Chapter Six Hundred And Seventy Six – 676
Chapter Six Hundred And Seventy Six – 676
Chapter Six Hundred And Seventy Six – 676
The night found Vess with her aunt, quietly chatting after a long soak in a copper tub that her porters had managed to carry from the wreckage of her manor. Hot water had been hauled up long flights of stairs just for them, but Vess didn't regret the wait. She felt more relaxed now than she had in weeks. Clean and smelling faintly of flowers, her aunt was carefully brushing Vess' dark locks before a long, gilded mirror.
"You rescued quite a bit from your manor, I see."
Verona shook her head, a small smile on her lips. "My attendants insisted. They carried much of it to the wagons even as the place was burning around us. Said a lady should never be without her essentials."
One of the maids posted by the door blew a quiet, satisfied breath through her nose. Aunt Verona smiled indulgently. "Wine?"
"Of course."
More than just the gilded mirror survived their manor's fall. Sumptuous rugs covered the cold floor, each one worth more than Zara's old manor in Haarwatch. There were no windows within the room, but Manalamps were affixed to the walls, bound by sigils and fed by the ambient magic around them. They gave off a calming, buttery glow that could be changed with the turn of a dial.
The largest indulgence, of course, was the large carved bed frame and mattress, upon which they sat. Thick, hand-stitched silken sheets from Jaast were tucked on, along with fluffy, Avum-feather pillows. The headboard was carved to resemble a roaring lion's head, with sapphires set into its eyes.
"Vessilia, where did you meet Felix?"
Vess cursed inwardly. She'd been distracted by the bath and the wine and her appreciation of the room. She had expected an interrogation earlier but it's delay lulled her into a false security. "In the Foglands. He saved me from a pair of Frost Giants."
"By himself?"
"His Companion helped."
"The dog? How much help can a hound provide, however intelligent?"
"I think you will be surprised," Vess said, managing to keep her tone even. If Pit wanted to keep his true form hidden, then she was not about to reveal it.
"He's strong then. To help someone he'd never met is not something I'd expect from a wanderer in the wilderness."
"Felix is...unique," Vess said, smiling to herself. When she thought of the man her stomach fluttered in the strangest of ways. It wasn't entirely unpleasant. "He is a good man."
"And you are courting?"
Vess coughed, nearly choking on her wine this time. Aunt Verona only laughed. "You think I'm blind? They way you two look at each other is enough to heat a room."
She blushed, and it was especially embarrassing to see it happen in the mirror in real time. "Yes. We are courting."
Well, I suppose I must apologize to your father when we rescue him. Sending you across the Continent had some real benefits. Quite the strapping young man, and a king to boot.
Vess frowned. "He is good and kind and filled with the urge to do what is necessary. His station has no bearing on my affection. I would not turn him away even if he lost all of his power."
Verona nodded firmly, a pleased smile plastered on her face. "Just so."
In the well-lit confines of the Fenwald Forge, Harn struggled beneath the weight of a thick stone as big as him. It wasnt the first stone hed moved that day or the largest, but for a moment he feared it would be his last. Yet with a combination of his crutches, his arm strength, and pure tenacious Will, he finally shoved it the last finger span it needed. Gravity took hold, pulling the whole block forward, where it slammed into place with a muffled boom. Panting and exhausted, he collapsed against the side of the now mostly rebuilt furnace.
"Just about ready to light it," he said between large gulps of air.
While the process was taking a while, the forge was starting to look functional. In addition to the single furnace, hed repaired a single workbench, cleared the quenching troughs, and rescued a mithril anvil from beneath a heap of collapsed masonry.
"You wanna see inside?" Several gave begrudging nods. "Then you'll swear an Oath, right here and now."
Silver light gathered in Harns palm, twisting with potential. "Break it, and you'll splinter your foundation and bleed from the eyes and nethers till you die. Still eager?" When none of them backdown, not even the ones that looked ready to faint, Harn grinned. Swear on it.
"Well, when you put it that way, how can we refuse?" Selin said, rolling his eyes. But the Half-Elf reached out and grasped the oath, tangling it around his own fist. The other Dragoons soon followed suit, until the silver threads sunk into all of their chests and tugged at Harn like a pack of lead weights.
"Good," Harn grunted. "Let him in, Orun."
"Aye, sir."
Harn met the Dragoons as both Eidolons stepped aside, gazing at each of them in the eye. "Follow me, and be quick about it."
"Thanks again, kid.
Vess smiled through her weariness. It is my pleasure. If I had known you needed to unlock sooner, I would have
You helped out when you found out. I should have come to you to begin with." Harn smiled in that lopsided way he had, his scars pulling tight against his rugged face. "Go get some rest. You look ready for it. And don't pay any attention to what those idiots are saying."
"Good night, Harn."
"Night."
Vess hadn't been able to sleep despite being offered relatively sumptuous apartments by her aunt. When Yin had sent word that Harn needed aid opening the armory, she had jumped at the chance. Turns out, the sealed doors in the forge's central structure were storage chambers, filled to the brim with materials and pre-made items. Spears, side swords, shields, and plate armor designed for the ancient Dragoons. They were all enchanted, too, inscribed with sigils that increased their durability and reduced their weight. They were artifacts of legend, but they would serve the soldiers well.
In the material storage, they found sealed barrels of quenching oils and monster blood. Files and hammers and odd hooked rods she wasnt familiar with, but Harn had just about drooled at the sight of them. And in the back, taking up a vast section of the storage space: high steel, mithril, and a large quantity of orichalcum. Harn wasn't quite up to manipulating orichalcum as well as the other metals, but it was a treasure trove at his disposal, all of which would be useful in the days to come.
She left Harn to his work in the forge. The idiots he mentioned watched her go. Though they were sweaty and dirty as they moved metal and charred wood out of the way of the forge, it was clear that they looked down on her. They despised her. Yin as well. She had known that would happen, but she had hopedshe wasn't quite sure what she had hoped. Perhaps that she would have found some proof at this point, more than a few lines in an old book.
Vess walked the halls, investigating some of what she hoped were undiscovered areas, but all of it had been explored. The chanters were busy cleaning the walls, clearly concerned with the murals that covered nearly every single one of them. Dragons made of layered, precious gemstones swooped across vaulted ceilings and over arched doorways, always accompanied by Dragoons on their back. It was clear that they were connected, but the Dragoons had always known that. What they couldn't believe was that the dragon's betrayal was false, a lie made up for who knows what reason. She needed to prove it.
Vess ducked into every door and every chamber she saw. Many of them were still caked in dust and the accumulated grime of centuries. She checked closets and shelves, half-collapsed wardrobes and rotted chests. There was nothing left.
Finally, she circled back, returning once again to the hatchery on the opposite side of the forge. The lights were now on, magical illumination kindled in the entry and central rooms, and through the broken windows she could see Yin. When she entered, he was nestled atop the hollow cradles where Dragon eggs had once rested, waiting to hatch. The Wyrmling was sadsad in a way that Vess couldn't quite comprehend, though she could feel the very texture of it through their bond. It was heavy and coarse and smelled of salt. It dragged at her like a vast weight pulling her deep into the sea.
"If we had more Dragons, more bonds, would that help our cause?" she asked him, gasping through the vastness of her glimpse into his heart.
"No," he said. Smoke rose in thin tendrils from his snout to collect against the cracked ceiling. "It would only endanger the hatchlings."
Vess clenched her fists. "I will find proof, Yin."
"I believe you, little Dragoon," he said, before blowing a deep sigh that was far too big to come from such a small body. The smoke dissipated. "When you do, we will bring forth the eggs."
Vess's breath caught. "Truly? Are you ready?"
"Not yet. I still require more strength in order to save them. I need my Evolution. Can you assist me?"
"Anything.
Yin nodded. "Then we begin with the dawn."
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