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Hineni pulls the trap-door open and stares down it. It is, indeed, exactly where Sockel’s voice had said it would be. Hineni bends down and peers into it, holding the lantern in front of himself.


He can feel the hot breeze of the heating shaft rushing past his face. But it seems to be clashing with some… indiscernible cold. The man shudders. He had no idea that the bones of the old house were this cold. It almost feels as frozen as the outside world. He hopes that he doesn’t have a hole anywhere in the walls.


His family’s old room in the attic is right next to the forge-tower. He supposes that he’s on the same height as the windows in it right now. This must be the shaft that Obscura had flown Rhine into.


Leaning down, he calls into the shaft.


“Can you hear me?” he asks, listening. He receives a hoot in reply. “I’m at the trap-door,” says Hineni. “But I don’t think I’ll really fit down here.”


Maybe this is some kind of maintenance entrance for the heating system? It makes sense. But he has no idea how anyone qualified for such work could reasonably fit in here, let alone get to it unnoticed regularly. He and his family lived up here and he never heard anyone thumping around beneath them and he certainly never saw anyone use the trap-door, considering that he had never even known about it.


The man squints, looking at the walls of the shaft. There are markings carved into it. Sigils? Or maybe letters of some kind. He doesn’t recognize them. But they’re tiny.


“Did you guys see these too?” he asks. “The marks?”


“Marks?” asks Sockel’s voice. “Look. It’s getting kind of stuffy here,” she says. “Can you just… I don’t know. Crawl in and pull us out?”


Hineni raises an eyebrow. “That seems like a horrible idea,” he says. “If I go down there, I will literally never fit out again. It’s too tight.”


“Should I use my magic?” asks Rhine. “It’ll fill with water and we’ll float up again.” Rhine yelps as something hisses and clacks next to him. Hineni recognizes the sound as that of a beak snapping shut, biting only air.


“FOOLISH BOY!” hoots Obscura. “Obscura was wrong! He is as crude and dumb as her Hineni!”


“Pretty sure we’ll drown,” says Sockel.


“Please don’t flood the house anymore,” sighs Hineni. “We’re running on fumes as is.” The man pulls his head out of the hole and looks around. Where in the world are they supposed to be? The shaft runs around to every room, which means it also goes downstairs.  Rhine said something about floating up, so maybe they fell down into one of the shafts and are actually down below? Wedged in some chimney or something?


Hineni shudders. What a grim way to die that would be.


“Look, just… just crawl in and get us, okay?” asks Rhine. “I’m scared.”


Hineni rubs his head. He’s stuck between a rock and a hard place. On one hand, he really doesn’t want to crawl in there. It seems like a one-way trip for someone of his size. On the other hand, the people he has in his life need his help and he might not have time to get anyone from outside. If they’re really stuck, air could be a real problem.


Should he break the walls…?


Hineni nods. That’s the only reasonable choice.


“I’m going to bust the walls open,” he says. “Do me a favor and knock against them so I can find you.”


“Please! Just come and pull us out,” says Sockel. “You’ll fit back out. Worst case, just crawl backwards to the forge opening,” calls her voice, echoing down the dark shaft.


“I’m running downstairs now,” he says. “Don’t wor-”


The door to the attic opens behind him. “Hey, there you are,” says Sockel, rubbing her forehead. She has a book in her hands. “I was just in the library and…” She stops, looking at him. “Are you okay?” she asks. “You look a little uh…”


Hineni stares back at the dark shaft and then back towards Sockel, who is standing at the staircase.


“Sockel. Weren’t you just stuck in there?” he asks.


She tilts her head. “Huh? I was in the library. I just told you,” she says, lifting the book in her hands. “Why would I be stuck in some weird hole in your house?”


“I thought…” Hineni blinks, looking back at the darkness of the shaft beneath himself. The hairs on his neck stand on end.


Something giggles.


Hineni’s eyes, wide, scan the room. “Sockel. Where’s Rhine? Where’s Obscura?” he asks, getting up and rushing past the elf who only seems bothered by his odd behavior and not by the giggling that she doesn’t seem to be reacting to.


“Huh?” she shrugs. “Didn’t you tell them to clean the heating system?” she asks. “Hey, wait.” Her gaze falls to the trap-door. “Isn’t that it? Weird. Anyway - Hey! Wait!”


“There’s a problem,” says Hineni, rushing past Sockel as he runs downstairs to the forge and looks up to the heating shaft. Obscura and Rhine are nowhere to be seen. The man’s eyes, paranoid, scan the forge. Quickly, he turns around and sprints back to the front area, looking around the restaurant as he rushes past a confused Sockel who is tailing him.


“You good?” asks Sockel, her ears twitching as she looks around. She sniffs the air, perhaps not even noticing that she’s doing it. But Hineni catches it out of the corner of his eyes as he also does the same.


But there is no scent of frog in the air.


“No,” says Hineni. He wants to tell her what the problem is. But it’s kind of a weird problem and he doesn’t know how to even start explaining what just happened. What if she thinks he’s some weirdo who’s hearing voices? He needs Sockel. He can’t scare her away by being…


Hineni stops himself. That was close. This time, that man had almost caught up to him again.


He gestures for her to follow him as he walks around the house, listening to every wall as he explains what his predicament is in clear, shameless detail. Sockel simply listens intently, waiting for him to finish. She doesn’t smirk or laugh or shake her head or roll her eyes, she doesn’t even yawn. He’s very thankful for her right now.


“- And then you showed up,” finishes Hineni, pressing his ear to the wall of the kitchen.


“Oh,” says Sockel, thinking. “Uh, fairies, maybe?” she asks, looking around.


Hineni sighs. That stings a little. And right after he had just finished appreciating her in his thoughts. That makes it worse. “Sockel,” says Hineni, listening to the wall with an empty glass. “I’m being serious. Please don’t make fun of this.”


“Huh?” she asks. “This is typical fairy wobble-woo,” she says, spinning a finger in the air. “Sounds like a mean one though.” Seeing his gaze, she shrugs. “What?

“Sockel,” says Hineni sternly. “People who are important to me are missing and I’m worried,” he says, making his case clear. “Fairies aren’t real.”


“Huh?” she tsks once and shakes her head. “City boys,” mutters the elf. “Fairies are real. Why wouldn’t they be?” asks Sockel, taking her turn now to sigh.


Hineni blinks. “Wait. Fairies are real?”


“Of course fairies are real. I know at least three. Or, well, I did when I was a kid,” she explains, shrugging. Hineni stares. Memories of his past, of his mother come to him. She always had what they had assumed were episodes in which a common theme was her explaining that she saw fairies. “They’re more common in the south because of all the wild ambient magic.” She leans in towards him. “You literally have books on fairies here. In the library.”


“Huh…”


She looks around the kitchen. “They’re usually okay if you keep your distance, but they’re real jerks if you go into their homes.”


“The shaft?” asks Hineni.


“Hmm… maybe…” She considers it for a moment. “The little guys usually like to live in dead-ends,” explains Sockel. “Hollow trees or underground holes in the forest. Caves.”


Hineni’s eyes open wide and he drops the glass, rushing to the side of the kitchen, across the door, where the hatch to the ice-cellar is. He grabs it, tearing it open and looking down into the dark underground.


A biting cold comes against him, rising up to nibble on the skin of his face, despite the fact that he’s confident that there hasn’t been any ice delivered to the cellar in at least ten years. Grabbing his lantern, he holds it down into the hole and looks around.


Ice. There’s ice clinging to the ladder, climbing up it like growing ivy.


“Sockel. Are fairies dangerous?” asks Hineni.


She frowns. “I mean… they like to bully kids, you know?” she asks. “They take it too far a lot though,” she mutters. “…Rhine?” she asks, looking back up towards Hineni, who is already in the process of jumping down the shaft, sliding down the ladder and into the depths of the icy maw.


A thousand distorted reflections come to bounce out all around him, as his own visage greets him from every angle, projected by the orange glow of his lantern.


Hineni’s boots crack against the ground, breaking the ice that was there with a loud, noisy crunch.


It’s not just ice as in a few blocks of it here and there, packed in straw. Rather, it’s like he’s in a frozen cave system. Where did all of this come from? Has it just been growing this whole time?


His breath escapes him, pressing out through his scarf as visible, thick vapors.


Hineni lifts the lantern, stepping into the ice-cellar, looking at the many jagged, frozen protrusions all around himself. The man stops, staring at the thing that he sees. A core, a solid mass of ice, suspended on the far end of the room. Inside of it, is Obscura, hunched forward into a ball, a hint of azure blue clutched in her grasp.


Something giggles behind him.

 

 

(Hineni) uses: [Ash: Antichrysalis]

 

 

The lantern flies out of his hands, smashing against the frozen floor at his feet. Streaks of oil slither out in all directions, the fresh flames snaking around the ice, hissing like vipers leaving a nest. Ash flies all around him in a flurry as if it were a tainted blizzard. Fire flies all around him, coating the entire cellar in a burning core of odd, sickly flame that fights its way to dig into the ice, worming into it like so many burrowing parasites as the glowing embers eat through the flesh of the frozen mass.


Hineni runs towards the crystal, fire pressing down beneath his flame-retardant boots as he moves to the core, pressing his hands against it. The man closes his eyes, focusing his magic onto his palms.

 

 

(Hineni) uses: [Ash: Smolder]

 

 

A strand of orange glow pushes into the core, winding through it like an artery of a frozen heart filling with blood for the first time. It reaches in, but not far enough. The orange dies out, leaving only cool, cold, blue and a trickle of water that runs out of the new hole.


Something giggles.


Hineni looks over his shoulder.


“That was close,” says the voice. It’s shrill. “I almost got you too,” it says. “If only you would have gone into the shaft.”


“Get out of my house,” says Hineni. He can’t see anything or anyone else, but he holds his hands out nonetheless.

 

 

(Hineni) uses: [Ash: Antichrysalis]

 

 

Ash swirls around him, filling the room with a renewed darkness. Wet ash and dying smolders drip down to the ground as the ice and the fire collides together, both muting the beauty of the other.


“I was asleep for a long time,” says the voice. “I sure thought I was a goner after you killed your parents. Thanks for that, by the way!”


Hineni does it again.


 

(Hineni) uses: [Ash: Antichrysalis]

 

 

“It’s no use. You can’t see me. So your magic can’t hurt me,” says the fairy. “Dumb-ass.”


Hineni looks around the room, pointing at the crystal. “Let them go.”


“No. Why should I?” asks the voice. “I need ambient magic to survive, and here it is,” says the fairy. “It came to me! It’s mine!”


Hineni casts the spell again. He can feel himself draining. He doesn’t have enough soul-points to cast this spell that often.

 

 

(Hineni) uses: [Ash: Antichrysalis]

 

 

Ash swirls all around him. The fairy sighs. “You’re really stubborn, you know?” it asks, almost bored. “I told you, that won’t work.”


Hineni stares around the room, watching the embers, watching the glows of the fire and then, he sees what he’s looking for. A blob. A blur. A spot where the ash doesn’t fly right. Where the mixture of the colliding heat and the ice doesn’t swelter with quite the right fluctuation. He sees something that others do not.


Hineni reaches out, grabbing the thing with his bare hand. As he moves, he feels the enchanted dagger on his belt tap against himself.


“AH!” It yelps. “Let go of me!” He feels something squirming around in his hand. Hineni lifts the invisible creature up to his face.


“Let them go,” he says. “Or I’m going to feed you to an owl.”


“That doesn’t scare me!” says the voice. Something bites him, he can’t see it. But he can see a small, red indent on his index finger. A trickle of blood leaks out of it, but he doesn’t let go.


“You gotta lick it,” says Sockel’s voice.


Hineni lifts his head, looking at the elf who is clinging to the ladder. “…What?”


“Yeah,” she affirms, nodding to him. “Just, you know, give it a good lick.”


Hineni blinks. “Sockel.”


“I’m serious!” she yells. “It’s really insulting that you’re so untrusting of me.” Hineni looks at her for a moment, before turning back to the odd, invisible blob in his hand. He can feel two small hands gripping him, trying to break free. “It’s a dominance thing.”


“Don’t you dare!” yells the fairy.


Hineni shrugs. He’s done weirder things in this new life of his. After eating raw frogs and bedding the owl-god, how weird is licking a fairy, really? The fun part is, none of these things are innuendos.


Hineni realizes that his third life is a really odd one.


The man accepts his fate and, as one does in life sometimes, licks the fairy.


All around the room at once, the magical ice shatters.



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