Upon entering the small
bedchamber, my senses were overwhelmed with the unique, repulsive
residue of Spring influence. The magical stench clung to the bedding
and child-sized clothing that had been strewn across the room and
forgotten in their haste to leave ahead of our arrival. There was no
mistaking that wherever the queen had fled to is where I would find
the girl. The only issue was there had been no signs of where she had
gone and what little reports we could get from surrounding peasants
yielded no clues. It was as if this queen and the fae blessed child
had vanished into the air, a magical feat that was surely beyond even
the most magically talented human.
Perhaps the child could have
pulled off the feat of realm walking, though that would mean she
would have to be incredibly adept at wielding her powers through her
own exploration or somehow a powerful trainer had made their way to
her and kept her fae magic quiet. Either way it was stupendously
unlikely, especially since I severely doubted that a human child,
even while fae blessed, could pull off such a feat on such short
notice. Though that did beg the question of just where someone could
go on such short notice so stealthily and not leaving behind obvious
clues.
“Lady Nommu?”
I inwardly sighed at the
seeress Emmi's continued refusal to call me commander despite
everyone else under my command doing so without question. She felt
entitled to call me whatever she wished based on the fact that she
personally valued my noble family line ahead of my military
achievements and the knowledge that the position of seeress of the
Vanguards was not an easy one to fill. On top of that, she was an old
family friend of my mother’s which made it difficult for me to want
to bring down punishment on someone who had quite literally watched
me toddle around as a child. I had tirelessly argued with her that if
she truly wanted to show she valued my family's friendship and
respected me as her superior that she would abide by the traditional
honorifics, but all attempts thus far had fallen on intentionally
deaf ears.
“Commander Nommu,” I
corrected, a slight frown on my face.
“Isri,” she scolded with a
roll of her eyes, “you are lucky that I call you a formal title at
all in front of anyone else. Consider the usage of any title as an
appropriate level of respect given our history. Now, we have more
important matters to discuss than the silly idea of proper titles.”
She stood in the doorway to
the bed chamber, her traditional dark navy seeress robes cinched
tight around her waist with a gold cord. A golden charm the size of
the palm of her hand depicting an open eye hung from the knot in the
cord. She was in her battle dress and had not taken time yet to
change into something more causal since we arrived to the castle. The
robes made her appear opposing and powerful, there was little more
worrying on the battlefield than when you caught sight of an enemy
seer or seeress. They were particularly striking on her with her
stark white hair and steely gray eyes. She looked like a ghost who
has risen up from her fallen place on the battlefield to seek her
revenge.
“I was informed that you
wanted to speak with me about one of the chambers," I said.
“Yes, not this one,” she
said while scanning the room with her eyes, “this one was obviously
where the blessed child stayed, but I have quite thoroughly scanned
the magical signature and there is nothing residual here to indicate
where she had gone. There is something much more unique and curious
down the hall.”
I followed her through the
cramped hallway, it was certainly wide enough for a few people to
walk down hand in hand, but I was much more accustomed to fae castles
with their grand hallways and great ballrooms. It seemed that humans
did not build with the grandiose in mind. It was strange to think
that such a small castle and the tiny chunk of land it sat on seemed
impressive to anyone.
Stopping outside a door
identical to the room I had just left, the seeress gave me a look of
caution before swinging the door open. Immediately upon it being
cracked, a foul magical stench spilled from inside the room, causing
me to wrinkle my nose and want to spit to try to remove the taste it
inspired upon my tongue. I had come across some unpleasant magical
auras before, but this one was the first that truly wanted me to
wretch.
“Terrible, is it not?” she
asked with mirth. “I had only read about the description of the
taste before and it is quite a bit worse than the scribe's
explanation. Not to mention the feeling of filth upon my skin, it
truly is a vile magical residue worthy of the type of creature that
possess it. I believe we have stumbled upon the den of a true
goblin.”
Surely I had heard her
incorrectly, the fae had wiped out all traces of the goblin realm
millennia ago, their kind too abhorrent and nasty to be allowed to
continue to exist. They were little more than a nasty footnote in
books about the vile species that had been compassionately culled for
the betterment of every realm.
“I did not want to believe
it at first either,” the seeress remarked, peering into the open
room. The room itself did not look like anyone had lived it in for
some time, the blanket upon the bed even had a fine layer of dust
over it from being untouched for so long. “However, the sensation
closely matches what has been recorded and I have had the displeasure
of being in the presence of a hobgoblin during my rounds of
researching elusive magical creatures. Being related they evoke a
similar feeling of disgust, though fortunately much less intense and
cloying.”
“I do not think I even
recall why they were culled, though that stench alone might be good
enough for me.” Not wishing to entertain the slimy feeling it was
causing in my mouth I uselessly held my breath and stepped forward to
close the door, relieved at how instantaneously better the world felt
with the magical taint contained.
“Plenty of reasons. Their
temperament and general level of class and civility matched their
repulsive nature,” she explained, brushing the sleeves of her robes
down like some of the stench still clung to the silky fabric. “From
all written accounts they were perhaps the most underhanded and evil
creatures ever known. Too cunning and intelligent to let them run
their own course. They eventually would have caused some realm
shaking disaster, likely to our own given the mutual hatred our
respective kinds shared. The war was shift and decisive for a reason,
we did not dance around and play fair like we might with our own
kind, we knew they needed to be completely obliterated.”
“It seems we failed.” I
ran my tongue against my teeth, trying to scrap the remaining
horrifying flavor away, it truly had coated the inside of my mouth
and sinuses from just a single breath in of the air exiting the room.
This content has been misappropriated from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
“If anyone were still alive
from that point in history, heads would roll, certainly. Though, I
would imagine that just one hanging around probably is not a terrible
omen, if it has managed to survive thus far I do not think it is out
for revenge or strong enough to pose a real threat. If it did, I
imagine it would have stood its ground, the record of their abilities
puts them relatively similar in power to a fae.”
“Then it surely would have
run,” I scoffed, “one of equal power could not stand up to an
entire army.”
“Perhaps.” She nodded her
head and cast her eyes upon the door. “Though, something about the
magical aura is intriguingly old, perhaps ancient. I have never heard
of species living so long and by all written accounts their lifespan
any stragglers should have died out long ago, but…” A flitting
laugh escaped her lips and she shook her head like what she was
saying was ridiculous. “Enough must have survived to preserve a
small familial line that has been prudent enough to stay far away
from fae recognition. I cannot think of very many creatures who can
boast that long of a lifespan and all of them that can are either
extremely stupid or placid and I dare to think that fae scholars,
even in ancient times were proficient enough in their research to
have caught on if goblins were capable of such extreme longevity.”
“I am very glad you think it
is a ridiculous idea, I would not want to try to comprehend the
magical skill level someone could achieve if they decided to focus on
their talents given so much lifespan. Still, I question what they
were doing here if our presence is so overwhelming to the populace,
either they never left this room or was able to shield much better
than a majority of fae.”
“I would imagine that since
the creature would need to keep a low profile at all times they would
have learned fairly quickly to shield themselves to keep anyone from
figuring out what they truly were. I would venture to guess we can
only sense the residue here because this was the one place where they
let their guard down. I have not worked up the courage yet to step
into the room proper, but I believe that there is a sealing spell or
two active in there to contain the magical residue when the door is
closed so it did not seep out and alert anyone to what they were.”
“They must have been the one
to alert the humans,” I said, piecing the events of the invasion
together. “I do not think any of them would have be able to be any
the wiser without someone of much more magical might around. No one
in this realm seemed to take any notice of us on our march here until
we chose to reveal ourselves.”
“Most certainly,” she
agreed, “and I do not for a single moment think it is pure
happenstance that we find a goblin residing in the same place as our
fae blessed child. The two must be intertwined somehow, the creature
would have recognized straight away the potential the girl carries
and where it comes from. I think not only are we chasing this girl to
prevent her from falling into the hands of Spring, but also to keep
her from the dark clutches of a long forgotten enemy.”
“All the more reason to
recover her quickly,” I confirmed.
Perhaps it was farfetched to
think that a single goblin, though a nasty creature, would pose any
real threat to the whole of the Vanguards, but it was safest to
assume the unknown enemy was the most dangerous.
“Of course, the girl might
yet be salvageable and if she was talented enough for Spring to want
her, perhaps she might have some purpose for us. First we just need
some clues as to where they have fled to.”
“There are apparently
strange arcane symbols in the basement that my troops feel I may be
able to identify, perhaps it will be our first clue if you wish to
join me,” I instructed.
The seeress nodded her head
and motioned with her hand that she would follow me. “Arcane
symbols are your expertise, but perhaps I may be able to fill in some
gaps with my general knowledge if you can identify from what school
of magic they are from.”
In the dungeon two soldiers
were waiting on my arrival, snapping to attention as soon as I came
into view. They looked tired, though they were doing their best to
appear still fresh and alert. We had not stopped to camp on our
journey over, hoping to prevent the Spring forces from getting their
hands on her first. It had been a couple of days since any of us had
gotten any meaningful rest, it was not typically the way I liked to
run my soldiers, an army marches best on good food and adequate rest.
“This way, Commander,” the
female of the two offered with a bow.
The soldier led us down into
the very bowels of the dungeon where the air stank of stale, over
grown mold that had flourished with no adequate ventilation. It was
quite obvious that this part of the castle was not commonly inhabited
and made fresh enough to be pleasant to exist in. A large iron door
stood before me, a ridiculously sized iron padlock tossed to the
floor beside it like they had been keeping some terrible, wild, and
vicious animal locked safely behind it. On the inside, the walls were
lined with multitudes of black candles and wordlessly I extended a
magical hand to light them all to illuminate the room. Despite the
light filling the room, there was not much to see, the walls were
entirely bare stone and the only point of interest in the room was a
large arcane symbol carved into the stone of the floor.
“Demonic.” I instantly
recognized the symbol, it was almost cliché in how common the
particular arrangement of lines were used together.
The seeress bent over at the
waist and narrowed her eyes at the floor, searching for any traces of
lingering magical potential that might still reside within the
stonework. Her magic extended and flooded the groves of the symbol,
illuminating them with icy blue light and causing the symbol to hum
as magic flooded its conduits.
“It was a portal,” she
confirmed, “Not hard to extrapolate that it was to the demon realm.
Humans and demons working together, an interesting mix, I wonder what
a demon would want to do with the human realm. Demons are not the
most potent magic wielders, but certainly leaps and bounds ahead of
any human, and the realm holds nothing that they might want that I am
aware of.”
“Not that I know of either,”
I verified. “Demons tend to keep to themselves generally, even
between their own subspecies. I do think we know where our missing
girl went though, they must have destroyed the exit point on the
other side to keep us from being able to immediately follow. Seems
very odd that they would do so, surely they must know that a fae with
any decent amount of power can realm walk without a need of magical
crutches like a portal stone or ritual circle.”
I dug at the carving with the
toe of my slipper and considered what might spark such illogical
actions. If they did have the goblin with them, I was going to go
with the assumption that they were the one running the show as the
most magically potent of them and I would therefore be inclined to
believe that they would know what fae were capable of. In fact, why
would they use the portal at all? If a goblin could match a fae, they
could travel without the need for such things. Something was not
adding up just yet, but I would get to the bottom of it and succeed
in my mission.
“Shall I go get prepared to
realm walk?” the seeress asked.
“No, not yet, I think it
best that we rest first. Demons should not stand much chance against
us, though if they are in league with the goblin I want to take some
time to fully understand what the dangers are before I lead my
solders in there blind. Also we all could use good food and enough
time to rest, I want us to be at our best when we cross the realm
barrier. We are ahead of Spring, we have seen no signs of them
following the trail yet.”
“Lovely,” she said with a
relieved sigh, “I could use a hot bath and a long nap. Before I do
though, I will set up my communication crystals and ask for whatever
information on goblins and demons that is available in the citadel
library to be transmitted to us.”
“It might take you some time
to find a viable ley line to align your crystals with, we are in the
most magically dead realm I have ever personally stepped foot in,”
I reminded.
“Hmrph,” she snorted with
annoyance, “I can make it happen, though the conduit back home with
be unstable and slow. Perhaps do not expect a response today, maybe
even tomorrow, this might delay us more than you intend if you are
certain you want all the information before we march again.”
“I am certain,” I
confirmed, “I will not march an army while blind.”
She nodded her head once, then
bowed slightly at the waist, again not quite as much as she probably
should. “If I may be dismissed then I will get started.”
“You are dismissed.”
“I wonder if they have
decent food in this realm,” she muttered as she left the room,
already undoing the knot on the cord around her waist to start
getting out of her battle robe.
I
glanced down to the arcane symbol again and pulled a the small piece
of parchment I kept tucked under my belt for such times when a quick
note needed to be taken. Concentrating on the symbol until it was
burned into my mind, I then unfolded the parchment and set my focus
on the blank surface, forcing the image of the arcane symbol in my
mind to burn into the surface. With a small whiff of smoke the image
smoldered into existence and after checking it against the carving
for accuracy, I refolded the scrap and left the ritual chamber to
find the finest room in the castle to claim for myself and recharge
so I could plan the next move with a clear and rested mind.

