"Indeed – the festival of the winter solstice. That Elder of yours is ant to be conducting a ceremony on the outskirts of the village to welco winter in. The Vice-Captain and I have been asked to attend. It will be a good opportunity for you, no? I imagine you have not spoken much with your fellow villagers in the last couple of days," Lombard said.
"That rchant in particular has been asking after you. Though, he is currently bearing the weight of a likely involvent in murder. Three n seem to have been slain by his underlings. As soon as the prostitutes were barred from the campgrounds, the slaying stopped. Odd, is it not?"
Lombard said that testingly, as though to evoke a reaction from Beam. Tolsey noted that the Captain was looking towards him carefully as he played with one of the wooden board pieces in his hand.
But Beam just shrugged as though it had nothing to do with him. "Greeves isn't stupid enough to involve himself in such open murder with nothing to gain. But it is unfortunate for him, that all the circumstances point in his direction. It's just one of the many problems afflicting this village as of late.
Speaking of which, before I et with Nila, do you have any information for , in regard to Stephanie?"
The Captain paused a mont at that and glanced at Tolsey. It seed he'd put the Vice-Captain in charge of that little endeavour. The man cleared his throat and ran a hand through his beard, ridding himself of the nervousness that had built up.
"We didn't find anything in particular that pointed to her – the villagers are reluctant to talk to the soldiers unless forced, after all. But a few days prior, our n found a pair of footprints, leading from the forest, pointing in the direction of the house that you nad. Only, these footprints were visible in a single patch of mud, for about three steps.
It might be entirely unrelated," Tolsey said.
"Ah," Beam's eyes lit up at that, and he clenched his fist. "So they ca from the woods after all. That is good to know."
The Captain and his Vice-Captain shared a look. "That scrap of information was enough to give you certainty, was it?" Lombard asked.
"My master ntioned sothing that made it seem to like the shadows had sothing to do with the disappearance of Stephanie. Those footprints seem right to . Plan your counterattack, Captain. I need to get back in that forest and get looking again," Beam said.
"The Yarmdon threat delays my hand there. As do our lacking defences. You will need to wait another few days – or bring a location. Though it does trouble that your master would not involve himself directly. Surely this situation you worry so much about would be solved far quicker with his assistance," Lombard said.
Beam could not disagree there. But Dominus was a strange man. He'd claid that he thought Beam capable of solving this riddle by his loneso. If things truly did reach a point beyond Beam's capabilities to handle, he would step in, Beam knew that much at least. He only hoped that by then it would not be too late. It had been too long since Stephanie had disappeared, after all.
Even though it was still just a few days – each day weighed heavier than the last, on everyone involved. He knew that Nila and her mother likely would not be able to bear the strain much longer.
…
…
The sky was already the darkest black by the ti the villagers started making their way to the bonfire that had been started on the edge of the village, just a short distance away from the forest. Because it was so close to the soldier's defences, they'd need express permission from the Captain in order to set up there.
There had also needed to be stationed an extra couple of squadrons for the affair – for it was quite possible that so monsters might drift towards them, rather than to the monster lure that had been set up behind the defensive wall.
Beam arrived with the soldiers, just as the crowd was beginning to thicken. People glanced at him, a friendliness in their eyes that they didn't have before, but there was also a sympathy as well, as though people assud he was nigh-on a prisoner for the Captain. He returned the greetings of the passersby as best he could, though he was never much of a socialite.
The fire was built and burning high already, a true bonfire at that, taller than three n, with a wide and stable base to match it. There was the scent of oil in the air, evidence of the firestarter's cheating ways, as they tried to get the thicker logs to catch fire faster.
There were quite a few complaints from the crowd as more people arrived and noticed that stench.
"Oh, co on, can't you light fires without oil anymore? That's lazy, that is. The back of my throat is going to be feeling like I'm dying now," one old man complained, as others joined in to voice their agreent.
Hearing their complaints, a firestarter – who'd been working on behalf of the village Elder – rose up a shrill voice in defiance. "It gets the fire hotter faster! The sll will disappear in due ti! Stop complaining!"
"Aye, by the ti we've all left it will," ca the reply without missing a beat.
Beam smiled quietly as he listened to the interaction. He'd separated himself from the soldiers by now, as Lombard had told him to. He'd told him to et up with his village friends, and ensure them of his well-being. But as Beam stood an awkward distance from the fire, his hand resting on the sword at his hip, and his clothes clean and finer than he was used to – he couldn't see anyone that he knew.
There were nearly fifty people there already, with a steady stream of them coming down the village road, lit by torches that every fifth man seed to carry. It seed more like a funeral procession than a festival, Beam thought, and the attitudes of everyone in attendance seed to support that.
There was a tightness about their face, like people being forced to endure sothing, as nearly everyone complained about the cold.
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