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Chapter Nineteen: Reckoning at Dawn

The first thread of dawn streaks the sky as you and Theron, hauling the travois, reach Master Thorne’s house in Three Pines. The magistrate is roused from sleep; his face tightens when he sees the bound brigands and the hauled n. You lay out the night in plain, hard lines—the grave, the locket, the Blighted Wildcat, the brigands’ confession of Joric.

“Master Thorne,” you say, voice steady in the morning hush, “my brother Heyshem gave you a communication slate last year. I need to know if you still possess it.” You let the question hang, then add the truth you can no longer keep folded: “I am Yohan, his second. The Rex Huntsman are not rely traders or rangers; we are sworn protectors of the wilds, a quadrant of the old realm. If I am to act as scout for my brother, protector of Three Pines, and ambassador for Oakhaven, I must make our connection known.”

Thorne stares, then shuffles to his strongbox. “The slate…” he says at last. “Aye. It’s kept safe.” His eyes widen as your na and title settle over him. He glances from the brigands to Theron and back, the weight of what you’ve revealed slowly dawning.

A question nags your mind—the old, impossible one of the clans, the scions of the ancient king, the desert rats, the sea‑farers, the horse riders. You wonder whether the Huntsn’s silence across generations ans the old orders are truly gone, or whether this quest might call them back. The thought you do not speak aloud: if your brother summons you, you must answer; your service to the clan will guide the next step.

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You turn to Theron. “Does the Hall possess a slate?” you ask. “If not, I will advise Heyshem and seek his counsel. If he bids press on to the holding, I go. If he calls back to Oakhaven, I go there. Before I contact him, any information you or the Hall can spare would be welco.”

Theron shakes his head. “No, Yohan. The Hall has no such slate. Direct magical communication over such distances is rare; Master Elara keeps only a few devices for dire ergencies. Your slate is an artifact of old craftsmanship.” He straightens, resolve folding into his tone. “We will send word to Elara at once and press the magistrate for every detail about Joric and possible accomplices within Oakhaven. I will dispatch an encrypted ssage to Master Elara with what has transpired—the Blighted Wildcat, the locket, the brigands’ testimony, and your identity as a Huntsman.”

You agree to wait until Theron’s ssage is sent and use the daylight to follow the remaining leads. “Today I will visit the mill pond; tomorrow, Whisperwind Gully,” you state. You hand the folded, bloodied rag to Theron. “Send this with your fastest courier to Oakhaven. It is proof of the blight and of corruption.”

Turning to Master Thorne, you offer aid in moving the brigands to his stockade. He blinks, still absorbing the gravity of your claim, then finds his feet. “A stockade it is. And—your revelations. This changes everything.”

With the brigands secured and Theron preparing the ssage and courier, you and he step back into the burgeoning light. The village basks in golden morning while the dark comrce of the night lies laid bare behind you. The mill pond waits; the next piece of the puzzle draws you on.

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