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The goblin camp sprawled across the ridge like an open wound: stitched-hide tents, racks of bone, and a central pit that belched greasy, orange smoke. Figures moved through the tents, thieves, scavengers, sentries, all of them small and sharp, voices jabbing at one another as they argued over scraps. Their line was loose and ragged, but there were more of them than the party liked.

They crouched in a tangle of brambles, breath shallow and timing asured.

Josh’s voice was a flat edge. “We hit fast. Draw them out. Bhel, circle with Perb. Let him reduce their numbers with arrows. Don’t charge until I’ve got their attention.”

Bhel’s jaw set. “No lone charges. Understood.”

Perberos pointed to the far side of the camp. “Split their focus. Make them panic, not think.”

Brett’s eyes went hard on a stack of wood by the fire. “No clever. Just chaos. I sound like Josh.” Everyone smirked.

Perberos and Bhel lted left, ghosting through shadow. Despite his bulk, Bhel moved like a stalking predator when he should, low steps, head down, axe hafted but silent.

Five minutes of patient breathing, and Brett nodded. He let heat gather in his palm until it humd. A single firebolt punched from his staff, arcing across the ridge and detonating into the woodpile. Dry kindling answered like tinder, the nearest tent flared and went white with fla.

Screams shredded the air. Goblins scattered, tumbling from their beds, stumbling through canvas and smoke. Brett didn’t stop. One firebolt beca another, and another; sparks winked into thatch, ropes burned, tents collapsed with choking little explosions. Burning beams fell on a cluster of goblins and crushed one beneath a shower of hot splinters.

Panic bent the camp toward one point. The goblins finally found the direction of the fire and charged headlong toward Brett’s hiding place, teeth bared and spears thrust out.

“Guess I’m up!” Josh roared, surging from cover with shield raised. The ground hamred beneath his boots. He t the first goblin like stone eting a shovel; the creature’s blade clanged off his rim and it folded back, stunned, as Josh slamd the shield into its chest and shoved it into several of its compatriots, sending them all sprawling. .

Arrows thudded into flesh behind the charging line. Perberos’ shots spat from the trees, each one punching into a shoulder or spine and twisting a goblin’s stride. The camp funnelled into a choked aisle of screaming bodies and smoke, all of them driving toward the one man they thought responsible.

Josh’s short sword bit and withdrew, fast and economical, a quick throat jab or a stab between ribs. When a goblin ca under his shield and slashed low, the cut snagged leather greave instead of flesh; Josh snapped his leg out and sent the attacker sprawling, then ramd a boot into its chest to keep the gap.

Brett’s magic braided through the lee, punishing stray arcs, cauterising openings with white-hot fire where any flinch might let another goblin through. Carcan stood just off to Josh’s rear, weaving translucent shields that shivered against spear tips and absorbing blows before they reached flesh.

The rhythm was brutal and relentless: block, shove, stab, advance. Josh anchored the centre and ate the worst of it; Bhel, when the mont opened, struck like lightning into the rear of the line.

He slamd through the last ranks with a violence that slled of iron and sweat, blades flashing, axes tearing through leather and bone. One goblin let out a grunt before it knew where the pain ca from; another found his neck split open by a second clean stroke. Bhel pivoted, ducked a wild swing, and swept a blade into a shin, then drove his second axe deep into a throat. The effect was surgical when joined to Josh’s immovable weight, anvil and hamr in perfect, bloody cadence.

“Keep pressure!” Perberos barked from the trees, picking off stragglers with calm shots. His arrows stitched the back of the horde, collapsing lines and turning charge into scramble.

A brute in a rusted helm tried to rally them, barking orders over the roar of burning canvas, but the camp had beco chaos. Brett blasted one goblin back into a smoking heap of ash; Carcan’s pulse of green light sealed a wound on Josh’s shoulder and pushed him back into the fight.

They flowed together, Josh planting, absorbing a wild cleave and twisting to expose a flank, punishing the overstep; Bhel slipping between enemies, lashing out like a crazed animal; Perberos and Brett carving gaps with distance; Carcan defending them with shields and healing them when needed. Each movent was brief and exact, the kind of teamwork that left no room for glory and no tolerance for mistakes.

The boss moved like a thing dragged from the deep: a hulking outline stitched in rust and leather, breath ragged with smoke and fury. His helm rode low, eyes twin coals in a crooked, snarling face; his spear was a jagged promise, its blade nicked and dark. Around him the last of the goblins were shoved out of his way as he pushed his way towards Josh, their shrieks braided with the crackle of fire.

He surged forward with war-thinned montum, a wave the party could have broken if they’d t it on level ground. Instead Josh planted himself in the churned earth, shield up, feet braced to swallow the impact. The first clash was a thunder of wood on tal that sent a taste of iron across Josh’s tongue; the shock rolled up his arm and into his ribs, but he held the line, braced against the brute force driving at him.

The boss hamred again and again, each strike a promise to break bone. Josh t them with weight and timing, using the shield not just to stop but to steer. He caught the spear under the rim, let it slide a hair to one side, and twisted his whole body into a motion that bent the leader’s line open. Muscles scread; the sll of charred hide and sweat thickened the air.

That twist was the seam Bhel had been waiting for. He ca like a thunderbolt from the boss’s blind side, not a headlong charge but a taught, coiled lash of movent. His axes spoke in short, brutal sentences: first a ringing slice that opened a gutter of red along the leader’s flank, then a second, flatter blow that caught tendon and tal both. The boss staggered, a guttural sound tearing out of him, but he did not fall imdiately; he fought like a thing with too many lives.

The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringent.

Josh didn’t give him the luxury. He drove the shield forward with a grunt, hooking the boss’s helm with the edge and wrenching the head back just enough to expose throat and jaw. Bhel moved in on that sliver of exposure, eyes white with focus. Ti telescoped: breath, the scrape of leather, the wet thump of iron biting flesh. Bhel’s second axe rose and fell in a motion honed by hunger and training, and the boss’s neck yielded with a final, ragged sound that ended like a slashed drum.

Blood sprayed the air in a slow, awful arc; the leader’s head ca away with a soft, final thud on the ash-darkened ground. For a beat the world held that sound, the hollow thump of skull against earth. Then the remaining goblins went slack, the fight collapsing into a scatter of animals without a shepherd, the remaining goblins pouring around Bhel and Josh like grains of salt through a shaker. So fled through smoke and root; others dropped weapons and crawled on hands and knees toward the trees. Silence fell, raw and ringing, broken only by the crackle of fire and the wet rattle of goblin breath.

Josh sagged against his shield, chest heaving, the aftershock of the impact ringing through him. Bhel stood over the fallen, axes dripping, breathing hard and a little wild, the edges of his mouth raw with exertion. Around them Carcan moved like a tide, hands coming up, offering healing where needed, while Brett’s eyes scanned the tree line for any further sign of organisation from within the camp. The clearing now tasted of iron and smoke and the sharp sweetness of victory that was never clean.

They stood in the heat and the ash, blades dripping and boots stained, breathing hard.

Josh lowered his shield and spat into the dirt. “That went better.” His voice was ragged but steady.

Perberos slung his bow and climbed down from the branches, strings snapping in the quiet. “They’re not scavengers anymore. That was organized.”

Around them the fires guttered. The camp lay in pieces, a ruined hive. They had won, but the victory tasted of smoke and the knowledge that this fight was only a piece of sothing far larger.

Bhel wiped blood from his axe. “Teamwork. Who knew?”

The goblins were gone. The fires still burned. And the party stood victorious, not just as survivors, but as a unit, all of them getting distracted by a ssage appearing in their view:

[Congratulations. Your party has killed 8x Level 1 Goblin, 11x Level 2 Goblin, 4x Level 3 Goblin and 1x Level 4 Goblin Boss]

The fires still crackled, throwing a jitter of light across the ruined camp. Smoke curled up to the canopy and mingled with the acrid scent of singed leather and blood. Bodies lay where they’d fallen, broken, twisted, and still. Until, one by one, they began to dissolve.

It started at the fingertips: a fine, golden shimr like dust catching sun. The glow crawled up wrists and arms, threaded across ribs and faces, and the goblins unstitched themselves into motes of light that drifted up and away. No rot, no gore left behind, only a soft, uncanny hush as each little shape dissolved into the air, and a small tidy pile of loot. Josh lowered his shield and watched the last of them blink out. “Still weird,” he said, more to break the silence than to explain.

Bhel watched the vanishing bodies with an untranslatable look. “What do you an?” he asked.

Josh blinked, patched the thought together. “Just. It’s weird that battlefields tidy themselves. I’ve killed livestock before; the ss stuck around.” He offered that like a clumsy joke. Bhel shrugged and accepted it.

Carcan moved through the pale ash and pulled a small cloth pouch from her belt. “Ears,” she said, voice flat. “Proof for the bounty.”

Perberos was crouched beside a dissolving body, plucking an ear from the small pile of grisly trophies that always appeared at the end of a fight. “Got one. Still warm. Disgusting,” he muttered, tucking it away with the sa careful motion he used to sheathe a blade.

Brett wrinkled his nose. “Why ears? Why not teeth? Or badges? Or anything less… fleshy?”

Perberos smirked. “Because the system giveth and the system taketh.”

They moved through the camp picking over what remained. Most of it was junk: rusted blades with chipped edges, cracked bone charms threaded on string, and ragged strips of leather that slled of smoke and damp. Soone had scavenged a handful of poor-quality arrows and shoved them into a broken quiver; Perberos slid those into his pack with a glance that said they’d do in an ergency.

Carcan held up a crooked necklace of rat skulls and feathers. “Goblin fashion,” she said, half amused and half grim.

Perberos tossed the necklace aside. “Curse bait. Leave it.”

Bhel kicked a splintered crate and a cloud of mouldy roots, a half-eaten squirrel and a dented tin spoon tumbled out. He held up the spoon like a trophy and made a face. “Luxury goods,” he said, sarcastic.

In a collapsed tent Josh found a small pouch of copper coins, hardly more than enough for a single al and shrugged it into his belt. “Better than nothing,” he said.

Brett brushed ash from a scorched canvas and found sothing a little more interesting: a short, battered cloak with a patchwork of cheap leather sewn down the back, and tucked inside a water-stained journal. The cloak was too small for Josh but the leather lined hem would fit Bhel’s shoulders snugly; the journal’s pages were damp and half-smudged, but a pressed scrap of a rchant token fell from between the leaves. Brett thumbed the token and looked toward Carcan. “Looks like soone tried to make a go of being an adventurer,” he said. “Not much left, but the cloak might keep cold off Bhel on a bad night.”

Perberos rifled a fallen pack and turned up a cracked compass and a short iron bracer with a dented plate, usable if nded. He shoved the bracer toward Josh. “Fits you,” he said. “Might stop an ugly cut.”

Brett also found a small vial of dark green liquid, oily and suspicious. “Goblin brew,” he said, holding it up so they could see. “Probably toxic. Possibly explosive.”

Carcan leaned away. “Definitely not for drinking,” she said.

Bhel pushed himself into the centre of the camp and surveyed the wreckage properly. He picked up a stub of a wooden totem, a jagged sliver carved with the spiral mark they’d seen before and dropped it with a curse. “They were settled here,” he said. “This wasn’t a raiding party. This was ho.” His voice had lost its earlier bite and taken on sothing colder.

Brett’s brows drew together. “Which ans there’s more. Maybe out in the forest hunting, or bringing back others.”

Carcan tucked the ears into her pouch and tied the top with a practiced knot, grimacing as she did. “We’ve got proof. A few useful things. But no real prize. Ti to move.”

They catalogued what they could carry and left the rest: the rotten food, the rat skulls, a broken horn that might be worth a few coppers to the right buyer. The more useful finds, the cloak that would fit Bhel, a dented bracer for Josh, a cracked compass and a handful of usable arrows, went into the packs with a small sense of satisfaction bordering on necessity. The fires burned down to coals, the last wisps of smoke twined toward the sky, and the party gathered their gear, checked straps and blades, and moved on. The goblins were gone, but the forest still held other things, and whatever had organized this camp was out there, waiting.

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