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Light burned at the edges of your lids like a mory of fla.

You surfaced slowly, breath by breath, to canvas and the sharp-clean sll of boiled herbs. Heyshem’s tent crouched low around you, crowded with the hush of n who had not yet learned how to sleep again. Sowhere close, a kettle ticked as it cooled. Your arm lay heavy where the tusk had nicked you; your ribs ached as if the boar’s weight had settled beneath the bone and decided to stay.

Heyshem noticed the mont your breath changed.

“We thought you’d never rise,” he said, roughness in his voice fighting a laugh that did not quite make it through. He stepped closer and pressed two fingers briefly to your wrist, as if counting you back into the world. “The mist took so. Burned others. For you—” he tapped the bandage wrapped tight around your arm, “—it held.”

You tried to speak and found your mouth dry.

“Theron too,” Heyshem went on. “He rembers the jerky. Swore by it, even while he was coughing his lungs raw. Said the blight in it made him hard to the vapor. You ate of it as well.”

He leaned closer, eyes sharp now. “Do you rember how you cured it? The herbs. The smoke. Anything that might have blunted the mist—we need it. There’s a boar carcass cooling out there, and n who deserve more than prayers.”

You closed your eyes and dragged the mory up like a net snagged on stone.

The jerky had been made in haste, salted hard and hung where the smoke would find it but not choke it. North-herbs, scavenged from half-rembered groves and Reynard’s dwindling pack. Frostroot crushed fine, ironmoss scraped from wet stone, night-thistle for bitterness. The smoke had been rowan and ironbark—wood that slled of rain, old iron, and storms that never quite break.

“I promised Reva I’d try to rember,” you said slowly. “Those herbs don’t grow everywhere. We may not find their like close.”

Heyshem’s face eased, not with relief but with resolve. “Then we fetch them. If the jerky hardened you to the mist, we’ll try to make it again. If the boar’s fat holds anything—ash, resin, hide—we’ll test that too. We owe the n more than burial.”

The tent flap stirred.

A shadow fell across the canvas, thin and uncertain, and Toren stepped inside. His sleeve was bound where the mist had kissed him; the flesh beneath still looked wrong, darker than it should. He was not the man who had rushed his father screaming. Flight and pain had hollowed him, scraped sothing raw and permanent into his face.

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Theron followed, ink smudged on his fingers as always. Mira ca next, quiet as a stalking cat. Last was Lyra, pale and shaking, cradling a folded bundle wrapped in cloth.

“They haven’t left you,” Heyshem murmured, almost to himself. “Two days now.”

Toren dropped to one knee without ceremony. He set his hand on your bandaged arm, carefully, as if afraid even that contact might break sothing.

“I should have stopped him,” he said. His voice was thin, scraped nearly to bone. “I thought I could end it cleanly. I thought steel would be enough. I ran.” He swallowed hard. “If there is any way to undo what he did—tell how to help.”

Mira stepped closer, her hand finding Lyra’s. Lyra flinched, then held on. She unfolded the cloth with shaking care. Inside lay crushed roots and dark leaves, pressed flat and brittle.

“We kept what we could,” Mira said. “Not much. But enough to try. She wouldn’t leave them.”

Lyra nodded, eyes shining. “Frostroot. Ironmoss. Night-thistle. The ones you nad.” Her voice caught. “I thought they were only dicine.”

Theron cleared his throat softly. “The smoke,” he said. “Rowan and ironbark. And there was resin—Reynard’s pack. Similar to what crusted the boar’s hide. I used it to seal the at. If the blight was in the flesh and you ate it, perhaps the resin and smoke changed how it bound to blood.”

You pushed yourself higher on the cot and took the herbs from Lyra’s hands. They slled thin and clean—cold iron, wet stone, bitterness sharp as a vow. The mory ca clearer now: strips of at rubbed with ash and resin, hung low over smoke until they dried stiff and dark.

“If the blight hardened us,” you said, “then the cure changed how it took hold. Render the boar’s fat. Boil the resin down. Mix it with a decoction of frostroot and ironmoss. Make a salve.” You t Toren’s eyes. “We test it on a small wound first. One man. One cut. If it resists the mist, we scale carefully.”

Toren’s hand tightened on yours. “I won’t run again.”

Mira nodded once. “There’s a stand of rowan two days north. I can lead.”

Heyshem straightened, decision settling into him like armor. “Theron records everything. If this works, the Hall will have it with witnesses. If it fails, we’ll know why.” He glanced toward the tent opening. “Yahs is seeing to the dead. Simply. Honestly. Cael deserves that much.”

Outside, Yahs moved with quiet care, arranging water, cloth, and earth. No rchant’s mask now—only a man who understood sand and endings.

You drew a breath that hurt and let it go.

“Begin,” you said. “Render the fat. Fetch the wood. Write every step. Toren stays with . Lyra—help Yahs. There’s penance in tending the dead.”

They moved at once, swift and silent. Orders passed hand to hand. Parchnt unrolled. Horses were saddled. The tent filled briefly with motion, then thinned again.

You lay back and watched the canvas ripple in the wind. Pain settled into sothing honest and manageable. Outside, Yahs’s low chant rose and fell, carrying Cael and Jothere toward whatever reckoning waited beyond breath.

When you closed your eyes it was not to sleep, but to asure: fat to resin, heat to ti, smoke to flesh. One careful trial. One watched hour.

The boar was dead. The blight was wounded.

Now ca the slower work—of rembering, of nding, and of proving that what had been made monstrous could, piece by piece, be undone.

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