



Chapter
Five
The Storms
of a Broken Heart
Timeline:
The skies darken and churn over the Ritual Forest with disturbing precedence as the company from Serenity Home hunt down the last survivor, a sneak thief, of the culprits that attacked their once-peaceful town.
The young rangers, Laila Wolvesbane and Bremorel Songsteel are hurt and still recuperating from the wounds they suffered from an unexpected attack; a creature, tall and lean, cunning and brutal, calculating and merciless, yet unseen or unheard of, leaving them in pain and frustration as their query, the sneak thief, gets further and further away from them.
This story begins shortly after
The Ambush.

I am fine.”, Ranger Laila Wolvesbane said wearily as she lay under her blanket and cushioned by a heap of fallen forest leaves.
“What she said.”, added her cousin, Ranger Bremorel Songsteel, lying under her own blanket, also cushioned by a heap of leaves.
“You will be fine when I say you will be fine!”, replied a scowling she-dwarf as she steered the small iron pot hanging over the campfire.
“That.. that doesn’t even make any sense, Temple Guardian!”, Laila said with an infuriated tone.
“After what happened the last time, you still want to sass me, do you? And I thought you were the smarter of the two cousins, Laila Wolvesbane!”, the she-dwarf replied mildly, without even bothering to look at her.
“I resent that.”, mumbled Bremorel, then pinched her face as a sharp, sizzling pain shot right across her abdomen.
“Which part do you resent, little Morel? Do tell.”, asked the Temple Guardian, Lady Magella, and this time, she did turn around to give the young ranger girl a very, very steady gaze.
Bremorel gulped.
“Uhhmm.. the part where you would think Laila is the smarter of the two of us?”, she mumbled.
“Young Laila is not black-listed from anywhere in Serenity Home, little girl.”, Lady replied, though, surprisingly, not as harshly as she could have said it.
Bremorel’s face pinked, then turned red.
Her cousin stifled a laugh, but a snort did escape her.
“She’s right, you know.”, she whispered at her merrily.
Bremorel scowled at her as her face became darker.
“Shut up, Laila. You look like a bloody raccoon!”, she snarled at her, then hissed again as another stab of pain jabbed at her.
Laila gave her cousin one of her ‘thousand-yard’ glares, though in all fairness, with her newly set nose and the black rings around her eyes, the ranger girl did resemble a raccoon.
“And you are.. you are.. leaking all over the place!”, she spluttered angrily.
“Awesome comeback, cuzz. You really have no street culture whatsoever. Leaking all over the place? Really? That’s the best you can do?”, snarked Bremorel. “Ranger Master Davien has left a lot of gaps in your training, girl.”
“And Ranger Master Moorat has left a lot of bark on you in yours!”, Laila shot back.
Bremorel laughed..
..and then hissed as her tummy sizzled and she ended up squirming under her blanket.
“Ss.. See?.. Tha.. that was.. much.. better..”, she chuckled even as slicing and churning prods of pain gnawed and ricocheted across her belly.
“Are.. are you alright?”, Laila asked with scared consternation as she pushed her blanket aside and crawled on the ground, one of her legs not quite functioning. Under the scowling gaze of the Temple Guardian, she made her way to her cousin, grabbed her, blanket and all, and hugged her fiercely! “Please don’t do things like that again. It would kill my father if something happened to you.”
“No, it would kill your father if something happened to you!”, came Bremorel’s muffled voice.
“You really are an idiot, you know that right?”, Laila fumed.
“What? Why?”, her cousin’s voice was heard.
“When will it get through your thick head that my father absolutely adores you. Never once did he ever see you as some stranger in his home, but always as his very own daughter, and my sister.”, Laila said angrily.
“I am a stranger in your home.”, mumbled Bremorel.
Laila sighed.
“Your father was my uncle, Morel. And he was my father’s brother.”, she said, calling her by her real name as she did on rare occasions. “I loved my uncle and he certainly adored me. And now I’ll tell you something I have never told you before. Even after all these years, my father still turns around and says, ‘Aramsis would have laughed at it.’, when he tells me one of his lame father jokes and I roll my eyes. And when I return home from one of our grueling patrols and you don’t come home with me, he sits late into the night and stares out the window in hopes that his brother’s daughter, the niece he adores and is so proud of, might turn up. He even puts aside a plate full of whatever he made for me, just in case you might drop by. It is churlish of you to not accept the love and care he has for you and insist on being a stranger in his home.”, Laila said quietly.
No reply came from under the blankets this time. Only some sniffling sounds.
“I.. I am sorry, Laila.”, Bremorel said finally. “I truly am an idiot. As long as I called myself a stranger in your home, I thought I wouldn’t have to face some.. realities..”
“Which is the point. It is not my home, girl. It is ‘our’ home!”, Laila replied kindly.
“You have missed your calling, young Laila. You should have been a Temple Guardian.”, came Lady Magella’s voice from where she sat, still steering the little pot over the campfire.
“Yeah, and sit around all day reading incomprehensible religious scripts.”, mumbled the ranger girl. “Like that was going to happen. The only thing I ever liked there was the singing, and that was once a week.”
Bremorel gave a slobbering snort and hissed once more.
“Stop. Please..”, she nearly begged her cousin. “You are going to do what that stupid beast couldn’t, and kill me!”
“I won’t kill you if you promise never to act so rashly again, cuzz.”, Laila replied seriously. “My father does not have enough many daughters that he could spare. I never want to see him become that broken man when my mother died. Not again. I mean, he became catatonic and he was so furious, all the time, at himself, at the elves, and at the Heavens. And when he heard about what happened to your mother and your father, he went livid. He was beside himself. He very nearly went mad with grief because he thought you had been killed too. Nothing I tried had worked to turn him around, Bree, you must know this. What’s worse, they wouldn’t even allow him to go and bury his own brother and his sister-in-law, who was my mother’s oath sister, because ranger masters Davien and Moorat claimed the area was ‘too hot’ and that he really shouldn’t see what the orcs had left behind, though they swore that they put them, and all the other deceased to rest, and that every one of them had their proper graves.. Then the news of a little girl having been brought to the Serenity Home orphanage arrived. A girl that matched the description of his little niece. I was there when Sheriff Standorin brought him the news. My father just slumped down and cried. Turns out, it took them nearly three months to figure out who was who because some of the bodies were not readily identifiable and some of the woodsmen had gone missing. And woodsmen being woodsmen, kept no records of the people that lived in their many clusters of small villages. There were neither any birth nor death certificates. Yes, technically, both of us are also woodsmen, having been born there, much like our parents were, and I know how much we all love our freedoms, but really? No birth or death certificates? It’s like when you are born, no one takes any notice of you, and when you die, it’s like you never existed.. Out of all that chaos, there were only two kids recovered from the orc raid and they were placed in the orphanage and no one knew who they were until the dust settled. And guess what? One of them was a savage little girl who wouldn’t talk but only fight, bite, and hiss at anyone that got too near, the other was a little boy who had lost his voice and never talked at all until he was into his teens; you and Thomas. And the little girl’s uncle was living just on the other side of the very same town!”
Bremorel was staring up at her cousin from inside her blanket with a numbly broken and tear-stricken expression. Laila glanced down at her, then, thoughtfully she stared up at something off in the distance to give her the illusion of privacy.
“I hated you, you know? When my father first brought you home from the orphanage. And for a long time after that. All the effort I gave to make my father happy, nothing worked. But then, this pint of a hissing girl came along and it was like my father was reborn. I honestly thought he loved you more than he loved me. And I was afraid you were going to steal him away from me. I mean, I was already missing my mother for years and I just couldn’t stand the idea of losing my father too. Then Udoorin happened and that was a game-changer for, I think, everyone that was involved. That day, I found me a sister, a cousin, and a life-long friend that I knew I wanted to stick to, like no other..”, she said with a whimsical sort of smile, though it made her look a bit odd, with her two black eyes.
She stared down at her cousin again and this time there was something desperate and pleading in that stare.
“You, and I.. We know what losing loved one’s means, cuzz. We know it intimately. Those that are dead and gone, are dead and gone. The ones that are left behind, however, are left behind to suffer.”, she said with a whisper, then fell silent, holding her cousin even tighter to herself.
Bremorel didn’t reply for the longest time.
She just couldn’t..
“Why?”, she asked finally. “Why didn’t you tell me any of this before?”
“Because..”, her cousin replied. “Some things must be accepted when they are told, Bree. Not proven. Once you know it is a fact, all its beauty, all its calling mystery is now gone. I wanted you to accept my word when I told you, on innumerable occasions, that my father adored you. And even though he never said a word to you, he loved seeing you in the house. When I returned from our patrols, he was unbearably happy. I mean, he would hover all over me, making me tea, bringing me hot doughnuts, and slices of jam pies, and always cooking the foods that he knew I liked. He would have all my clothes washed and pressed, to my despair, and have them neatly stacked in my drawer. When you also dropped by, however, he was, I suppose the correct word would be; content. Yes. When you came home, the world could come to an end, then and there, and he would still be happy because ‘both’ his daughters were there with him, which is exactly what you are to him; not some distant relative, but a daughter..”
“Wow..”, Bremorel whispered. “I never knew..”
“Well, that’s because you are an idiot.”, replied Laila.
Bremorel let loose a wet sort of snort.
“And now you ruined it all.”, she said.
“Do I have your word, cousin? That you will stop this reckless attitude of yours?”, Laila asked, her voice serious.
“I.. I will try, I promise. But a lifelong abuse of stupidity will not be easy to just shrug off. I.. I know I have no right to ask you for it, but I would really appreciate it if you gave me the chance.”, her cousin replied.
“I will. As long as you are trying, I will.”
“Well, now that you two have that covered, I suppose I may be allowed to do my job.”, Lady said with a scowling tone as she walked up to them, carrying the bubbling pot she had been steering in both hands.
The ranger girls stared at her with trepidation.
“Put your cousin down, little Laila. You may be done with her, but I am not.”, the she-dwarf said briskly.
“What.. what are you going to do to her?”, Laila asked, pulling her cousin even closer to herself.
Lady Magella cocked an eyebrow at her, then smiled.
In all candor, it was possible she was going for a sweet, and perhaps even a pleasant smile, but the end result had freaked out both the ranger girls even more.
“The same thing I am going to do to you.”, she said.
For the next hour, the company heard many agonizing screams as the Temple Guardian applied hot gruel mixed with many foul-smelling herbs on young Bremorel’s sliced abdomen, followed by many embarrassingly girly yelps from her cousin, Laila, as the same sticky and stinking ‘porridge’ was applied to her leg. By the time it was over, Udoorin had ripped a long strip of his shirt and tied it around his sore and nearly crushed throat in hopes of hiding it from the dreaded she-dwarf, the paladin girl, Lady Moira, was standing guard with a diffident expression on her face, and the little gnome, Gnine was hiding behind some bushes. Even Master Aager was nowhere to be found!



When will they be up and running?”, growled Aager Fogstep.
“There will be no ‘up’s, not will there be any ‘running’s, Master Aager. Not anytime soon.”, Lady Magella replied, scowling up at the man.
Aager stared at the she-dwarf.
Squinted, really.
And he silently fumed in frustration.
“Every minute we waste sitting here, the chances of our query to escape raises exponentially, Lady. The rangers must be made available, and now.”, he grated silently.
“Made available? Perhaps you think the rangers are some machines that I could fix by changing their broken parts? I am fully aware how much you care for those around you, Master Aager, and how little compassion you have for humanity at large, but that is low even for you.”, Lady Magella replied coldly.
“What I think is irrelevant at this point, Temple Guardian, and seeing as how I have no care for those around me, and nons compassion at all for humanity at large, this conversation is rather moot. What matters is that the rangers are made available, now.”, the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask growled.
Lady Magella scowled at him.
Quite and quietly furious.
“One day, Master Aager, you will have to face your ignominy.”, she told him with a very frosty tone.
“Yes.”, agreed, the man in dark leathers, then with the same indifferent growl, he added, “The rangers, Temple Guardian. Have them up and running within the hour..”
..And walked away.



To say the Temple Guardian, Lady Magella was furious, was not unlike saying the sun generally dawned along the eastern horizon, sailed lazily across the sky, and settled somewhere off west.
She was livid.
She was visibly trembling in furor.
She was mumbling and spluttering with outrage.
And she was stomping her feet with every step as if stepping on some particularly daft idiot’s head!
It was no wonder the little gnome, Gnine, was making himself scarce. True, he was a troublemaker by nature, but he was also smart enough to almost never be caught. Young Udoorin had ranged out as far as it was moderately safe, more out of some instinctual survival drive against the blistering she-dwarf than deliberation the way Gnine had. Even Lady Moira, who had gotten along with the Temple Guardian just fine, because she was a classy, polite, and sensible sort of girl, avoided her. Perhaps taking a cue from the young man, she had also ranged out, her sword and shield at the ready.
Master Aager was nowhere to be seen, however. He had opted to avoid needless and pointless conversation that would involve further accusations of ‘ignominy’ from the furious she-dwarf. True, he cared little for what people thought of him as he’d had compassion washed out of his system by the time he’d barely been five, but having the Temple Guardian so cavalierly chalk him off as ‘little care for people’, as opposed to ‘little care for what people thought of him’, did irritate him, as correct as the Temple Guardian’s original assessment of him had been. Also true that he had avoided Serenity Home temple quite diligently. So much so that one could go as far as calling it, ‘with an unholy passion’, but not because he felt any personal hatred, animosity, grudge, resentment, or even odium for the temple nor the people who worked there. Other than, perhaps, self-loathing, the only thing he might have felt was ‘rage’.. As to why he felt so, was a matter that needed to be looked into. But that was for another time. The most interesting part in all this was, he did not feel said hatred, animosity, grudge, resentment, and certainly any bigotry for the Great Heavens above. Whatever his faults and his sins were, Aager Fogstep never stooped to accusing the Heavens for his own follies. He did what he thought needed to be done, then owned them. In all fairness, one could easily assume, that the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask was quite ‘impervious’ to the Temple Guardian’s attitude.
It did, however, irritate him. After all, he had displayed nothing less than utmost respect to the people who worked there, much like he showed the same professional attitude to everyone around him whether he actually felt the respect he displayed or not..
The focus of the Temple Guardian’s overall and cumulative fury was nowhere to be seen, but the reason for her infuriated anger, at that very moment, were both grunting and hissing in torturous pain some twenty yards away, one limping, the other somewhat bent over in throbbing cramps as Laila and Bremorel stalked through the forest, searching for the sneak thief’s tracks.
Unbeknownst to the furious Temple Guardian, however, the sinister man in dark leathers had left strict orders to the big, burly young man and the paladin girl that should either falter or encounter further altercations, Udoorin was to rush ahead and both defend and cover Ranger Bremorel while Lady Moira would do the same for Ranger Laila. It wasn’t a very good plan nor did they move with their previous gait but the matter of fact was, they were on the move, as slow as it was, and they were not sitting just to be subjected to any possible ambushes by the same creatures that had slaughtered the cutters.
For Aager, that was a win.
“How are you doing?”, whispered Laila, as she limped up to her cousin.
“Hurt, and hurting..”, Bremorel whispered back, her face pale, and her voice hoarse. Very slowly, and tenderly she knelt down and sat on the forest ground. “Gets worse when I bend or kneel down for any reason.. I really must be wicked and paying for my past sins.”
“Why would you say that?”, Laila asked, coming to stand next to her.
“No rest for the wicked?”, she said with heavy sarcasm.
Laila stared down at her cousin and an angry frown appeared on her boldly striking face.
“That’s not even what that phrase means.”, she said irritably.
“I beg to differ.”, she replied.
“You may beg, but not for being wicked, you dolt!”, Laila said sternly.
Bremorel snorted, then winced, as sizzling pain crisscrossed her abdomen.
“Why do you think that Aager-guy is pushing us like this? Is he really this petty to make us suffer the way he is? Perhaps he didn’t like it when I called him an arse..”, she said, her face pinched.
“I don’t think he cares enough, one way or the other, to be that petty, cuzz.”, Laila mused. “I think he is merely being cautious.”
“This is him being cautious, is it? Running two wounded rangers, his only chance to ever find and catch the bloody sneak thief, into the ground?”, Bremorel replied with bitter resentment.
“No, cuzz, he just doesn’t want us to end up the same way the cutters did. The creature that got us busted has a lot of friends out there somewhere, remember? And they just might decide to come back. As strong as they are, they seem to prefer ambushes over direct confrontations. Or maybe they just like to play with their food. Master Aager is keeping us on the move in hopes of avoiding exactly that.”, her cousin mused thoughtfully.
“Your persistence in defending that arse amazes me, girl. You got something going for him that I am not aware of or something?”, she said, giving her an evil smirk.
Laila returned her smile with a level gaze.
“Do not make me hurt you more than you already are, Bree. I could snuff out your candle with a pinch.”, she said balefully.
“A pinch, huh? So you are going to pinch me, are you? Like a little girl?”, Bremorel barbed. “But then, you did scream like one, when Lady was applying that stinking porridge on your leg. A little, girl raccoon!”
“Yeah.”, Laila replied. “As opposed to slobbering all over the place like you were.”
“I get the first dibs, by the way.”, her cousin said.
“Dibs? What dibs?”, Laila asked a bit confused.
“The sneak thief. When we catch him, I get the first dibs to punch his face in.”, Bremorel replied with a grim expression.
“Girl, you can dib all you want. When I see him, I am not going to bother with his face. I am just going to shoot him in his breadbasket and watch him squirm.”, Laila said coolly.
“Yeah, I suppose that’d hurt.”, Bremorel nodded. “But you are going to have to do a quarter-draw for that. Otherwise, the arrow will go right through him.”
Laila gave her another level gaze.
“So you are going to teach me how to shoot arrows now, are you? Girl, I was shooting apples off trees at two hundred yards before you were even admitted as an initiate.”, she said angrily.
“Hey, I shot the ugly orc-whatsit and pinned his arm. You got yourself backhanded, then had him break not one, but both your swords. Didn’t Ranger Master Davien ever tell you never to try and block an axe swing with your blades? How stupid is that?”, Bremorel scoffed.
“It got right past you and jumped me. What’s your excuse for getting yourself sliced open?”, Laila sniffed at her.
Bremorel’s face flushed as she stared at her cousin guiltily.
“That was harsh. Even if it is true.”, she mumbled.
“I am sorry. I didn’t mean to burn you like that.”, Laila admitted, also flushing a bit.
“No. You were right. In all our frustration to catch the sneak thief, we neglected who we were and acted like a pair of stupid Moxes. And that’s coming from me!”, she said bitterly.
“Did Udoorin really ram that thing off you and then try to strangle it?”, Laila asked, sort of to change the subject.
“Yeah, the idiot.”, Bremorel said. “And he didn’t try to strangle him because he wanted to. He lost his axe! All those weapons he brought and he ended up trying to kill the first creature he came across with his bare hands.”
Laila snorted.
“But he is bloody strong, I’ll give him that much. I punched that animal square in the face and it didn’t even feel it. It did go purple when Udoorin was squeezing his throat though.”, Bremorel admitted grudgingly. “I shudder to think what will happen to the girl he finds to his liking. He will probably break the poor thing and say, ‘what just happened?’”
Laila laughed.
“C’mon. Let’s get moving. I can hear him, and Lady Moira crashing through the bush.”, she said, then paused.
“What?”, her cousin asked.
“I like her.”, Laila said.
“Her? Her, who?”
“Lady Moira. She’s steady and cool, and she’s got this sense of peace around her. And the way she rushed up to me when I was down. It was kinda awesome. She was like this heroic monument standing there with her shield up and her sword drawn. She said, ‘Fear not, fair Laila, I shall defend you and your honor or die trying, if I must. Heavens Willing, and together, we shall stand against darkness. Thus shall Good and Light prevail!’, I mean, she said all that so smoothly.”, Laila replied mutely. “I think we should form closer relations with her. Udoorin won’t talk to her. Not that he doesn’t want to, but he is such a klutz when it comes to girls, he just mumbles some things at her then runs off. Gnine will talk to her, but I dearly hope he doesn’t try to prank her. That would end badly. Lady Magella chats with her, but their talk is more like ‘shop talk’, if you get what I mean. And I can’t imagine Master Aager having a laugh with her. I don’t even think he knows how to laugh. Which means she must be feeling a bit left out.”
Bremorel grimaced.
“I hate forced friendships.”, she said.
“It won’t be forced, trust me. I don’t think she is as stiff and archaic as she seems.”, Laila told her.
“How do you know?”, Bremorel asked curiously as she carefully rose from the ground.
“Saw what she was wearing under all her shiny armor.”, her cousin said with a broad smile.
“You spied on her?”, Bremorel asked incredulously.
“No, girl, why would I spy on her? She was trying to get out of her armor, and I just happened to be there, so she asked me if I would be kind enough to unbuckle the straps on her sides and shoulders. I did, and she had this beautiful, pink satin blouse under it. It was very pretty and it had these silver embroideries on it, and some lovely frilly sleeves and.. Don’t look at me like that, alright! It was pretty!”, Laila said, her face going slightly pink.
“Girl, your world stops cold when you see a pretty dress. Good to see that hasn’t changed.”, Bremorel laughed, then hissed as another cramping stab of pain ricocheted around her belly.
“Everyone’s got some vices, alright.”, Laila said hotly. “Is it a crime that I like pretty dresses? I mean, I can’t wear them anymore, but I still like them.”
“You can wear them in town. I am sure Uncle Darien would love it. He certainly would approve.”, Bremorel offered, trying for a grin, but it ended up being a bit like a grimace.
“Yeah, Laila Wolvesbane in a frilly pink dress. I am sure that won’t cause any circulating gossip.”, she replied with a pinched face.
“I can’t imagine anyone making fun of you. I can, however, imagine D.D. Dexter’s face when he sees you in it.”, Bremorel snickered as she took a few, tender steps and started after the sneak thief’s tracks.
“Girl, if you would listen to me just once and put on a dress yourself, you could have your boy eating from your hand!”, Laila said irritably.
“I know the effect I have when I wear dresses, Laila. Especially when I put on my black dress skirt that falls down to my ankles. The one with the white collarettes and sleeves. Uncle Darien almost burst with happiness when he saw me in it, considering what he paid for it. I wore it once and took a stroll through the town, then returned home, put my usuals on, and went back and beat all the boys who’d ogled at me. The carnage was epic!”, her cousin said with a frown.
Laila laughed again.
“But I don’t need Thomas eating from my hand. I need him to brave up and ask for my hand.”, Bremorel replied with a resigned sort of voice.
“In all candor, you did look quite dashing in that dress. It was one of the rare times I actually felt jealous.”, Laila admitted.
“Don’t be daft, cuzz. You’d look great in it too. Hell, you look good in any dress.”, her cousin shrugged.
“Wish that were true. I don’t have the right hair color for that dress.”, Laila said with a deflated tone.
“And I can’t believe the kind of things you two talk about, and while we are hot on pursuit!”, rumbled a voice and Udoorin came crashing up to them.
Both the ranger girls sighed.
“We talk about a lot of things, Udoorin.”, Laila said. “What? Did you think we are like, these two stone-cold rangers prowling in the woods? No. Not unless there was imminent danger involved. As rangers, we rarely get to entertain social lives. This is what we do to stay sanely civilized.”
“Really? I mean, I didn’t know. You two always looked so cool, all the time.”, the young man said, more than a bit astonished.
“We are cool.”, Bremorel replied with an ‘offhand’ smirk. “But we are ‘people’ too. Everyone seems to forget that, where rangers are involved. Town guards make their rounds and their shifts, but at the end of the day, they all go home.. To their wives and kids.. We have no rounds, we have no shifts, and we have no posts. We are sent on missions and we are always on alert. We can die at any time and no one will know. In all your life, have you ever heard of a ranger’s burial?”
“Uhhmm.. No..”, Udoorin replied with a frown.
“That’s because we don’t get burials, Udoorin. By the time they find our bodies, there is hardly anything left to even identify us.”, she said coolly.
“I.. didn’t know that..”, the young man mumbled.
“So when we are alone, as two rangers, we can talk whatever bloody we want.”, Bremorel said, as her ‘cool’ cracked a bit.
“He doesn’t know, cuzz. No one really does. There is no reason to berate him for it.”, Laila intervened.
“I am sorry, Udoorin. I didn’t mean to burn you like that.”, Bremorel said quietly, her face slightly flushed.
“No, no. I am sorry. As Laila said. I didn’t know. But I would look for you, both of you, should something happen to you. And never stop until you got your ranger’s burial.”, Udoorin mumbled again.
“That’s sweet. And depressing.”, Laila smiled, then asked. “Now. Why are you here and where is Lady Moira?”
“I am here because you two stopped and we caught up to you. Lady Moira chose to stay behind because she did not want to seem like she was intruding between friends, which I thought was rather thoughtful of her.”, he replied.
Laila gave her cousin a meaningful, ‘told you so’, sort of glance which Bremorel returned with a thousand-yard squint.
“We stopped because I needed a breather.”, Bremorel said. “Now that I am rested, we shall continue our pursuit.”
“Don’t over-push yourselves. If you are tired, stop. I don’t think the sneak thief is faring any better than us.”, Udoorin rumbled with a frown.
“Are you concerned for our well-being, young Master Udoorin?”, she snickered.
Udoorin gave her a scowling glare.
“I would rather neither of you ended up needing a burial, Bree. As much as you would think otherwise, there are people who care about you.”, he said still scowling at her. “You freaked the Hell out of me when that animal sliced you. I mean, I actually saw red, back there. I forgot all my training and just rammed into it like an idiot. Hell, you freaked the Hell out of Lady Magella too. I think that’s why she was so furious with Master Aager. And after he forced her to heal the two of you the way he did, it was all she could do to barely stand.
“She did seem wobbly after she prayed over us.”, Laila mused. “And the cut on my leg and the slice on Bree’s abdomen were both gone. What I don’t understand is, I still can’t move my leg the way I should and Bree, here, can barely stand up straight.”
“I can explain that.”, piped a voice and the bushes parted to reveal the little gnome, Gnine.
“Gnine..”, Laila said a bit angrily. “I told you not to—”
“I didn’t follow you, girl, chill, already. I only came because I noticed you two had stopped.”, Gnine said, returning her irritation in kind.
Laila fumed a bit, then sighed.
“Alright. Do explain why my leg and Bree’s abdomen still hurts like someone’s placed hot lumps of coal on them?”, she asked.
“I asked Lady Moira why you two were still in pain even though Lady Magella had healed you.”, he said with a shrug.
“Why didn’t you just ask Lady Magella?”, Bremorel asked.
“Girl, really? You want me to willingly and knowingly volunteer to get verbally, and possibly physically abused? I mean, she’s irritable in her good day.”, he replied, staring at her incredulously.
Bremorel snorted.
“Look, you want to know why you two are in pain or not?”, he asked with an exasperated tone.
“Do tell.”, Bremorel said with an expression that told everyone she was fully expecting a wild, highly convoluted, and very much improbable explanation from the little gnome.
“Like I said. I asked Lady Moira and she said it has to do with the mind.”
Both the ranger girls raised their eyebrows at him.
“The mind?”, Laila asked.
“Yes. I admit I didn’t understand everything she said, but from what I did understand, elves, humans, dwarves, gnomes, or any other race or beast, we all get hurt in life and if it isn’t fatal, we expect to heal in time. Which I think is the crucial point; Time. Our minds are configured, through experience, that a cut, a bruise, or sickness takes time to get better. When Lady Magella healed you, the cuts are gone, and the muscle damage is no longer there, but your minds have never seen nor experienced that happen before, hence, you still feel the excruciating pain, which isn’t really there.”, Gnine explained, interestingly enough, quite succinctly, and without his usual ‘I know things’ attitude.
Both the ranger girls and Udoorin ogled down at him.
“You mean to tell us that we are making up the pain? In our minds?”, Bremorel asked, scoffing at the gnome.
“I think what he means is, we are imagining the pain.”, Laila mused.
“Essentially, yes.”, Gnine confirmed. “On both cases.”
“You mean I am squirming, and there really is no pain at all?”, the younger of the two rangers frowned.
“I am sure there is some residual pain, but it shouldn’t be any more than some very minor sizzle. Or perhaps something akin to your period cramps.”, he replied.
Laila and Bremorel’s faces went red.
Udoorin coughed uncomfortably into his fist.
“And how would you know what a period cramp feels like?”, Bremorel snarled at him.
“Hello? We have been friends since, like, forever.. You didn’t think I wouldn’t notice when either of you was ‘unavailable’ to hang out for days, every month?”, Gnine replied impudently.
The ranger girls glared down at him, their faces still burning.
“Look, just think or imagine some nice things, alright? That should stop, or drastically reduce the amount of pain you think you are feeling.”, the little gnome said.
“Like what?”, Bremorel asked hotly.
“Do you really want me to tell you what you ought to imagine?”, Gnine replied with a bemused expression on his face, then added with a grin, “I mean, I certainly could, but I am not sure if you could follow?”
Bremorel gave him her best, thousand-yard squint then reached down and smacked him over the head!
“Ouch, girl, you sure have a heavy hand. I am tempted to ask if Thomas knows this side of yours but that’d be a moot question all on its own, seeing as how well he knows just how heavy-handed you are!”, the little gnome said, scratching the sizzling spot of his smacked head. “How’s the belly?”
“Eh? What?”, she asked, still angry with the little gnome.
“How is your tummy, girl? You just bent down for that smack. You should have been squirming in pain by now.”, Gnine said, still scratching his head.
Bremorel froze.
Then she quickly turned around so they wouldn’t see, pulled up her leathers, and her shirt, and stared down at her previously scarred abdomen.
In all likeliness, it is a bit nonessential to mention that the young ranger girl did not have a soft tummy. Perhaps, once, she’d had the potential for one, but unless some things changed, and quite drastically, that ship had long sailed..
Bremorel Songsteel had some serious abs!
The inevitable result of years of physical training coupled with her naturally athletic figure had earned her broad shoulders, strong arms that could sing with a great, two-handed sword, and stronger legs that could run all day. It would appear, the only thing soft about the young ranger was, surprisingly, her voice, which oft went unnoticed because she was usually snarling at someone, anyone, at any given time.
“Well, now..”, she whispered in astonishment. “I should have ruptured the cut and been bleeding all over the place.”
“Let me see that.”, Laila said and came to look at her open belly. “Wow, girl. Have you been working out? You look delicious!”, she said with an impressed smirk, causing her cousin to blush.
“There you have it. You just have to set your minds elsewhere and you should be fine. Seeing as we are likely going to get hurt again, and any number of times, it is reasonable to say we will end up under Lady Magella’s scowling care. I can’t promise any tenderness on her part, but I can promise if you can mentally adopt the idea that she can heal you with her prayers, and mostly without even scarring, you can overcome the pain you think you are suffering.”, Gnine said, sort of smugly.
Bremorel shoved her shirt back into her pants and dropped her leathers over again staring at the gnome musing whether she should thank him or apologize to him for smacking him over the head.
As if on cue, her cousin, Laila, turned to the little gnome with an evil looking smile on her face, and just when she was about to speak, Gnine squinted up at her and said, “No, Laila, you can’t kick me just to see if your leg hurts or not!”
Laila had the grace to at least look like she was a bit ashamed.
“Now that you two are fixed, we can pick up the pace and Lady Magella won’t have an excuse to come at any of us.”, Gnine said.
“I wasn’t aware you were so eager to go hunting criminals, Master Gnine.”, Bremorel said with one eyebrow cocked, though a smile did play around her lips.
“I am not. But anything beats getting burned by our esteemed Temple Guardian.”, he replied while looking around to make sure she wasn’t anywhere near.



Laila Wolvesbane froze where she was, one step over the other, and not quite down, as a sense of dread like nothing she had ever felt washed over her.
The sun had dimmed and the evening was coming fast, and the two ranger girls had started looking for a suitable, relatively safe campsite when she’d sensed the feeling of dread. She had stumbled once, then again, as the air had become denser, and almost seemed to choke her. And then she had frozen in her place as she had, one foot not quite settled. Only her eyes moved and she could see her cousin, some thirty yards away and among some trees, also standing still, her back stiff, her greatsword in her hands, but she was trembling, so much so that she could barely keep her sword straight.
With learned awareness, she felt, more than saw, clouds, dark gray and muddy purple had gathered and churned above her, and from far, far away, she thought she heard a low, feral rumble followed by a sudden, eye-searing flash, and an earth-shaking thunderclap..
Then the Great Heavens all came crashing down as if it were the end of times!
Rain in a forest and in June was nothing unusual. Quite the contrary, considering the mild climate around Serenity Home and Ritual Forest in particular. But what came down flattened Laila into the ground and she was suddenly deafened by the shear, roaring of the downpour, followed frequently by the savage, clashing thunderclaps. She pushed herself forward, over fallen branches and under the heavy brush. Spattered in mud and quite drenched, she made her way to her cousin, who was also in a similar disposition. She had, however, also curled up into a ball, her greatsword fallen, and she was whimpering in a hole formed naturally in a tree.
“Bree.. Get up, girl. We can’t stay here. We must get the others and find shelter. This downpour is not natural.”, she shouted at her over the rumbling thunder.
Bremorel did not respond nor did she move. It’s like she never heard her. She just huddled in the hole and whimpered!
“It’s coming! It’s coming!”, was all she could moan!
Laila stared down at her cousin, quite astonished. Bremorel Songsteel NEVER whimpered, nor did she ever cower!
“What is it, Bree? What did you see? What is coming?”, she asked her urgently in a hoarse voice as she drew out the two, lengthy daggers she had borrowed from Udoorin and peered into the hazy and pouring forest, but she couldn’t see anything beyond fifteen yards. Seeing nothing she could identify as an immediate threat, she put her daggers away, grabbed her cousin, and her greatblade, and forcibly ran her back to the company.
The company, as it turned out, hadn’t fared any better than they had. Lady Magella was soaked and was huddled against a tree looking highly offended. Lady Moira was drenched and had her back on the same tree trying to keep an eye in every direction. There was also a haunted look in her eyes. Udoorin was covering the adjacent tree, also drenched, and his face was pale and his short hair seemed to be standing on its matted ends. Gnine had somehow climbed up the tree Lady Magella and Lady Moira was huddled, and he seemed totally freaked out.
“Where is Master Aager?”, Laila shouted over the enormous roar of the rain.
“He took off the moment the rain started.”, scowled Lady Magella angrily.
“What?”, Laila said with an astonished tone as she ‘dropped’ off her cousin next to the scowling Temple Guardian.
“He might have said something about finding shelter or some such.”, the she-dwarf mumbled grudgingly. “What’s wrong with little Morel?”
“I don’t know. She sort of clamped down the moment the rain began. Kept repeating, ‘It’s coming, it’s coming!’, but I didn’t see anything.”, Laila replied, wiping the rain off her face. “This.. this rain.. It isn’t natural..”
“No, it isn’t.”, Moira agreed. “I don’t know what unearthly fool summoned it, but there is a great sin afoot walking these woods this evening. Methinks we must find cover at once.”
Lady Magella, Laila, Udoorin, and up from the tree, Gnine, ogled at her.
“What do you sense, dear girl?”, Lady asked her.
“An unspoken evil has been let loose upon the world, Temple Guardian. It is savage, it is vile, it lusts for blood, and it hungers for the flesh of mortals.”, Moira replied, taking a better grip of her tall body shield and her long sword, though she kept its point-end low. For a moment, she fell silent as she stared down at the whimpering Bremorel, then mused in a much quieter voice. “It would appear, dear Ranger Bremorel is a very sensitive young woman.”
Lady Magella stared at her.
So did Laila, but not with the incredulous eyes as the Temple Guardian did. For what the tall paladin girl had said, seemed to confirm some things she had sensed, guessed, or even known about her cousin. True, she, herself, was a half-elf and was much more attuned to nature due to her elf heritage. But for whatever reason, and when it came to certain other things, her cousin had shown an unexpected aptitude to sense the presence of danger, or even death, than she ever had. Laila had always wondered or even suspected, whether her cousin’s sensitivity for ‘mortem’ had been due to the traumatic horrors she had been forced to witness as her parents got slaughtered right before her eyes while hiding in a little closet and at an age, no one should have seen such things.
With a determined expression on her own face, she sat down on the wet forest ground, scooped up her cousin as best as she could, cuddled her, and noted she had stopped shivering now, though she did spasm and jerk violently every once in a while.
The rain had started whipping at them by the time Master Aager appeared. There was an ominous, howling wind as well and streaks of, not electric-blue, but greenish lightnings flashed and jabbed down into the forest, followed by discontent rumblings of the churning clouds above as well now and at an alarming frequency as leaves, twigs, and even branches got swept and crashed every which way!
“Come.”, growled Aager, as he pointed in a direction. Then he motioned at Lady Moira and Udoorin, then pointed at Lady Magella, Ranger Bremorel, and up at the little gnome who was clinging at the tree, very much frightened.
Moira sheathed her sword, quickly hung her tall shield on her back, firmly buckled it there, and offered her hand for the Temple Guardian to take. Lady grunted, hauled herself up with the help of the paladin girl, made sure her pack and all the food and utensils were where they should be, and nodded at her. Udoorin reached down for Bremorel, but Laila shook her head and pointed up, then slowly, and with a grunt, picked her cousin up, and followed Lady and Moira.
“Come down, Gnine. We are leaving this spot..”, Udoorin shouted over the wind.
“Can’t!”, the little gnome shouted back down.
“You can climb up there but you can’t climb back down?”, the young man shouted.
“It wasn’t this wet when I climbed up here, alright!”, Gnine replied with freaked out sarcasm. “If I try and climb back down, I’ll slip and break, Heavens know what!”
“Jump, then. I’ll catch you!”, Udoorin shouted up at the little gnome.
“The Hell I will! I am not jumping down and hope that a lummox like you will catch me!”, Gnine replied with even more sarcasm.
“Lummox?”, Udoorin said, frowning up at him.
Still staring at the wet gnome, Udoorin stabbed his greataxe into the ground, then with a massive jump and a savage heave, he grabbed hold of the branch and pulled it arching down at a rather precipitous angle, and came face to face with the little gnome.
Gnine Tinkerdome ogled at the frowning head of the big, burly young man staring into his eye, and gulped.
“Now, then..”, the young man told the little gnome.
“Wha.. What are you doing?”, Gnine ‘eeped’ in horror as the heavy branch arched down even more.
“You have two options, Gnine, and neither is very good. One is where you let me get you down, the other is I let go of this branch and it snaps back up and slings you as far as you can go..”
Gnine ogled at him, some more.
“Very well.”, Udoorin said. “Sling it is..”
“No! Don’t leave the branch!”, Gnine ‘eeped’ again.
Young Udoorin let go of the branch..
..but not before he grabbed the little gnome by the scruff of his jacket and a mere foot from the ground.
“Please do not call me names, Gnine. It is a contemptible thing to do, and it is beneath you.”, the big, burly young man told the little gnome, lifting him up to an inch from his own face.
“But of course, young Master Udoorin.”, Gnine piped hastily.
“Don’t smarm, either. It doesn’t suit you, for one, and I am not some unstable nut job who will go berserk on you at the drop of a hat. Just stop with the name-calling, the insults, and the pranks. I am sure it was fun for you when I was fourteen. But it hasn’t been fun for me. Not then, not now.”, Udoorin said, still frowning at the diffident face staring back at him. “Now, then. Can you keep up? Something tells me this wind and this rain is not going to go away any time soon, and will only get worse.”
“I’ll do my best.”, Gnine replied. “You can put me down now.”
Udoorin grunted and put him down, went over to his very heavy backpack, hauled it up, threw it over his shoulders, and started towards the barely visible form of Laila fading in the savage downpour..



Aager Fogstep ran them through the chaos of the raging storm and through the forest for nearly a mile. With crisp, harsh, and grating growls, he urged them on. “Move!”, he very nearly cursed, as something deep down his barren soul steered, for he felt the tingling sensation of magic gathering in the savage storm.
What no one knew, not even Sheriff Standorin was that Aager Fogstep knew magic. Not intimately. And certainly not enough to be a wizard nor a sorcerer. But enough to have the upper hand in his numerous fights against all the cutters he had killed back at Drashan.
And it was also back then when he’d been a young teenager, that he had apprenticed himself to a beautiful, luscious, and a rather sensual young woman named Primrose, an alchemist and quite the dabbler of the arcane arts by day, and an enthralling belly dancer by night. A woman of soft flesh and charming smile, alluring eyes, and delicious-looking breasts with her numerous beady necklaces, bracelets, belly chains, and bangles.. She had been, perhaps, the only woman the very young, nameless boy from Drashan had ever been infatuated, with back then.
Who the illustrious Primrose had really been, no one had known. She had arrived at Drashan and set up shop, offering her services as an alchemist, a potion master, someone who concocted poisons and antidotes during her days, and offered other entertainments come sundown in the more ‘optimistically classy’ inns and saloons of that wretched island of thieves, thugs, murderers, lechers, whores, and pirates —the worst of the worst humanity had to offer anywhere in the known world.
How a nameless boy of early teens from the stinking and derelict streets and a beautiful young woman in her mid-twenties had met, and why she had tutored him was a story for another time. But the matter of fact was, she had learned him the ways of alchemy, potions, and poisons, and philosophy, history, religion, logic, and a pinch of magic.
It was her tutorage that had saved the young, teen Aager back then, and many times, and later as the young man Aager, on many occasions, upon the rooftops of Drashan, fighting and effectively killing many cutters, and when he had come to Serenity Home with Sheriff Standorin, some five years ago..
And due to that very same tutorage, that very moment, he had sensed something was terribly wrong with the wrathful storm raging around them. Hence he had dashed into the forest and sought something, anything, that would offer shelter. He wasn’t sure why, but he knew, he just knew they had to get out of this downpour..
..and whatever else it might entail.
“In here. Hurry..”, he growled as he pointed into a little, hut-like ‘thing’, build from interlocking branches, leaves, and vines.
Lady Moira, who had been running in front of the company, and right behind the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask, stared dubiously at the tiny hut.
“There is a hole in the hut that leads further into the ground.”, Aager growled. “Room enough for all of us, if barely.”
“What is this?”, Lady Magella asked, frowning at the tiny hut.
“I do not know. I found it while seeking shelter. Suffice to say, it is here, and it offers said shelter.”, he grated and pointed at the hut once again, telling the paladin girl to ‘go in’, already!
Moira dropped to her knees with a loud, clanking noise and crawled into the hut, and disappeared in it. Lady Magella mumbled some things under her breath, removed her backpack, and she too crawled into the hut and pulled her pack in behind her.
“What happened to her?”, Aager almost snarled, staring at the whimpering, curled-up girl in Laila’s arms.
“I don’t know. She’s in some kind of shock. I can’t bring her around and she needs to be out of this rain.”, Laila replied, panting heavily.
“Why isn’t young Udoorin carrying her?”, the man in dark leathers asked. “He did join to do the heavy lifting, after all.”
Laila gave him one of her best, angry glares.
“She is not heavy, and I am not letting anyone touch her, Master Aager.”, she snapped at him and without waiting for an answer, she set her cousin down, ducked under the hut, and dragged her in.
Gnine didn’t say anything when he caught up to them and just ran into the tiny hut, though from the expression on his face, he did seem like he was grossly offended about something.
Following him was the big, burly young man, Udoorin, who didn’t comment, nor argue about the size of the hut. He had, after all, been trained by Aager for the past five years and when push came to shove, he didn’t question the sinister-looking man. It was possible, should the man in dark leathers barked, ‘Jump!’, he would only ask, ‘How high?’
The young man tossed his very heavy backpack aside, knowing it wouldn’t fit through the tiny gap, pulled out his extra axes, and holding them firmly and away from his face, he slid and disappeared into the hut.
Aager gave a final look around him, scanning the hazy rain and the flight of leaves and branches, stared up when another greenish lightning flared up the churning, dark gray and purple sky, pressed his lips tightly together behind his half-mask, did he hold his breath!
There..
He heard it again. The thing he’d thought he had heard a few days ago;
The roar of a savage and feral beast!



What is this place?”, Lady Moira asked as she huddled next to Lady Magella, who was giving the little gnome a furious look.
“It is kinda cozy. I like!”, Gnine said impudently as he huddled on the other side of the tall paladin girl, holding up a small, portable lantern.
“I don’t think this hut, nor this ‘rabbit hole’ was originally prepared for such a crowd.”, Laila mused as she stared into one of the half a dozen sacks heaped into one ‘corner’ of the ten by fifteen foot, ‘earth’ room. It also had a low ceiling with roots sticking down where everyone except Lady Magella and Master Gnine had to crawl to get in. “I also think this was some sort of a way point for supplies, other than being a hidey-hole.”
Lady Magella frowned and reached for another of the sacks, untied it, and stared into it.
“Carrots.”, she reported. “They seem quite fresh and well preserved.”
“Yes. There are potatoes in this one.”, Laila said as she went for the other sacks. “Onions, turnips, garlic, some ginger, dried apples and peppers, yams, sweet corns, radishes, some well cured and dried meats, and quite a few smaller pouches stacked in one of the sacks. From the sharp scents, I suspect they are herbs and spices; black pepper, mint, salt, and some things I don’t know what. There are also a few small barrels of water.”
“Is it possible this batch might belong to the creature that attacked you?”, Moira asked.
Laila frowned as she assessed the items in the sacks for a long moment.
“No..”, she said finally. “These are.. I don’t know how to phrase it but, all of these seem a bit like someone who likes their veggies far too much. I mean, I am a ranger and part elf, but I wouldn’t eat some of the things here even if my father cooked them. Look at this. There is even some preserved broccoli here. Broccoli? Really? Who eats that thing? And the spices. Human, elf, dwarf.. no military would have any of the spices here. The salt, yes, because it has many applicable uses. The other spices? I am sure they also are good for you, but they would be far too expensive for the military, and one certainly wouldn’t bring them here and hide them. Not like this. I have never seen any military hideout like this one. I mean, if it were up to me, I’d have dug a hole, put everything in it, then covered it all up with dirt, flattened it, then scattered leaves and twigs to give it a natural camouflage and no one would have found it. I certainly wouldn’t have erected a hut over it, as small as it is.”
“Your assessment is correct, Ranger Laila.”, Aager growled as he too rummaged through the sacks. “This is not a military way point stock. Neither is it a smuggler’s stash.”
“How do you know?”, Lady asked, now turning her permanent scowl at him, not that she really needed any encouragement on his part.
“No weapons.”, Aager said simply. “I have found some medical supplies, but they are limited to bandages made of the simplest of cotton and clean linen, and mostly herbal remedies. There is water but no ale, rom, or any other form of liquor.”
He paused for a moment, looking, and considering something in the little pouch he had just pulled out of one of the sacks.
“And then there are these..”, he grated, turned around, and gave the pouch to the Temple Guardian.
Lady took the small pouch from him and curiously looked into it..
..and just sat there staring into it with a dumbstruck expression on her face.
“What is it?”, Gnine asked, voicing everyone’s provoked curiosity
Lady didn’t answer for a long moment.
Then, with a totally baffled expression on her face, she mumbled..
“Candy!”



What?”, asked Gnine incredulously.
“Candy. Looking at their colors, I am thinking; lemon, strawberry, mint, and grape flavored.”, Lady Magella repeated. “I don’t understand.”
Everyone stared at her equally baffled. Aager, however, was staring at all the sacks and reevaluating their content.
“Tracks.”, he growled suddenly. “Are there any tracks in here?”
Laila stared at him.
“A bit too late to ask for tracks, Sir. Everyone here has trampled over everything.”, she replied with a frown.
“Nobody move.”, he growled then turned to her. “Look. Anything you find will be of some use, Ranger Laila.”
“Is there something we should know, Master Aager? You seem to have an idea.”, Lady asked, staring curiously at him.
“Yes.”, the man in dark leathers growled, but he did not elaborate.
Lady Magella scowled at him, some more..
Laila only sighed, carefully lay her cousin down and pillowed one of the sacks under her head then fumed.
“The lantern please, Gnine.”, she said through gritted teeth. “And where did you even get a lantern?”
“It’s my own designs. I can turn it on and off at will. Or rather, there is a knob at the bottom. If you turn it clockwise, it will go brighter. If you twirl it counter-clockwise, it will go dimmer until it turns off.”, replied the little gnome with a smug sort of grin.
“This is fascinating. I didn’t know you could do things like this. Is it magic?”, she asked, ogling at the tiny lantern.
“It might be.. perhaps.. maybe.. a bit.”, Gnine said evasively.
“The tracks, Ranger Laila.”, Aager grated.
Laila fumed again, took the lantern, twirled the little knob at the bottom like she was told, and suddenly, the underground rabbit hole was flooded with a very bright light!
“Wow!”, exclaimed the ranger girl, squinting away from the lantern.
“You might want to dim it down a little bit.”, mumbled Gnine a bit embarrassed.
No one said anything but they were clearly impressed by the handy craftsmanship of the little gnome.
Laila scanned the room from one corner to the other, telling people to slowly get up without nudging, as she very carefully inspected the dirt floor. After perhaps a full thirty minutes, she gave her report..
“Like I said before. We trampled the room well and good, Sir.”, she said.
Aager didn’t press his lips together as he stared at her and quietly, he waited.
“I did, however, find a partial and it does not belong to any of us.”
“What? You got all of our foot sizes?”, Udoorin asked, a bit surprised.
“I don’t ‘got’ them, Udoorin. I just ‘know’ them. By looking at tracks, I can tell your weight, give or take a few pounds, likely your race, and possibly even your gender, and if you were extra burdened, along with how fast you were moving, or if you were tired or spry.”, she replied.
“The partial, Ranger Laila.” Aager prompted.
“Yes, well, I am not quite sure, to be honest, but it looks like a human footprint with an off skip to his gait. Very light. It could be because the tracks are old, or maybe because.. I don’t know.. Like I said, I am not sure.”, she said with a confused sort of frown on her face.
“Perhaps because the tracks are not quite so old, but the person they belong to was quite old?”, Aager offered.
Laila stared at him.
“It is possible.”, she conceded, then frowned again, started to say something else, but held herself.
“You have something else to add, Ranger Laila?”, Aager growled.
“I.. I found another set of prints..”, she mumbled.
Perhaps it was time for the man in dark leathers to stare, for he did. Silently, he squinted at her.
“Did you, now?”, he growled in a low tone.
“Yus!”, Laila admitted with a flushed face.
“Tiny feet, perhaps?”, he grated.
“Yus..”, she said, her face turning into a darker shade of red.
“What is it?”, Lady Magella asked, frowning at them. “What are you two talking about?”
Aager’s piercing gaze bore into the ranger girl for a breath longer before he turned to the Temple Guardian.
“I believe this ‘rabbit hole’ belongs to no other than Master Cathber Gwet’chen Bolgrig. I expect you know who he is?”, he grated.
“Yes, of course, I know who Master Cathber is, though I have never met him in person.”, Lady scowled at him.
“I suspect he has many other hidey-holes all over this forest, which is understandable.”, he growled.
“Why is that understandable?”, she frowned.
“This is his forest.”, Aager said simply.
“And the other set of footprints?”, she asked.
Aager did not reply immediately. He stared at Laila for a moment, who flushed even more.
“I am unable to give any more information on this matter at the time being, Temple Guardian.”, he grated finally.
That..
..offended the she-dwarf. Very much!
“Would you like to elaborate on that, young man?”, she asked, her face smoldering.
“No, Temple Guardian, I would not. Operational prudence.”, he replied.
That..
..offended the she-dwarf even more!
“Well, excuse me!”, she flared.
“Does the Serenity Home Temple share all their findings with the Sheriff’s Department, Lady Magella?”, Aager growled in a low voice.
“No. We do not.”, she admitted grudgingly.
“There you have it, Temple Guardian. I apologize for the inconvenience but should you want said information disclosed, you will have to run it by the sheriff himself.”, he said.
“What is your purpose here, then, if you are not speaking for the sheriff?”, she scowled.
“I represent the town, Lady. And the law, as ironic as that sounds. My purpose here, however, is to make sure two things happen. One is that the culprits who attacked Serenity Home are brought to justice by any means necessary, dead or alive. The means were left up to me to decide as I see fit.”, he growled.
“Is that so?”, the Lady Magella said with an even deeper scowl.
“Yes.”, the man in dark leathers replied coolly. “You see, I am not a public figure, Temple Guardian, hence I do not need to appear cute for the sake of appearances and what the people around me think is their prerogative. My second objective is to make sure everyone here is to return back to town alive, intact, and functional. My mission parameters were deliberately left vague as ‘get it done’, but not limited to it, which is where ‘as I see fit’ comes into play.”
Udoorin stared at Aager, then looked around at the others uncomfortably.
Gnine tried to make himself appear smaller and was fiddling with one of his sleeves.
Laila returned to her cousin’s side and took her into her arms again though her eyes were ablaze and she was fuming through her nose. It wasn’t clear as to why she was so furious. It was possible, no matter what she did, or how smart she was, things seemed to end in the favor of the man she very much disliked. And no, Laila did not hate Aager. She was almost sure her cousin did not go as far as hating him either. But they both resented him and found him very irksome. What the ranger girl truly found frustrating about him, however, was just how cunning, ruthless, remorseless, and soulless he really was.
Lady Magella’s face had turned outright black, and her lower lip was trembling with abject fury.
“It has come to my attention how you always seem to refer to Serenity Home as ‘your town’, and never ‘my town’, or even ‘our town’, Master Aager. One wonders as to why?”, she grated.
“One should not waste time entertaining such delinquencies, Lady Magella. It is pointless, it will serve no one, and it certainly will not help us catch our query.”, the man in dark leathers replied in his low voice.
“Perhaps you think yourself above the rest of us..”, she said, giving him a baleful glare.
“I shall be above everyone when I am hanging at the end of a noose, Temple Guardian, for I am living on borrowed time and hence see no reason to adopt your town as my own. What is not mine, I can never lose.”, he growled. “That being said, perhaps you would serve ‘your town’ better by seeing to the well being of the young ranger, Morel, for when she is down, she is not moving and neither is she doing her job. Ranger Laila, Master Udoorin, with me..”, he grated, and ghosted back out of the ‘rabbit hole’ and out into the storm..



You could have been a bit politer with Lady Magella, you know?”, Udoorin mumbled as they got out of the tiny hut.
The storming sky had settled down to a fitful, dissatisfied dawn, and grumbled every once in a while. The greenish lightnings still flickered among the churning clouds and the air smelled of sulfur and charred wood.
Master Aager Fogstep, Ranger Laila Wolvesbane, and young Udoorin Shieldheart were standing on top of a steep hillside, staring west of Ritual Forest, for there, far, far away, the dark, purple-black clouds seem to have congealed and something was going on there also..
..something disquietening and soul-draining.
Young Udoorin’s relation with Master Aager had begun some four or five years ago when Sheriff Standorin Shieldheart had sailed to the infamous Island of Drashan under the flag of truce to offer them a non-aggression treaty with the murderous pirates who resided there and ruled the bloody island with iron-fist tyranny. When the sheriff had returned from Drashan, he had not arrived alone, however. With him came the young, but soulless man, Aager Fogstep. No one quite knew why the sheriff had brought the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask with him, but shortly upon their arrival, the lax and mildly trained guards had learned, that their days of lazy response to their duties were very much over.
Within the first few weeks, a pandemic of cracked heads and bruised faces, and not a few stab wounds had broken out. Within the next few months, the level of discipline among said guards had risen exponentially, and by the end of the first year, they were par to Arashkan city militia!
First among the cracked heads had been no other than the sheriff’s own son, Udoorin, a troubled, and troublesome young man back then. Not unlike a daily prayer, the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask had come down on the young man, adamantly, and quite mercilessly, and had turned the irresponsible boy into ‘something’..
Suffice to say, their relationship had not started thus cordially. In fact, by the end of the first week, the boy had hated him —utterly.. By the end of the second month, and with the help of several of his friends, he had tried to even ambush the sinister man in hopes of some well-earned payback —with clubs! To be fair, the attempt hadn’t been a very brilliant plan, nor a convoluted one, to begin with, and had ended by him finding himself with a brand new crack on his skull, in jail, along with his co-conspirators, all entertaining similarly painful adornments!
In time, and particularly after the boy’s unexpected relative fame in Serenity Home when he had apprehended some strangers skulking in the town while his father, Sheriff Standorin, Master Aager, ranger masters Davien and Moorat, ranger novices Laila and Bremorel, and quite a number of the other rangers and town’s guards had been off to some operation at Oger’s Foot, that young Udoorin had come to realize the significance of the very harsh and quite painful training the man in dark leathers had learned him. And bit by bit, he had come to genuinely respect him, even though there was only a five-year age difference between them. Still though, and at times such as these, the young man still ‘mumbled’ his displeasure at him in hopes, perhaps, to get a ‘human’ and ‘humane’ response out of him.
“You want to tell me something, young Udoorin?”, Aager growled as he squinted into the dark, purple-black storm raging far in the distance.
“I just did, Master Aager. It wasn’t nice of you to talk like that to the Temple Guardian.”, Udoorin rumbled. “And what was it that was so important that you would talk her down the way you did.”
Aager turned to give the young man a long, cool gaze.
“I do not go out of my way to disrespect people, young Udoorin. This, you should know by now. And I have the utmost respect for Lady Magella. However, for someone who does not share information that might be pertinent for the safety of her own town, I see little reason to return the favor. As for what I refused to share, perhaps you should ask Ranger Laila about it, since, at the time, she, herself had refused to divulge said information in the first place.”, he grated.
“Perhaps you should not ask Ranger Laila about it at all!”, Laila spat. “It is none of your business.”
Udoorin cocked an eyebrow at her.
“That was a tad harsh, Laila. Did I do something to you that I am not aware of?”, he asked honestly.
Laila fumed, then sighed.
“I am sorry, Udoorin. Look, can we talk about this some other time? Or never? This really has nothing to do with you.”, she said then turned her attention to the raving storm. “That is not a natural occurrence at all.”
“No. It is not.”, Aager confirmed. “And I do not think it really is a storm.”
“How do you mean, Sir?”, Laila asked.
“I am not a weather expert, Ranger Laila. Had I been a Drashan pirate, I would have made some professional assumptions. You, on the other hand, would understand storms and weather patterns much better than I would in a forest. Does the appearance of a storm in such a relatively small area seem natural to you?”, he grated.
“No. Storms, as I understand them, are all about heat difference in usually two or rarely more weather patterns colliding with one another. They are extremely violent and tend to want to expand as far as possible to even out said differences. Of course, this is an overly simplified explanation but it is true.. in essence, and you would very, very rarely see it occur in such a small and confined area. At least not when there is plenty of space for it to spread.”, she mused. “And lightnings do not flash in green like these ones.”
In silent, spooked amazement, the three of them watched as the storm churned, boiled, and displayed its ‘contained’ wrath. One green lightning after another flashed savagely and struck down followed by an enormous thunderclap and between the claps, they heard screams!
And among the screams, they heard the sounds of howling ‘things’, the roaring cough of some feral beast, and something was laughing! It was a hallow, soul-ebbing laughter. Something elemental and primeval. Something that did not belong to this world..
“I.. I don’t know what is going on over there, but I suddenly don’t want to be here..”, Laila said, her voice trembling.
Young Udoorin did not say anything. He couldn’t. He merely watched with fearful fascination. He certainly wanted to run away, but it seemed like something weighed down his legs and he just couldn’t move. Aager didn’t say anything either. Whether it was because he was equally stunned or afraid, was unclear, for whatever expression there was to be had, it was hidden behind his half-mask. One thing he was certain of, however. Some great power was at play there, and it didn’t seem like something he wanted to get involved.
The howling storm crowded and smothered the confines of its funnel and ravaged the lands and the trees below it for another hour. When it was done, it didn’t slowly dissipate, nor did it leave quietly. With a final, ground-shaking howl, it just vanished and only the ruination of the lands right below it was the testament to its existence. The three stood there petrified for a long time until Aager shook free of his fear-shackles.
“We had better get moving. It would seem we are not alone in these woods seeking something today. And I want to put as much distance between whoever is out there and ourselves as possible.”, he growled.
“We are not going to investigate what just happened there?”, Udoorin asked.
“Young Udoorin. It would only appear whatever transpired there, only seems close. That distance, however, is deceiving and it will cost us at least two days to reach it, which is more time than we can spare. We have already lost almost a full day sitting out the unholy storm and my only hope is that our query also hid and waited it out. That, however, will work more to his advantage than it will for ours since the storm would have washed away all his tracks. I am guessing he also knows this and will use that time to either foolishly rest, or smartly run as fast and as far as he can.”, Aager replied with smoldering anger. “We will return back to the hut, collect the others, and move out.”
Then, on the way back, Aager leaned in and growled at the young man.
“The next time you want to question me about not sharing information, young Master Udoorin, perhaps you should listen to your own advice.”
“I don’t know what you are talking about, Sir.”, Udoorin said with a baffled expression on his face.
“Junior Temple Guardian Thomas Dimwood was never mentioned in your long report about the events that took place in your town when we were gone for the Oger’s Foot operation. Yet you let that slip several days ago when you were talking to Master Gnine. Now, why is that?”, he grated as he stared at the young man.
Udoorin’s face flushed.
“I.. I wasn’t trying to hide anything, Master Aager. I promise. Thomas asked me not to have him get involved. He was there because I asked for his help. He knocked one of the men trying to get away by clubbing him with a flail. I honored his wishes because he’s a good man and my friend. And to be honest about it, it didn’t seem pertinent to me back then.”, he said hastily.
“It isn’t up to you, nor is it up to him, to decide what is pertinent and what is not. If everyone redacts and serves what information they wish, said information becomes inaccurate, which is to say, wrong people may get killed. Our job is to find security risks where Serenity Home and all the lands around it are concerned. Thousands of lives depend on the information we gather. If the information is lacking, people lose their lives. Do you understand that?”, the man in dark leathers grated.
“Yes, Sir. I do.”, Udoorin replied mutely, his face burning now.
“One day, your father will grow old, young man. His only wish is that you take up his job as the new sheriff of Serenity Home.”, Aager said.
“What if I don’t want to be the sheriff.”, Udoorin mumbled.
“What if you don’t?”, Aager growled. “Perhaps you should ask your father why he became a sheriff in the first place. I am sure that will give you the correct perspective, considering you were born because he chose to be the sheriff!”
“What?”, the young man exclaimed, staring at the man in dark leathers, but Aager did not elaborate.
Udoorin fumed in frustration as he followed him down the hill and to the tiny hut.



Bremorel was ‘awake’ when they ducked into the tiny hut and crawled down the rabbit hole. Her face was pale and she was still jerking and spasming uncontrollably every once in a while as she tried to slurp the hot soup Lady Magella had made for her and the others while they waited for the savage storm to blow out.
“But why was I affected so much?”, she was saying. “Did anyone else panic and collapse?”
“My dear girl, you did collapse, but what you experienced was not panic.”, the Temple Guardian said.
“It was, Lady. It was sheer, blind panic. I felt.. I felt like I was..”, she mumbled, but fell silent and did not voice what it was she’d felt.
“It is alright to be afraid, Ranger Bremorel.”, Moira said kindly. “I am afraid of many things and I do not fear to admit it. It isn’t bravery if you can not feel fear. It is bravery when you are afraid, but still, go ahead and do what needs to be done.”
“This was.. this was like a nightmare.. It engulfed me and I couldn’t breathe.. Darkness was everywhere.. And death..”, she said hoarsely as her face flushed in mortification. “I have never been so afraid in my entire life.”
Lady Magella gave her a thoughtful look. She had known Bremorel since the day she’d been brought to Serenity Home and placed in the orphanage when she’d barely been four years of age. She had been an angry little girl back then, always shouting at the top of her lungs and always fighting. That hadn’t changed much in the following years.
When she had been twelve, she’d picked a fight with the sheriff’s son, young Udoorin, who was also of the same age, along with three other boys. The sheriff himself had intervened and she had been arrested and put to jail for a week to ‘cool off’, then drafted off by Ranger Master Moorat as a ranger initiate to help her channel her anger to something useful, or at the very least, something less destructive.
That particular idea hadn’t come from Moorat, but from Lady Magella’s spiritual superior and the head of Serenity Home Temple, Senior Temple Guardian Demos Lightshand, though no one had told that to the young girl, and to be fair, Moorat had resented having been forced to put up with ‘that little demon!’ who had clearly been foisted on him. Sheriff Standorin had certainly found the whole idea somewhat a ‘novelty’ and told his brother-in-law, Moorat, to stop moping and to make a ranger out of said little demon..
Under the harsh tutorage of the ranger master, Bremorel had grown and flourished, and she had become a very good ranger, making Moorat quite proud. Unbearably so at times. It was all he could do but strut before his brother-in-law, Sheriff Standorin, whenever the young ranger attained a new achievement, putting the sheriff in despair. Not because of the young ranger’s well-earned achievement, but because of Moorat’s gloat! The point that interested, and worried, Lady Magella was, had the girl really gotten over her anger?
But then, that was the question, wasn’t it?
Lady Magella had hoped that she had but the evidence proved otherwise. What the evidence also showed was that the young woman had also never quite gotten over neither her mother’s nor her father’s death.
Lady never blamed her for that. All things considered, who would get over such a sudden, drastic, and horrifying loss, especially taking in the fact that the young woman had witnessed their deaths at the hands of the orcish raiding party from as close as a few feet, hiding in a tiny closet. Hungry, thirsty, very much in shock, and perhaps permanently traumatized, she had sat in her parent’s blood, expecting their butchered corpses to wake up for days until she was found..
..which explained, Lady thought, why the girl had succumbed into panic-induced shock, right when the storm had struck, confirming her suspicions that the storm had not been a natural occurrence, but something else.
Temple Guardian Lady Magella was a priestess. But her particular school of choice had been of ‘Life’. And all her teachings in the past two decades told her that the storm had been, not precisely evil, but it certainly had ‘death’ in it. It also said something about young Bremorel, for she had felt the ‘dread’ of the storm so thoroughly and down to her very core. That the young ranger was exceptionally sensitive to death. Or to put it into a more tangible perspective, Bremorel had become intimately, if not quite attuned, per se, but rather aligned to death, if that made any kind of sense. Lady Magella suspected, given enough time, the girl would become better at understanding what she felt, in turn, becoming stronger for it, should she master and harness her traumatic past and hence, her fears.
“I wouldn’t worry about it, my dear child. We were all afraid. It may have very well happened to you because you were closest to it at the time. When your cousin brought you, it was all she could do to stay standing.”, she told her with a surprisingly reassuring tone and a gentle smile..
..which freaked the Hell out of the ranger girl!
“That is true, dear Bremorel. I am a paladin and I could hardly stay standing, myself.”, Moira admitted from where she sat.
“What she said.”, Gnine piped as he slurped his soup. “I ended up hugging the tree I had climbed and couldn’t even get back down. Udoorin ended up dragging me off it, and quite literally..”
Bremorel didn’t say anything for a long while as she drank her own hot soup from her bowl.
Her hands were still trembling but at least the jerky spasms had stopped. She knew the others were trying to help and ease her embarrassment if nothing else. She also knew what she had seen, or thought she had seen in that darkness when it had engulfed her. And once again, she was four, and she was back in her home at Dim Woods..
“Morel, my sweet baby, quick. In here. Hide..”, her mother, Seleina, was saying and from her voice, little Morel knew her mother was so afraid. And there were tears in her eyes as well.
Bremorel remembered the screams coming from outside their little woodmen’s cottage, but for whatever reason, their volume had suddenly become barely audible.
“Mom. I can help. Please, let me help.”, the little Morel had begged as her mother carried her over to the tiny, handcrafted closet box, opened it, pulled out its few, poor, handwoven content, and placed her in it.
“Listen to your mother, Morel.”, her father, Aramsis, had rumbled as he walked up to them. He had a big, wood men’s axe in one hand and another, smaller axe in the other.
Bremorel’s father had been a large man with broad shoulders, and powerful arms and little Morel remembered watching him chop wood outside their home with mandatory ease.
In retro respect, she had always wondered how he had been so gentle with her mother, who had been a tall, willowy sort of girl with long, dark hair, long, slender arms, and legs.
“You must be brave, my beloved little Morel.”, his father had said, kneeling next to the closet box.
“And never cry, or make any sound. You are a Darkmaine and more important, you are a Sunstrider. Darkmaine’s never shy from a fight, and Sunstrider’s never shy from life.”, he had said, grinning like a boy.
For whatever reason, that had given all the backbone both she, and her mother had needed..
“I will stay in this box, father. And I will not cry. I will be quiet as a mouse and no one will hear me.”, she had promised.
Aramsis had given her one of his big, broad, and very much proud smiles and hugged her, very tightly, and then rose to make room for her mother.
Her mother knelt before her and had hugged her as well, even more tightly, as she had smelled her hair, and deeply, then given her one last look and whispered to her..
“You are your father’s darling and my beautiful baby. And my beloved sister, Seraphim Silverdûne’s niece. I love you as she loved me. Never forget it..”
With that, she had closed the lid to the small, chest-like box and her father had given the smaller axe to her mother. They had nodded once and turned to face the door.
And as if on cue, the screams coming from outside were audible again..
..and the door to their little, woodsmen’s cottage had burst open, letting in the orcish raiders..
Bremorel shuddered, then sighed.
It would seem, that years just couldn’t wash some things off her desolate memories..
“It is time to move out.”, growled a voice and ‘blessedly’ tore her away from her gloomy past. Then she woke up to the fact that it was that evil guy, Master Aager, who had spoken, and she scratched over ‘blessed’ and scowled in his direction, just for a good measure.
It would also seem, that the young ranger girl, Bremorel was a tad vindictive like that.
“We shall move out when the children are done putting some hot soup into their stomachs.”, Lady Magella said, and to Bremorel’s delight, she was also scowling at the man in dark leathers.
“This isn’t a stroll in the woods, Temple Guardian. The storm has had its fill and our query is likely on the move once more.”, grated Aager.
“Our query, as you like to call him, is wet, hungry, and is likely lost in the woods, Master Aager. I have no desire to emulate his stupidity by letting my children do the same.”, she replied with her jaw set as if she was crunching walnuts!
Aager fumed silently.
“I guess I shall have to bow to the inevitable obstinacy of the dwarven kin.”, he replied in his low, gravelly voice, crawled up to the Temple Guardian, and opened one, empty hand.
Lady Magella stared at him, and at the empty hand.
“What?”, she asked, a bit perturbed.
“My share of the hot soup, Lady. Unless I am exempt of your tender care..”, he growled, though there was amusement in his dark eyes.
Lady scowled at him, then poured him a bowl of hot soup as well.
“Indeed, your tender care forever amazes me, Lady.”, the man in dark leathers said politely, nodded at her, then settled down next to the little gnome, Gnine, who gave him a careful, sidelong glance, and started gulping down his own remaining soup.
“Ahh, food!”, Udoorin said brightly and crawled up to the Temple Guardian followed closely by Ranger Laila..



There is death in the air tonight.”, Lady Moira murmured as she stared up at the dark, chilly sky. It was was early summer and it shouldn’t have been this cold. Ritual Forest always enjoyed a ‘blessed’ climate, even during winters; never really deadly cold. In fact, one could survive the seasons with a rudimentary tent, a small campfire, and a blanket, and the beautiful forest itself offered many little ponds of clear water and bounty in the plenty.
Tonight, however, something seemed to have overridden the norms of the forest and it was, even now, prowling and stalking in the night with a bloody vengeance in mind..
“No dear, child, there is ‘murder’ in the air tonight.”, Lady Magella corrected. “I can feel it in my very bones. Many murders have already happened, but the thirst for more has not been quenched.”
“Cheery..”, Gnine mumbled from behind the Temple Guardian.
“No, it is not!”, the she-dwarf snapped.
“I am sorry, Temple Guardian!”, the little gnome piped hastily. “Of course, it is not! I mean, how could it ever be? Murder is an evil sin!”
The Temple Guardian turned around and gave the little gnome a burning glare.
Gnine gulped.
“I don’t need your smart mouth, Gnine Tinkerdome. I respect your uncle. I would like to respect his niece as well. Don’t mare his reputation by your delinquent behaviors.”, she hissed at him.
Gnine gulped again.
“No, Temple Guardian, I won’t. Of course, I won’t!”, he replied immediately.
The she-dwarf gave him another burning glare, then turned around and in a commanding tone, she very nearly barked at the young man walking next to the paladin girl, Moira, just a few feet ahead.
“Udoorin. Drop that backpack of yours and go find the Drashan. Tell him we are going to make camp early this evening. I want a large bonfire going. I want you, him, and young Moira on watch, and I want the ranger girls resting. He’s been running those poor girls into the ground ever since we left Serenity Home.”
“Uhhmm..”, mumbled Udoorin, a bit surprised at her abrupt manner. “Okay, but who is going to carry my pack while I go and find Master Aager?”
“I will bring it along.”, she said harshly.
“Uhhmm.. Are you sure, ma’am?”, he asked dubiously. “It’s.. a bit heavy..”
“I am sure I can handle a backpack, young man.”, she scowled at him. “Now, go!”
Udoorin dropped his pack and took off as Lady Magella mumbled something about the lack of respect in kids nowadays, grabbed at the backpack’s straps, heaved..
..and fell!
“What in the name of Great Heavens..”, she spluttered as she picked up herself and stared down at the pack.
It hadn’t moved an inch.
She made another go at it and pulled, heaved, pushed, dragged but it still didn’t move..
..at all!
“Well, really, now!”, she flared.
Gnine hiccuped and bit at his knuckles. If he laughed, he just knew the Temple Guardian would hurt him!
“What does that boy have in this bloody thing?”, she fumed. “Lady Moira, if you will, do give me a hand with this.”
“I apologize, Temple Guardian. But my code of honor forbids me to touch another’s property without the express permission of its owner.”, Moira said, also trying to hide her smile. “Whatever it is young Master Udoorin has in there, surely he must think it essential to carry around with such arduous fervor.”
“I.. see..”, the she-dwarf said with a frown. “Well, I suppose you are right. We shall have to wait until they return, then.”
It took perhaps half an hour for the young man to find Master Aager, which is to say, the man in dark leathers crept up to him in total silence and growled in his low, sinister voice..
“You are out of line, young Master Udoorin. I believe I had warned you about not doing that. During our first meeting.”
Udoorin gulped.
“Please don’t club me over the head again. I was trying to find you upon Lady Magella’s orders.”, he said hastily.
“Ahh.. Is the Temple Guardian giving the orders now?”, he mused.
“I.. wouldn’t know, Sir. I believe she wants to make an early camp. She said something about ‘murder in the air this evening”, and sent me off to find you.”, Udoorin explained quickly.
“You left the Temple Guardian alone, in the woods?”, Aager growled.
“Lady Moira was with her. And Gnine..”, Udoorin gulped.
“Lady Moira is an unknown entity in this company, young Master Udoorin. I have yet to hear why she came to Serenity Home in the first place. Something she has thus carefully avoided in not mentioning. As for Master Gnine, I shudder to think how he would fare should the Temple Guardian come in harm’s way. I wouldn’t mind at all if he ran and never came back, but not at the expense of Lady Magella.”, the man in dark leathers grated and started walking towards the company.
“I.. wasn’t aware you disliked Gnine so much, Sir.”, Udoorin mumbled. “I certainly wasn’t aware you were so fond of Lady Magella. Considering how she seems to want to burn you at every opportunity.”
“‘Dislike’ is a word I would find falling short of the little gnome, young Udoorin. I detest idlers and those who think they are somehow entitled. Suffice to say, it is up to Master Gnine to change my opinions about him, not up to me to fix it for him. As for the Temple Guardian, she is the core of this company. Our rangers are our guides, yes, and should anything happen to one of them, we still have the other to lead the way. Even should I fall, the company can still achieve its goal. Should something happen to the Temple Guardian, however, this company will dwindle and eventually die, for she is the only one among us who can keep us all alive, in the most literal sense.”, Aager growled and there was no emotion in his voice..
..at all.
“That is a rather cold way of looking at things, isn’t it?”, the young man said with a very disturbed tone.
Aager Fogstep did not reply.
The man was still young and this was not Drashan. He’d had his empathy drained out of him by the time he’d been five but apparently, things were different here, and even after five whole years he’d spent at Serenity Home, he still couldn’t understand how naively optimistic these people were.
“What took you so long, young man?”, frowned Lady Magella when the young man returned with the man in dark leathers.
“I am sorry, ma’am, but Master Aager isn’t easy to find, you know? Why are you still here?”, Udoorin said.
“We couldn’t move your pack.”, the Temple Guardian said flatly. “Just what do you have in this thing?”
“Uhhmm.. this and that.”, the young man replied evasively.
“There is no point in wasting time here, Lady Magella. The rangers have already set up camp some five hundred yards north of here.”, Aager growled.
“They have, have they? Good for them. Those girls need the rest.”, she scowled a tad belligerently at him.
“I guess they do, Temple Guardian. Shall we?”, Aager offered mildly.
Lady Magella seemed like she was looking for something to argue but the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask hadn’t really left anything to argue about, so she let loose a ‘humph’, and started towards the camp.
Udoorin hauled his very heavy backpack and followed her with Lady Moira, Gnine, and Aager bringing up the rear.



The next storm came without any warning.
The ranger girls had lit a large bonfire, and against Aager’s better judgment, but he’d held his opinions on the matter to himself. For whatever reason, the Temple Guardian felt agitated towards him and he did not want to turn the company against one another, nor to disrupt their loyalties.
He himself was affiliated directly with the sheriff’s office.
The young ranger girls, Laila and Morel, however, were not. Their loyalties were to Serenity Home and to their respective ranger masters, Davien Hart and Moorat Maelstrom.
The Temple Guardian, Lady Magella’s affiliation was to her temple, and to Senior Temple Guardian Demos Lightshand. Young Udoorin did not have any official affiliation even though his father was the sheriff of Serenity Home. The boy also had high respect for the town’s temple, the Senior Temple Guardian himself, and by his proxy, for Lady Magella.
The young paladin girl, Lady Moira had no affiliation to Serenity Home at all. While her military command and training would place her under the de facto jurisdiction of the sheriff’s department, her spiritual command, however, would put her under the temple’s jurisdiction.
As for the little gnome, Master Gnine, he had no affiliations with any official office, department, or temple, making him a loose cannon however one looked at it.
Aager did not like politics. He knew the necessity for it at times, but rarely did he partake nor want to have anything to do with it, and those who knew him well enough also knew never to politic him! Hence the man in dark leathers, hood, and half-mask opted to seethe in silence as he stared into the night, his back turned to the fire, and somewhat apart from the rest of the company. He didn’t really need these people to like him. But he did need their cooperation, preferably willingly. A something he knew wouldn’t happen should he further aggravate them.
It was likely everyone around the campfire, at that very moment, would have been surprised, and possibly even be somewhat ashamed had they known, the man in dark leathers did not care, at all, whether they appreciated his efforts, his tenacity to pursue, and his dedication to his work that would inevitably and inadvertently save the lives of ‘their’ town. It was likely they didn’t, or perhaps, simply couldn’t understand his efforts, his tenacity to pursue, or his dedication to his work. After all, practical pragmatism at his level of understanding and application would likely constitute, and consequently be branded as ‘sin’.
“Stew?”, said a voice, and Lady Moira was standing next to him with a steaming wooden bowl and a hand-carved wooden spoon.
Aager gave the tall, well-built, and perfectly proportionate paladin girl a barely discernible side glance before he took the bowl of steaming stew that smelled of some delicious aroma; apparently, the Temple Guardian had gone out of her way to prepare the stew to be extra nurturing, if not outright delicious.
He took a small sip from the stew and frowned.
This was not Lady Magella’s cooking.
The Temple Guardian had a heavy hand when it came to her preaching and she showed a similar tenacity, or perhaps ‘doggedness’, when it came to her cooking.
This stew, had sweet potatoes, carrots, spars onions, ground apples, and minced rabbit meat. It was lightly spiced and had something else in it. Something he couldn’t quite figure of. He took a long, deliberate whiff of the steam and it clicked. There was rosemary in the stew, a something that was not in the Temple Guardian’s repertoire for ingredients that he was aware of.
“It would seem young Ranger Morel does know how to cook.”, he growled. “Does she know you brought this to me?”
“Ranger Morel is a greater person than you give her credit, Master Aager. It is true, she is young, and it would seem there is some sour history between her, her cousin Laila, and you, but I doubt, under any circumstance would she wish ill of you.”, Moira replied, giving him one of her pretty, broad, and genuine smiles.
“That is yet to be seen.”, Aager grated. “I am surprised the Temple Guardian let her cook, seeing as how concerned she seems of her ‘children.’”
“‘Let’, is a powerful word, Master Aager. The esteemed Temple Guardian is not a tyrant, after all.”, Moira said, stifling a laugh.
“I beg to differ.”, the man in dark leathers replied grudgingly.
“She does, however, honestly and genuinely believes that the people around her are, in fact, her very own children; young and foolish. A feeling she has adopted and opted to extend even to me, which is the point.”, the tall, comely girl said.
“There is a point, then?”, Aager growled.
“But of course, Master Aager.”, she replied. “A point you are missing.”
Aager turned to face the tall, reddish-brown-haired girl and cocked an eyebrow at her.
“Do enlighten me.”, he ‘almost’ snarled.
Lady Moira took absolutely no umbrage at his attitude. Her smile became even broader and she shined like a bright star.
“As misbehaved as you are, from her relative point of view, willy-nilly, you, Sir Aager, are one of her children, also.”



Huh.”, Aager grunted.
And just when he’d thought he had figured out ‘people’..
Apparently, there was more to said people than some equation no matter how pragmatic his approaches were. Also apparently, ‘people’ preferred to settle for foolish feelings than to adopt practical efficiency even in situations as dire as life and death.
‘People’, Aager thought, were foolish indeed.
“So they sent the paladin to put me in my place?”, he grated.
Moira smiled once more.
“No one sends a paladin but the Great Heavens, Master Aager. Much like our esteemed rangers, you have also been running around all day, every day, since we left Serenity Home, making sure we were safe and beyond ambush. I brought you the stew because it wouldn’t be out of place to assume you also would be humanly hungry. Even us paladins require it. True, our souls hunger for spiritual surcease, but our bodies run on food.”, she replied serenely.
“Why are you here?”, he asked suddenly.
“I thought that was rather apparent, Master Aager.”, she said, staring meaningfully at his stew.
“No. Why are you really here?”, Aager growled.
“Ahh. You are referring to my arrival and consequently, my presence at Serenity Home.”, she replied calmly. “I was informed by my direct superior that he had received disturbing news about possibly sinister activities around some ruins not too far from here and was told to investigate. I was also told to get in contact with the locals in hopes of getting more, preferably up-to-date information of the surrounding lands. I was seeking likely companions for my venture, which is why I was in your town. Suffice to say, things turned out not quite as I expected. When your sheriff, Standorin Shieldheart, offered me the job to accompany and safeguard their people, I agreed. One, because that is what we paladins do; we safeguard those who are entrusted to us, and two, I was hoping our trek would lead us to my destination. Either way, I shall stay with you and yours, and make sure they are safeguarded and returned back, ‘alive, intact, and functional, as you phrased it.”
Aager stared at her.
“That was very impressive, Lady Moira. You have said many things, yet, neither did you answer my question, nor did you reveal anything verifiable.”, he grated.
“Yup!”, she said with a merry grin.
“I wouldn’t have thought paladins would be so convoluted.”, he growled.
“There are no convolutions involved, Master Aager. It is merely a matter of operational prudence. I apologize for the inconvenience, and as much as I would personally have preferred to divulge the details of my presence here, you would first have to run it by my superior himself.”, she said with a sweet smile.
“Shrewd, Lady Moira, and touché. You have just stabbed me with my own blade.”, Aager grated and with a tint of amusement.
Funny how of all the people in the company, this red-headed girl, a total stranger, had turned out to be more of a mental challenge than he would have given her credit. She was cool, calm, undemanding, and she never shied from sharing her brilliant and sunny smile despite his dark presence, hinting to him, that she truly did believe ‘good’ and ‘kindness’ would prevail and whether Aager found that naive, she didn’t mind at all.
It was then, he felt a chilly updraft even though they were out and in a forest and a tingling sensation buzzed around his fingertips— ⊗
“Honestly, Master Aager, that was never my intention but a mere happy coincidence.”, she said with a grin. “I was saving that particular explanation in case someone did ask for the reasons for my presence. You just happened to be the lucky winner.”
“I would have thought Temple Guardians and paladins did not place much faith in coincidences..”, Aager growled as he looked down where his fingers rested..
⊗ —on his dagger’s pommel.
“EVERYONE, SCATTER!”, he barked as he shouldered the paladin girl..
..and knocked her down!
And without any warning, the second storm exploded right over their heads!



Something stung Aager somewhere down his hip and pain slashed at him. He grunted as the jabbing pain ricocheted back up his spine and he dropped to the ground.
With a loud clank, the paladin girl, Moira, also dropped next to him with stunned surprise, not quite understanding why the man in dark leathers had tackled her..
..until a savage thunder clapped right above them!
Aager looked down to see smoke rising from the ground, and from his side. He didn’t wait. With inhuman resolution, he ignored the stabbing pain and rolled away from Moira just as the sky coughed and a sheet of blinding flashes of lightnings came stabbing and tearing at them followed by a series of deafening thunderclaps.
The man in dark leathers felt numb and concussed.
The light was just too bright and painful to look at, and the staccato of thunderclaps was too loud and disturbing to shrug off.
“Scatter and.. take cover!”, he managed to splutter as he tasted blood.
He had bitten his own tongue and he hadn’t even felt it.
“Lady Moira..”, he growled in the general direction he thought she was.
“I am here, Master Aager. Are you alright? Your leg appears charred. Hold on, I am coming. We must get you out of this storm.”, she shouted from somewhere behind him, and with a voice that had much more control of herself.
Aager heard the clanking of the girl in her plate armor when another lightning flickered and there was a sonic blast followed by a grunt, and another clanking of armor as the paladin collapsed.
“I am alright, I am alright. It’s merely a flesh wound. Be right there..”, Lady Moira shouted ‘merrily’.
“No.”, Aager grated. “Get to the Temple Guardian and get her out of here.”
“I may not leave an injured comrade behind, Sir Aager.”, she objected.
“GET THE TEMPLE GUARDIAN OUT OF HERE!”, Aager snarled!
To give her credit, Moira did not stop to further object, or question his judgment, nor did she look around dumbfounded, or even confused.
She started chanting something and dashed to where the bonfire was hissing and spitting fitfully under the raging storm and there she found Lady Magella standing around, fists on her hips, her hair drenched and plastered, and with an expression that said she was clearly and highly offended about something!
“Udoorin. Get out of that armor, now! Bremorel, stay away from him. He’s a walking lightning rod! Where is that little no-good-gnome! Laila, take your cousin and go find him!”, she was shouting, forgetting the fact that she too, was wearing chainmail armor.
“I can find him faster if I go alone, Lady.”, Laila objected.
“Don’t argue with me, girl. TAKE YOUR COUSIN AND GO FIND GNINE!”, Lady blared at her.
Both Laila and Bremorel took off, parting and looking under bushes for the little gnome while young Udoorin had dropped his very heavy backpack, tossed all his weapons, and was struggling with his chain armor as the sky above them churned and blazed more lightnings and the night shuddered with growling thunderclaps.
Moira skid next to Lady, gave her a curt nod, and finished her chanting..
..and with a great whine, a massive warhorse, some eighteen hands tall, rose out of the ground with brilliant, celestial light!
Lady Magella ogled at the great, holy steed as Moira grabbed her, and without giving her the time to protest, hauled her up and sat her on the saddle of the massive beast..
“WHAT ARE YOU DOING, GIRL?”, shrieked the she-dwarf.
“You and the Great Heavens forgive me, Temple Guardian, but you have to go.”, Moira said guiltily and to the horse, she whispered, “Run, Ayla. Run like the wind. Take the Temple Guardian to safety!”
The great steed reared, and took off with the screaming she-dwarf!
Moira turned around to see a feral streak of lightning tearing at the ground sending chunks of tuft and turf, and Udoorin, flying in the air. The young man dropped back down like a sack, some ten yards away, with a pained grunt, got up, and started running towards the trees.
She saw Master Aager roll on the ground and zig-zag through the clearing and watched in horrified fascination as the night lit up and another lightning came flashing down..
..then again.. and again!
What fascinated her was how the growling man in dark leathers danced and evaded the forking spears of nature with inhuman determination. What had her truly lose her calm was the fact that the lightnings seem to follow him! As swift as he was, however, he finally dropped when a tree, a bare few feet away from him got struck, split down the middle, splintered, and came crashing down on him, and buried him under its heavy branches.
“That just can’t be natural.”, she said hoarsely..
..and comprehension clicked in her mind.
There was someone out there and whoever he was, he was responsible for the storm and the lightnings, and for whatever reason, he was punishing them.
“You may think me naive for believing in ‘good’ and ‘kindness’, Master Aager, but I do not.”, she murmured.. and she stepped in front of the dying bonfire, and in plain sight, and did she raise her arms into the night as if in supplication and called;

Ye, who hast cast dire storms,
and thunder, and thus wild,
Upon us, I beseech, do look
and deep, for we are beguiled.
Sense, do I loss, and wrath,
and sorrow, and anger,
Yet do I sense wonts,
and desires, and do they hanker.
A peek, is I beg, for you
to see in mine truss.
And see your sin, beckon
with haste and char us.

And a single beam of light lazily came down from the night sky and pushed the darkness away. It was a bright, golden light. A beautiful light. A light that bespoke of High Heavens and Angels beyond.
And just like that, the storm ceased, the rain stopped, and a choking silence settled into the night.
In the brilliant beam of light, Moira stood kneeling, rigid, unmoving, and petrified..
..and a little figure in tattered clothes came crawling from behind some trees just beyond the dying and hissing bonfire. In abject fear, she clawed her way to the unmoving paladin and prostrated herself before her, moaning..
“Burn me.”
“Please, burn me.”
“I want to be free of my demons..”
“Burn me..”
















