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Note: Real quick, I was recently featured on the CritRPG podcast. (Yes that's two podcasts back to back. I've been busy. lol) If you want to hear me talk about writing and other BS, check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4u_viPRoGns



Arthur’s emotions were in a whirlwind. Confusion over how the Mind Singer could possibly think that she had killed Brixaby mixed with shock that this was happening to him at all. Deep in his mind, Arthur still saw himself as a kid from the border-village. Less than a nobody. Now he was involved in high politics and had sentient scourgelings making major moves because of him.

But the most prominent emotion was seething anger.

The Mind Singer had known Brixaby’s abilities well enough to lay a trap card. Then she had been so convinced it would work that she had made major moves because of it.

Arthur sensed that more of this plot lay under the surface – this was the type of thing Cressida excelled at, not him – but all he could focus on as he accepted a ride from Laird to the council’s mesa was that the Mind Singer was a threat. She had to be eliminated.

Despite his seething rage, he wasn’t completely blind to what was going on around him. He’d expected Free Hive to be in a state of minor uproar. The alarms had been blaring non-stop for minutes now with no sign of abating.

Arthur expected people to be evacuating. Maybe gearing up to defend themselves.

Instead, he saw shops and booths shuttering up, people darting into larger caves, and others clustering in worried knots. All talking and glancing worriedly up at the tall, bubbled ceilings as if wondering if the stone would fall down on their heads any moment.

No one was preparing for battle. They looked to be sheltering in place. Some even looked slightly annoyed that their day had been interrupted.

And they have no combat cards, he thought and had to resist the urge to reach into his Personal Space, withdraw a handful, and toss them down like confetti.

He might have done it if Ghost weren’t flying beside Laird. That might be hard to explain.

Patience, he told himself and leaned forward to call out to Laird. The dragon was large and because Arthur sat at the base of his neck, he had to yell to be heard over snapping wings and the rush of wind.

“I’m going to activate my stealth skills. Try not to forget I’m here.”

He was only partially kidding. Sometimes the stealth skills could work oddly on the mind.

Laird snorted. “You may have matured, but you are still a bitty thing and easily overlooked. I don’t think the scourgeling is concerned with you. Only your dragon.”

That was a very dragonish attitude to have. He was also, Arthur was sure, dead wrong. The scourgeling had a vendetta, and Arthur would be a fool to ignore it.

But Arthur wasn’t asking for permission. Only giving a heads up.

He focused on his Stealth class and activated every skill in it: Silent Movement, Heightened Awareness, Camouflage, Evasion, Deception, Concealment, and of course Stealth. The overall class also gave him a boost of +5 to Perception and +3 to Luck.

The luck would be vitally important because he had the feeling he would need all he could get.

Nothing changed from his point of view, though he did see Ghost throwing him some odd glances his way. As a Stealth card specialist, he likely wasn’t fooled by Arthur’s skills.

Arthur threw a sarcastic wave at him.

With a scowl, the dragon turned his head away.

He smirked, but then, as an afterthought, focused on activating his mental blocking skills as well. Never hurt to be prepared.

Laird, of course, knew all the shortcuts and aerial byways in the hive. They erupted into the bright sunshine moments later.

Too bright.

Arthur covered his eyes with a wince. That movement let him mask a long glance back over to the salt sea and the peninsula.

There was no sign of the dragons they’d fought last night, or of Shadow's body. He hadn’t seen them last night either, but in the daylight there should have at least been spots of color off their scales. But it was only bleak gray and bleached white stone out there. All the bodies had been removed.

He dearly wanted to ask Laird what exactly he’d done, but again, not when Ghost was near.

Both adult dragons curved their wings and beat swiftly upward to crest the top of the mesa.

Again, Arthur was surprised. He fully expected an enemy army waiting for him, considering the alarms. Maybe the Mind Singer herself with her sisters.

Instead, he saw the humans of the council gathered together in a loose circle near to where the entrance of the prison had been. Meanwhile, four unfamiliar dragons flew high overhead in tight, perfect circles like circling vultures. They didn’t come close enough to identify.

As Laird came into land, Arthur took a swift glance around for signs of their break-in last night—was it only last night? It felt so long ago--. He saw nothing. The hasty patch job he and Brix had made still held up.

He wished his dragon was here now.

Chablis pushed to the front, her eyes slipping over Arthur as she frowned at Laird. “What took so long? Where is the Legendary pair? Is it true?”

“I knew it,” one of the councilmen grumbled. “They’re dead or fled. Your plan didn’t work, Chablis.”

Chablis turned and opened her mouth to retort. Before she could say anything, notes drifted down from the circling dragons above.

Whispers on the mesa, shadows on the wall

Your Legendary defender’s fallen, woe to you all.

We demand your surrender, lay your weapons down

Hand over your combat cards, or in the fight you’ll drown…

Drown?

Arthur glanced up. The dragons were so high in the sky they looked smaller than the top joint of his thumb.

One of them must have had a communication card to send that… song to them, then.

Which meant they could likely hear what was being spoken.

Arthur hopped off the dragon's neck and landed lightly. No one so much as gave him a second glance.

It was as close to being invisible as he could get. Though he suspected that if he spoke or made a spectacle of himself, he would be perfectly visible.

He glanced up at the circling dragons. Hopefully, they wouldn't notice him either.

Then again, had the Mind Singer ever laid eyes on him? Possibly, during the Demi-scourge eruption. Though he thought he might have been fighting her sisters rather than herself. She might have caught a glimpse of him when she first escaped the scholar's library. He didn't want to risk it.

Sliding one hand over Laird's scales as he walked to let the dragon know where he was, he ducked under his chest. Laird was tall, but Arthur couldn't quite stand up straight. He stood crouched. Then he dropped his stealth skills.

Laird glanced down at him, and then, within moments, ushered Chablis closer.

The woman was visibly startled she saw Arthur; her eyes wide. She didn't say anything, however. She glanced immediately upward. Her eyes flicked upward, and Arthur nodded. They had to keep quiet.

Shushing the council members – several of whom spotted Arthur and started to speak – Chablis ducked under Laird to join him. It was an odd meeting place, but perfectly hidden from above.

She spoke in a whisper. “If the worst happens, will you help us?”

Will you fight for us? Was the unspoken question.

Arthur nodded.

Chablis turned and ducked back out. She’d only risked a moment, knowing they were being watched from above.

“Council members,” she said, “it appears we have no choice. We should treat this group like any other Kingdom Hive: Get this over with and pay them off. I propose standard pricing.”

“I oppose. This is no Kingdom Hive,” Laird snapped. “This is a hive run by a scourgeling. It cannot be reasoned with—it’s already admitting to attacking us!”

One of the council members spoke up, his voice creaky with age. “The kingdom hives will not allow a powerful scourgeling—if that is truly what this is— to exist for long. I say we get it off our doorstep and send it away before it brings its war to us.”

Arthur looked on in confusion. Where they saying what he thought they were saying?

Chablis turned to Laird. “Scourgelings cannot live here – we barely can with all our utility cards. It’s a wasteland. It would be pointless to attack us,” she added, a touch louder and clearly aimed at the listening dragons, “but in the spirit of efficiency and good will--”

And cowardness, Arthur thought

“--we could deliver a payment of combat cards. As we do all Kingdom Hives,” she finished.

“Aye,” said the creaky councilman.

Three more ‘ayes’ followed, with Laird being the pointed ‘Nay’.

With a satisfied nod, Chablis stepped away from the others and directed her voice upward. “Our payment of peace is 20 Common Cards, 10 Uncommon, and 3 Rare. All combat focused.”

Arthur felt a little sick. Not only with the suggestion, but the knowledge that Chablis was offering something she didn’t have.

And she didn’t know it.

The circling dragons didn’t hesitate a moment.

We agree, our hearts convey,

But as a warning, act fast and do not delay.

“That’s a yes.” Chablis glanced at Laird, saw he was still sheltering Arthur and then nodded to Ghost who stood nearby waiting. “If you could convey us to the peninsula? Laird, please stay with our… guests.” She nodded upward.

“This is a mistake,” Laird growled. “A scourgeling’s greed will never be satisfied.”

“That’s your opinion. You were outvoted.”

With that, Chablis made her way to the silver dragon. The other council members followed.

Arthur watched them go, fighting with himself all the while on if he should call out. If he had Brixaby by his side, he would have. They had taken on four dragons last night. They might be able to at least drive them off if they made a stand.

Assuming the council members didn’t have any cards hidden up their sleeves and directly oppose them.

But he didn’t have Brixaby, or Cressida or Joy by his side. And Laird stayed just as silent, which was telling. Arthur wondered if he had a plan or if he was just as frustrated.

Ghost flew off, his wing beats labored with four people on his back.

How long would it take to get to the library and discover it had been looted?

It turned out it didn't matter, because the moment the disappeared into the dungeon, Laird let out a bitter bark of laughter.

"So whatever this is really about begins. I tried to warn them, but as you saw, I was outvoted.”

Arthur saw he was looking up. Carefully, he stepped out from under him, though kept into his shadow.

The circling, singing emissaries had stopped circling in place and were now flying in a different, complex pattern. All of them were figure eights that met in the middle and expanded out again.

It was odd, almost ritualistic.

"What are they..." Arthur started.

He trailed off as the air began to change. There was something different about the air. It was tingly. It was different, thinner, and tingly at the same time.

For some reason, it affected his mana vault. It was a spell. A powerful one.

With a sound like tearing paper, the sky seemed to rip in two. Two of the dragons — they looked dark green, though he couldn't tell for sure — broke off from the figure eights and grabbed each side, then they pulled the rip open wide enough to let dragons through.

"That's a portal," Arthur gasped, and before he could think otherwise, he turned and leapt onto Laird’s neck. "Back to the hive. We need to close the entrances — we need to defend it —"

As Laird lifted into the air, the first dragons from the Mind Singer's hive poured out of the rip in the sky.


Second note: This chapter crosses the 100k word-count mark for this book. :D It's been a long one!

To give you an idea of word counts:

Book 1: 131,000 words

Book 2: 148,000 words.

Book 3: 1??,??? words.

Thanks for following with me along this journey so far, everyone!

Comments

Hammy

It always bugs me in movies, shows & books when supposed wise leaders make dumb arsed decisions when dealing with an entity who only existence is to kill you and everything around you. And they are like oh we can make a deal with it despite literal hundreds of years of proof that they do not honour there words. But unfortunately I see people make the same decision in our own histories and life so it is believable. Great chapter, just want to smack em for being dumb.

Corpse Garden

TBF sentience allows for choice against one's nature. And we know very little about the scourge as a whole, there could be amiable scourge out there and it's possible that there are history's written in this world about safely paying off scourge already. Add to that this hive being a weak group of content passifists that have gathered here to avoid this world's cruel setting and harsh reality and it becomes more and more obvious that they would bury their heads in the sand and take the easy way out like they always likely have. There is a reason Laird and the others have become fed up.

WhiteRabbit

Makes sense given they are dedicated to being civilian, but looks like it's going to bite them quickly

Rubeno

They are scared and old age only beaten cowardice deep into their bones. They are incapable of reacting differently than bending backward.