The following morning found us on horseback, heading down the cobbled path toward Elderstead, a modest township Anabeth claid was not far from her family’s estate. Silvermane’s gait was smooth and steady, though my peace of mind was anything but.
Anabeth rode behind , seated side-saddle as though gravity itself had made a private arrangent with her. She was quite a compact person, slight in fra, and it would not have been an issue had she remained still. But alas, Anabeth did not know stillness.
Every few minutes she shifted her weight, rummaging through the satchel slung at her side, producing yet another glass vial of viscous green substance.
“Ah! This sample was a failure as well,” she declared, holding it up to the sunlight before flicking it carelessly into the roadside shrubbery. “But no matter! Thirty-seven more samples to go.”
Before I could issue a lecture on roadside contamination, she produced yet another vial—this one filled with a glittering, amber-hued slurry from a yellow sli we’d slain.
“Now this one,” she announced with ominous enthusiasm, “should suffice. If my calculations are correct, a mild invocation ought to reconstitute Durand’s primary structure.”
Anabeth uncorked the vial and began sketching spirals in the air with her fingers, her other hand braced against my shoulder for balance. Then both hands rose skyward as she recited sothing between a hymn and an explosion. “Lithogenesis: Resonant Recall . . .”
A thin tremor passed through Silvermane’s reins as a burst of ochre light flashed behind us. The horse whinnied.
Sothing popped. Not loudly, but with the wet, disappointing sound of a collapsing pudding. The ochre light fizzled into a thin wisp of smoke that slled of burnt listone.
Anabeth slumped forward with a sigh that brushed the back of my neck. “Failure number thirty-two.” Then she perked up imdiately. “But no matter! Thirty-six more samples to go.”
Enough was enough.
I bellowed, “Impudent sorceress! One more of your trifling experints upon my saddle and I will see you returned to your tutors in shackles.”
She replied imdiately, and with a giggle, “I very much prefer the shackle to be of silver, Ser. Lesser tals offend my neck.” Her words landed with the sort of insolent grace only she could muster. How could anyone be this shaless was beyond .
But that was understandable. Only the ntally deranged kind could find immunity to my absolute intimidation.
Elderstead rising up like a smudge of hearthlight against the greenery as we rode into the late morning haze. I recognized the crooked bell tower from afar; every town had one of those for whatever rituals the townsfolk deed necessary.
Silvermane’s hooves clicked less urgently now, her gait settling into the kind of steady trot that lets a rider’s thoughts wander to dangerous things.
Which was precisely how I found myself noticing the marsh to the west. Anabeth followed my glance and said, “That’s Gallowre, Ser. There’s a slough there—three, if the travelers are to be believed. Little dungeons, mostly. They’d harrowed the trade lanes for years ever since they’d appeared.”
A few weeks ago, the ntion would have been an annoyance at best. Gallowre’s knot of sli dens had eaten better n than and spat them back into the road, mostly in pieces. It was the sort of hazard that required strength, experience, or a very inconvenient amount of luck. I would have gripped my reins and kept my eyes forward.
Now the thought hit like a bell. I could clear that dungeon in a single morning and earn myself north of 700 Kohns. Confidence is a dangerous thing, but it is also an honest one. For the first ti since the Order called a curiosity and Sir Roland called useless, I could picture the slis dissolving beneath a spatter of lightning channeled into steel. The notion of clearing Gallowre made my shoulders want to square like I was a flagbearer.
But reckless optimism was how n ended up fertilizer in Gallowre’s swamps. The smarter path was clear enough: reach Elderstead, acquire the Lightning invocation, sohow gain 4 more APs, and then return to the marsh with the ans to turn those slis into profit. Unless an opportunity presents itself . . . say, a glowing stone on the side of the road that’d give a Dungeon-specific Task for a reasonable boon, I wouldn’t venture into Gallowre now. But of course, such opportunities would never—
“Look, Ser Henry! A glowing stone on the side of the road!” Ca Anabeth’s chirpy voice.
Before I could utter a single word, Anabeth slipped off the saddle like a cat. Silvermane barely twitched. For a heartbeat, her cloak caught the wind and fluttered. Then she descended, impossibly soft-footed. The air around her seed to bend for just a mont to cushion her, like the wavering distortion above desert sand. Must be so Air-based magic.
She brushed the hem of her riding skirt and hopped toward the roadside glimr. The stone pulsed a bluish-gold rhythm like a heartbeat trapped in quartz.
Anabeth crouched and breathed, “Oh, fascinating! Crystalline aether residue, specifically a Lustrous Phonolite. But . . . goodness, what turbidity! Look at that occlusion band. Impure formation, yet it’s still maintaining an active glow!”
I had no idea what she’d just said.
“A Grade-III at best,” she went on, more to herself than to . “But even so, the density is magnificent. Oh, Ser Henry, it’s probably linked to one of the local dungeon aetheric leyline!”
‘What is a leyline?’ I willed myself to ask.
“You will answer . What is the leyline?” I intoned. “Answer, or I will take your head and hang it from my saddle.”
Silvermane snorted.
That was not the sort of conversational register one hoped for from a roadside geological specin.
Anabeth stared at , then grinned in a way that made my spine go cold and my cheeks go foolish. She cocked her hip. “Oh, there are many ways to ask a lady to give you head without barking orders, Sir.” She then strolled over as if she owned the verge. “A leyline is the physical manifestation of the aether in the human realm. Think of it as a river of invisible current running beneath the world. Magi and artificers draw from those currents to amplify their aetheric output. But of course, the great Sir Knight must have known all of that and is rely testing .” Then she handed the stone. “Would you like to inspect?”
I lifted the stone. Imdiately, an apparition appeared in front of my eyes.
Task Acquired: The Oozing Hollow
Objective: Enter and secure the sli-infested dungeon
Boon: 2 AP (on successful completion)
100 EXP
Ah. An actual good boon. My fingers itched. I could already feel the energy buzzing along my gauntlets, ready to be channeled. Halfway to having enough AP to finally wield the Lightning spell, and this dungeon seed—at least theoretically—well within my capability.
Anabeth kept her grin on her, “I trust this pleases you, Ser? Nothing like a little practical acquisition to brighten one’s morning.”
“Slis.” I flexed my gauntlets. “We slaughter slis. Now.”
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