to be about his age was. He was clearly fit and trained his body seriously. He wasn’t ripped, but there seemed to be a balance to his body and his shoulders were broad, probably from swinging that sword of his around often, no doubt. However, apparently his lack of food was starting to do him in. He was becoming quite thin...

Varhi looked down at himself briefly, before looking back up to Sairek, slowly dropped his arms back down. “Seriously, do you think I didn’t come here without the same confidence in thinking everything will turn out alright...? That illusion I had was destroyed damn quickly within my first few hours here. I wonder how long it will take you…” He murmured. The way he said it though made it a statement though, not a curiosity or a question.

“Do you think I came here not expecting the worst…?” Sairek retorted back through clenched teeth. “I said I don’t plan to have anyone die. That is what is going to happen.”

Varhi looked at him appraisingly for a moment, then he leaned himself forward, lowering his head slightly but still keeping his gaze on Sairek with violet eyes that looked directly into his emerald ones. He spoke, his voice low and tense. “The terrifying truth about reality 'Sairek', is that a situation can always become more terrible than you can imagine...”

Sairek felt his skin become covered in goosebumps at that.

Varhi continued. “Every job I accept, I am prepared with the fact I might die. Even on the low risk jobs. It’s something you just have to accept in this line of work... The fact you plan for nobody to die…? It only tells me that you are not ready for this at all... and that makes me very concerned... You're 'still green', as we say in this line of work. It's fine to be green, everyone starts somewhere... but you are in way over your head...”

Sairek clenched his teeth and looked away from Varhi’s gaze. He immediately began refuting such an accusation in his mind, but the other boy had also sown seeds of doubt in his head.

Cyial glanced at Sairek and frowned. With a sigh, he moved to disarm the situation, lest Sairek look even more obviously uncomfortable. “Well, I can help most of these wounds easily, at least…” he began, digging into his robe and pulling out his own full flask of ethereal “Drink this. It’s bitter, but I don’t think it should taste nearly as bad as worms do.” He said, popping the cork off open for him and handing the flask to Varhi

Varhi took the flask into his hands and examined it, shrugged and began chugging it all at once. He didn’t stop until the whole thing was drained, where he coughed weakly once. “Ew…” was the only exclamation he let out regarding the taste.

“...I, uh, didn’t expect you to just down the whole thing.” Cyial blinked.

“Why not? Best to just get it over with quickly. Out of most of the shit I’ve had to deal with in the past few days, having to drink medicine that might save my life is far, far down on the list.” Varhi grumbled as he passed the now empty flask back.

Cyial moved to guide him to lay down on the sleeping bag, just as rustling from the bushes came and Nayleen wandered in, carrying the boy’s sword in one hand, pot lid in the other, and Sairek’s staff under her arm. “I’m back. How’s he holding up?”

“Not good, but we can help him. Right now, I think the most important thing he needs is some proper hot food and a lot of rest. Think you can do the honors for the first one?” Cyial asked her.

“Hmm. I’ve kind of noticed in my searching for this thing,” she began, waving the pot lid as she set the sword on the ground near Varhi on his right side, then handed Sairek his staff, “...that there are no animals at all around. Not even birds.”

“She’s a perceptive one. I like her.” Varhi complimented from the ground, rolling his head to look at her. “Nice one. You figured that one out by herself way faster than I did when I came here.” He complimented, lifting his arm up weakly to give her a thumbs up.

“Aw thanks.” Nayleen smiled sweetly at him.

Sairek rolled his eyes at both of them. “Does it really matter, though? You know we have emergency food just in case for that.” Sairek commented to her, pinching his left fingers onto the jewel again.

“Of course. Too bad there’s no way back up, though…” Nayleen responded.

“Ah, I figured something happened and there was a reason you guys weren’t so eager to just climb back up after seeing that thing…” Varhi sighed, laying his head back. “Go on, just lay it on me. What happened...?”

“So you came from this way after all, huh.” Nayleen mused. She sat down, opposite end of Varhi and to Sairek's right. Varhi verified her question with a nod and she continued. “Well, turns out there was a cave under the cliff face. All the rocks and stuff that had fallen over top of it put a lot of pressure on it. With all three of us standing on it together, it was enough weight to cause it collapse. We barely made it to safety. No way to reach the ropes to get back up.”

“For the love of— FIGURES...” Varhi groaned loudly. “This forest seems to be cursed with misery and misfortune. I don’t even believe any of that stuff, but this place has made me reconsider the possibilities...” He sighed. He rolled his head, looking as a bunch of items; or items in sacks and bags anyway, appeared beside Nayleen, thanks to Sairek's handiwork.

“Thanks Sairek. Hold tight Varhi, I’m going to cook you up a real tasty meal.” Nayleen said with a wink to the wounded boy, then turned her head. “Sairek and I can go get some more wood for this fire—”

“I’ll do it.” Cyial interjected, standing up.

Nayleen shrugged uncaringly and moved to stand up. Both she and Cyial moved to the edge of the clearing, looking to salvage sticks. Sairek moved his seated position to shimmy himself closer to Varhi while he waited for his friends to return. He thanked Cyial in his head. The demon probably knew he had a lot of questions on his mind to ask Varhi.

“...How bad is this place, really?” Sairek asked, speaking low to him so the others didn’t overhear just yet as they were walking away.

“I don’t think I’ve even seen the worse this place has to even offer yet and it still gives me nightmares. Literally. I haven’t exactly made it far, either. There’s dozens of those things—and I've already killed dozens more... by myself.” Varhi answered honestly. “...Unfortunately, they seem to actually be increasing in number faster than I've been able to swat them down... and don't think just because I've been able to slay so many by myself that they are easy. They're far from it. They just have a weakness I can exploit, but as you can see, even with that, I still took a miserable beating..."

Sairek gulped.

“Look, I don’t know what other reasons you have for being here. It couldn’t just be because Jimmy asked you. I’m not stupid—”

“The way Jimmy described how the man who returned to Masirean City died… it sounds a lot like how my own mother passed away.” Sairek interrupted him. “I was wondering if there was a possible connection...” He moved his gaze to the sides out from the clearing from the direction they came in from. “...I didn’t think that would involve such monsters, though… not unless what had killed my mother has seriously evolved and adapted over the past decade and a half...”

“Given how fast these things are changing, that might not be an impossibility, but I don’t think this is the same thing...”

“What makes you so sure?” Sairek asked, looking back at him.

“...Like I said, you haven’t even seen the worst. I don't think I have, either but what I have seen so far absolutely horrifies me—and believe me when I say I’m not someone who gets easily spooked…” Varhi growled through clenched teeth, looking away from Sairek back towards the sky.

“...So you think the King of Masirean did this…?” Sairek asked.

“Honestly, no. Or, at least not intentionally anyway if he did…” Varhi answered, grunting as he moved to sit himself back upright. “...but regardless, I think he is hiding something here, whatever that may be. It could be he wants to retrieve that ‘whatever it is’ before somebody finds out. I believe he allowed me to go alone and he emphasized on my ‘going alone’, because he figures I’d be dead by now. He was almost correct. Could still be correct in a day or two… and one of the terrifying things about these monsters is that if you fall prey to them, there won’t be any evidence of ‘you’ left…”

“...What do you mean?” Sairek asked, shivering a little. He was quite uncomfortable about what Varhi was telling him, but curiosity drove him to ask anyway.

Varhi sighed, glancing around as Cyial and Nayleen had returned midway through the conversation and were openly watching him, listening. Rather than speaking in a hushed tone like they had been, he spoke up more so they could hear him clearly. “Some of these things are not just walking mushrooms… some of them are walking mushroom trees and some of them are walking mushroom people. People, who from my experience, are still sentient and are very well aware of what is happening to them, yet unable to control themselves… and of course, Karvadean just happens to be a village full of people that is smack dab in the middle of a green cloud of fog which according to my experience just happens to be one of the main sources that seems to be spawning these blasted things.” He said, looking back into Sairek’s eyes and inhaling a deep breath from his run-on-sentence.
“Call this just an educated guess, but, I am going to assume that the possibility of being forcibly ‘assimilated’ into becoming monsters yourselves while some other manifestation takes control of your body and morphs it beyond recognition was not exactly on your list of possible dangers when you came here, was it. It certainly wasn’t on mine.”

The trio’s faces all fell in horror at the realization as to what he was saying.

“Exactly. So you better start praying we don’t die here… because that is certainly a fate I do not wish to be subject to… no corpse; you just become one of those things. A fucking terrible way to die. Nobody will realize or recognize that you in particular will have gone missing, either, Prince.” Varhi warned, still glaring at Sairek. “You can try to communicate to people, but anything you manage to cry out just comes out as a gargled wail. I’ve already seen a number of them trying to call out for help to me. It... It doesn’t really sound like the word at all but I—I can just tell. The only thing I can do to help them though is just... kill them. Kill the monster that controls them, then kill the actual them still stuck to the monster's corpse to put an end their misery…
“Sometimes cleaving these things in half isn’t even enough to kill them…! Sometimes I have to put the good blade of mine through their horrified faces first...” Varhi finished, moving to look at the unlit campfire, a sudden weariness in his eyes, despite his obvious youth. “...Honestly, in a way, I do wish Jimmy just left me alone to die here, because even with you three, I don’t think we’re going to make it out of this. I will damn well try my best, that’s why I’ve been eating worms to survive. Even when the odds are low, I will not quit because nothing in the world is impossible; but our chances are so incredibly slim... The only way out of here now is forward. Through those... those blasted things.”

There was an uncomfortable long silence. Which was broken by Nayleen tossing her sticks into the fire pit and then sitting down on her rear with a flop and an exasperated huff that passed out from her lips before she spoke. “Well, that’s great news to hear before making and eating a meal. Thanks for that.”

“Oh, you’re most welcome.” Varhi replied sarcastically, breaking his glare from Sairek to roll his eyes at her. “I suppose I should have told you that this place is wonderful, full of unicorns and rainbows. Would have done you much better with preparing you for the reality of the situation we are in.”

Cyial sighed, moving to bend down and more carefully place his sticks into the pit than Nayleen had done tossing them in. “Can we not start this, please?” He begged. “...Also, fire won’t attract these things, will it?” He asked a bit timidly.

“On the contrary, I think fire helps keep them away. Fire was effective on them when I made a torch and used it against one. It also nearly set the forest on fire. So I didn’t do it again. However... that was what I was about to do as a last resort in a few hours...” Varhi replied dryly. “I was planning to take this forest down with me… certainly wasn’t going to have my corpse become one of those things.”

“Then using ‘balinzer’ it is, then…” Sairek grumbled. Then with a pointed finger at the fire and saying the word with more emphasis, he chanted “Balinzer.” A small jet of flame emerged from his finger, sparking the wood in the pit to life. Slowly, it began to grow in strength. At least he could do that without explicitly needing his staff now where before he struggled to just light a candle to life. He mentally thanked Fuyiki in the back of his mind.

“Ah… I already had forgotten that you are a mage too. A Prince and a magic user. Yeah, we're definitely going to get along real well, aren't we?” Varhi grumbled, then glanced at Sairek's appraising look. "I'm saying I don't like mages, if you can't tell."

“...Why?” Sairek inquired.

“Because I use a big sword, duh.” Varhi said with a sidelong glance. “Makes it hard to get close to them when they conjure and throw everything at you from a distance but the kitchen sink. Will be to my benefit here of course, though.”

“...You’ve also had to fight other people?” Sairek asked.

“Of course. I do all kinds of work. From delivering messages, to bounty hunting. This may come as a surprise to nobody, but usually people don’t want to go to jail willingly. So a lot of my jobs are to make them. Mages are the trickiest for me to subdue.”

“Better not visit Ceareste, then.” Sairek cautioned him.

“Too late. Had to deliver a letter there. Right to your doorstep, probably.”

“Ah… so that letter I read with Avotash asking for reinforcements due to Kiorian spies was the one you delivered after all.”

“Sounds like it. How ironic that it would allow us to meet even though the point of the letter was probably to do the opposite.” Varhi chuckled. “Maybe that’s why Avotash lied in the letter. Your father Aayron would have been more than likely very interested to hear the symptoms of this ‘disease’. Of course, I do not think Avotash realizes exactly what is lurking in this forest. He probably thinks it’s just some kind of ailment or just a single monster or whatever—not because the forest itself and the people living in it are becoming sentient brutes.” Varhi said. “The guy who made it back to the city had his corpse cremated. He was turned to ashes before he started transforming and moving by himself, I guess. How lucky, because if they left his corpse there, I think the entire capital city would be assimilated by those things now. This is ground zero for a literal walking epidemic. Thank goodness this place is surrounded by mountains already to contain it.”

Sairek flinched at that. “My mother was cremated too, because her body was deteriorating so fast. Might not have been nothing left...”

“Perhaps, but she still survived for a few years after her symptoms began. This guy survived less than three weeks. Not to mention having gone mentally insane. There was no 'accelerated aging' symptom.”

Nayleen had begun the preparations of starting to peel things in a pot again, but she glanced up as she spoke. “So, technically, Avotash could just set fire to this place and the threat would more or less be gone?”

“Given the unique nature of how this place is surrounded by mountains, I doubt the fire would spread beyond the forest, so I guess so. Which is also why I need to hurry up and find whatever secret he’s hiding before he realizes the reality of the situation and burns it all down and can collect whatever it is he’s hiding here. Of course, there’s also the other possibility that he cannot afford burn the forest down for whatever reason. Regardless, I need to find out why… If he can though and the Prince’s guard comes and decides the same thing while we’re still in this forest, then we’re going to be in deep trouble. Would look really bad on Ceareste if the kingdom’s own men find the Prince’s burnt corpse in the aftermath of a forest fire they intentionally set, not to mention the fact you guys are clearly trespassing.”

Sairek ignored that comment, though he had to resist a shudder. “I must find out what is going on as well.” He replied, causing the other three to look at him. “If Avotash is lying and hiding something from my father and I, then I must find out what it is.”

“How are you going to even respond if you find out what it is that he’s hiding?” Varhi asked him.

“...What do you mean?”

“If you come forth with claiming he’s done wrong, then you are also admitting that you snuck in here in the first place without proper entry.” Varhi said. “Someone of your position sneaking in is grounds for Masir to declare war all on its own, you know. It doesn’t even matter if the claim is true and valid. What you’re doing right now is a very grave crime. Being deceitful in a letter is trivial in comparison, though I’m sure Kior would not be happy if they found out the truth. At the very least, Masir would call off the alliance, whether whatever you claim you find is true or not. Jimmy's word alone based on my account would not be enough. Spread rumors, sure, but nothing useful."

“I—I know all of that...” Sairek mumbled.

“And yet you still came here?” Varhi whistled. “That either makes you very determined, or very stupid.”

“...So, like you.” Sairek asked in a tone that was not a question at all.

“I should have known what I was getting into but I went anyway. That means I was stupid. You knew even more, are far less experienced, and yet you came anyway. That makes you stupid, too, but more stupid than me, that's for sure.”

“What, is this some sort of competition or something?” Sairek asked dryly.

“No, you dolt, it means that if you want to make it out of here alive with your friends intact and not becoming one of those things, then you better start thinking more rationally and planning to make outcomes happen, rather than hope they will turn out alright. Also, to start thinking a couple of steps ahead and have back up plans in case something goes wrong.” Varhi explained, groaning in discomfort as he moved to lay back on the sleeping bag with a weary sigh, one hand rubbing his left side where it was bruised the worst. “For example… what do you think would have happened if I hadn’t been able to help you against that thing…?”

Sairek stammered, but no words came out and he forced himself to look away from Varhi and towards the fire instead. After a brief pause, he finally found himself again. “How was I supposed to know there would be monsters like that, though…?” He growled. "They are something quite possibly out of this world..."

“I suppose that is a fair argument. You only knew there was something wrong, but not specifically what was wrong.” Varhi admitted, pulling back his aggression from Sairek as he saw he was increasingly becoming more and more uncomfortable with him constantly laying into him with such cold facts and criticism. “I ended up like this simply because I was too lazy to go back down to acquire fifteen more feet of rope… so I suppose in a way, it’s my fault you three are here.” He sighed.

Cyial let out a small little growling sound, causing the other three to look at him. “Can we please stop talking about what we should have done?” He demanded in a clearly annoyed voice. “It’s easy to lecture in hindsight but that does nothing with what we should be doing right now in the moment.” His tail flicked behind him as he looked towards Varhi. "If you say we need a plan, then let's make one instead of moaning about how we don't have one, alright?"

Sairek blinked. He hadn’t heard Cyial like that before.

“Well, unfortunately, I don’t really know what to do. The only way out of here is forward. I suppose with you three, it will be easier than by myself… hopefully. Even if I will still be doing the brunt of the work. However…” Varhi began, then gestured down at himself, wincing from the movement. “I’m... ugh... not exactly in the best shape anymore… Since you seem to be the medical expert, how about we let you decide what to do, doc.”

Cyial’s garnet eyes looked down upon Varhi, almost glaring, but they soon softened up and he let out a sigh, closing his eyes in thought and shifting his position to match Sairek's with his knees pulled up against him. “Realistically, you should probably be laying in a bed and resting for a few days… the ethereal I gave you won’t really do much other than make you feel better for a few hours. It’s not going to last long.”

“Oh, so I’m going to go back to feeling even worse? Well that sucks.” Varhi grumbled, rolling his head to look up at the sky one more time. “Why did you give me something as valuable as that if it’s not going to help in the long run?”

Cyial turned to open his eyes and blink at him. “What are you talking about? You looked like you were seriously about to die and in so much pain... Why wouldn’t I give you some? At the very least, this gives you some time for you and your body to rest in some relative peace, which you seriously need right now, and not be in immediate danger of dying.

“Huh… Well, um, thanks, I guess. That’s probably the best compliment anyone has given me other than Jimmy. Well, from what I can remember, anyway.” Varhi said, his gaze never abandoned to look away from the sky.

“Well, hopefully a proper hot meal will help you feel better before the ethereal levels in your body start to go back down.” Nayleen spoke up, pouring a moderate amount of water into her pot full of chopped and peeled ingredients.

Cyial nodded. “So… if we’re deciding what to do… it will be evening before too long so there’s not much reason to go out tonight. We should sit here and allow Varhi to rest until tomorrow morning when it’s daylight out. I can stay up all night to keep watch. With no animals, sensing something approaching will be very easy for me. Especially if they’re that big. We can see how Varhi is feeling tomorrow and sit tight for another day if we need to in order to allow him to recover.” Cyial said, looking back towards Sairek “With the, uh… ‘generous amount of sleep’ I’ve gotten in the past week lately, I should be able to stay up both nights without trouble.” Cyial watched in mild amusement when Sairek shifted where he sat, looking away from his gaze with a faint blush on his cheeks that only the demon noticed.

“That’s pushing the deadline fairly close…” Varhi grumbled. “We only have what, three or four days left before they get here? Maybe five if they’re slow.”

“That storm the other night would probably have slowed them down. That was a particularly nasty storm.” Sairek said. “It probably won’t be too much, but it is still something to consider, I think.”

“Hmm…” Varhi let out thoughtfully, then nodded slowly. “If they were going to Cylvolta on that day, the waters would definitely have been too rough to risk it… they would have temporarily shut down the ferrying to the passengers due to a storm warning and waited until it passed. Possibly stuck on the island for the checkpoint. Or still stuck back on the mainland. From Cylvolta, they would of course go back to the Masirean capital to report to the King, but I bet after that, with haste, they would be making their way over here, probably with horses.”

“Soooo…?” Nayleen pressed him.

“Assuming the Prince here is correct, then I would wager we have indeed five days at most, but probably only four.” Varhi said.

“So probably two days of rest, and two days to search this entire forest while we fight for our lives to find a way back out…” Sairek sighed. “I still don’t like those odds.”

“Well, we don’t need to search the entire forest. I have a pretty good idea where we can go to get out, I did have Jimmy show me a map of the area, you know. The problem is just getting there; because screw this place.” Varhi muttered.

Cyial sighed, and moved himself to stand up. “Well for now, let’s get him patched up the best we can. Since those bruises are a few days old, we can use hot compresses to help circulate the blood flow on those bruises. That will help them heal faster.” He explained. “Sairek, think you heat some flasks with magic and then wrap them around in some thin cloth?”

“Sure. I can do that within the jewel itself.” Sairek replied.

“As for the newer bruises, cold would be best… heat would only increase the swelling, but I don’t think we have anything to make something cold.” Cyial mused, cupping a hand under his chin in thought.

“...Your Prince here can make fire, but not ice?” Varhi asked.

“...No.” Sairek sighed. “Ice is a bit more difficult than fire… fire is a direct element of ethereal, while ice is not. That belongs to water. Water itself is easy, but chilling the water to that level of cold to where it solidifies itself as ice is a few extra steps that’s beyond my ability to do. I can make it a little more cold, and I can make it hot, but ice cold is a lot tougher than it may seem.”

“I… didn’t ask for a lecture. A simple ‘no’ would have sufficed.” Varhi replied with a sidelong glance. "Most magic stuff will go over my head anyway."

“S-Sorry.” Sairek grumbled.

Varhi soon looked towards Cyial. “And I’m guessing you can’t just make any, either?”

Cyial shook his head.

“You can make shields out of thin air, but not a few cubes of ice?”

“...Magic works much differently for demons. And for us born on the Overworld, there are so few, that much of how we react to ethereal is still a mystery. I don’t even know why I can do what I can. I just… can. It’s one of the few spells that I just tried out and it worked fine, where many others have failed.” Cyial said.

“Ah, I wondered why you weren’t cynical and in pain. Then again, I guess the fact you are small is kind of a dead giveaway that you weren’t banished but born on the Overworld.” Varhi said with an appraising look.

“...You’re one to talk. You’re not much taller than Sairek or I and Nayleen is certainly taller than you.” Cyial replied.

“I’m average for my age. You’re like… what, eight? Nine?” Varhi asked.

“...I’m twelve or thirteen, thank you very much. Incubi, or most demons in general, just mature slower than humans do and tend to live longer lives.” Cyial replied in a dry tone.

“Oh, you’re an incubus born on the Overworld? Now that is very interesting. I was wondering why you looked so human.” Varhi mused.

“What other kinds of demons are there?” Sairek asked.

“Well, a lot. While the Overworld may be dominated by just humans, in the Underworld, they have things from imps, doppelgangers and wraiths, to the ones that very closely resemble humans such as incubi, succubi and fey.” Varhi answered.

“...This doesn’t really help me ‘compare’, but okay.” Sairek blinked.

“Believe me, when you live in Kior, while they’re rare, you see all kinds of them. Though the more human ones blend in very well with the crowds, of course.” Varhi commented, then glanced back towards Cyial. “You will probably be getting your horns growing out of your head in a couple of years. Aside from being usually taller than the average human, the horns and tail are usually a dead giveaway, aside from the fact the tail is easy to hide. Although the height thing probably won’t be a problem for you, either.”

“...Yes.” Cyial agreed, moving to sit down next to Sairek on his left side. “When our body gets to the point where humans would normally begin to start maturing, that’s when the horns generally start growing for us.” He said, looking towards Sairek and leaned into him even closer, where Sairek hoped the amber glow of the fire was helping hide the blush that had risen to his cheeks due to the close proximity between them. “Flasks, please.” Cyial whispered to him, placing his hand on Sairek’s left upper leg where he sat.

“R-Right…” Sairek stammered, his blush deepening. He moved his left hand and fumbled to pinch the jewel to search inside of it for the flasks, then beginning to heat them up internally as he did. "W-Why is he acting so… ‘seductive’ right now, though…?” Sairek couldn’t help but wonder to himself.

“I’m still probably three to five years away from growing horns, though...” Cyial continued, still watching Sairek carefully, until a moment later, Sairek conjured two flasks for him which landed in his lap, each also already wrapped in a thin sheet of cloth. “Thank you, Sairek.” Cyial smiled sweetly, giving his leg one single firm squeeze with his hand, before reaching over to take both flasks in a hand each, standing up and making his way towards Varhi.

“N-No... problem…?” Sairek replied unsure and cleared his throat quietly. He took a moment to readjust himself a little, the sitting position he had been in having now grown moderately uncomfortable.

“Okay, please sit up.” Cyial instructed Varhi.

Varhi groaned again, moving to do just that with a bit of effort, then turned his head around when Cyial moved to sit directly behind him, legs spread out on either side of him to be right up against Varhi’s back. “Uhh…? What are you—ahhck...!” Varhi gasped abruptly. Cyial had pressed both hot flasks against his body on two separate bruises.

“Sorry, they’re not too hot for you, are they?” Cyial spoke in a tone that betrayed that he was in fact, not sorry.

“A little warning would have been nice…!” Varhi seethed through clenched teeth.

“Oh, my bad. I just figured a strong and tall boy such as yourself would have been able to handle this fine without any complaint. I guess I was wrong.” Cyial replied dryly.

“I-Is this seriously because of me noting how short you are? O-Oww-! W-Why are you pressing them in even harder?!”

Sairek slooooowly shimmied himself away from the other two boys and moved himself closer to Nayleen. They both watched past the flame of the campfire as Varhi continued to yelp out when Cyial pressed the two flasks against his open bruises. Sairek quickly realized that Cyial was not being seductive - he was, as some would say; pissed off.

“L-Let’s never judge Cyial by his height…” Nayleen whispered to Sairek. “Especially when we’re in need of medical treatment…”

Sairek quickly nodded his head in agreement. “Y-Yeah… Good advice..."