The Unseen

“The Second Day of Spring”, Ch. 3

Cover artwork by @clya_lyren
Story written by “Jungle”




The sun’s conquest had nearly come to an end, its day old empire a thing of the past. Even as it was saying its goodbyes, the red sun tinged the blue skies with orange and magenta streaks of vibrance. Across the sea,  that towering pillar of red smoke was still standing, but lo’ and behold: another tower had joined it, much nearer, not too far south from the docks where I was lying in wait. While I couldn’t see Empyria from there, I could imagine the uproar that Lady Lazira’s defiance would cause.

In fact, I’d planned on it. The way I saw it, after ol’ Nesden saw that smoke signal from the south, he’d probably leap at the chance to go and lay siege to Athedia. Realistically, Nesden would leap at the opportunity to go and siege anything after being cooped up as Steward for however many years. Gideon would have too, if he had still been amongst the living. With Empyria and Dalmar attacking from two fronts, Athedia’s only hope would be aid from Valikorlia.

Unfortunately, this in and of itself was a remote possibility. To start with, Valikorlia’s navy was inferior to Empyria’s and crossing the sea was the most direct route. If the sea was blocked, the Valikorlian Knights would need to travel by land, but that would mean traveling through the neighboring territory of Lehryn, risking ambush and a possible counterattack. At best, Kendo could send a small band of warriors to Athedia’s aid by flying them over land or sea, but this wouldn’t be enough to tip the scales.

With Valikorlia pinned down, a surprise offensive against Athedia seemed… well, not so surprising, I guess. It was a logical move, or at least, it was if you didn’t realize that there would be no second front coming from the south. That was another thing I had counted on – a lack of communication.

Why was that? Self-preservation. An army without a proven leader is an army that will lose. Gideon had named no heir to the Stewardship despite the reality that he had squired an untold number of bastards. Between that and the fact that his closest associates were as unscrupulous as he was, it was clear that it would take some time for that power vacuum to shake out. Whoever scraped and clawed their way to the top after Gideon’s passing would have to be a complete fool to advertise Dalmar’s weakness at a time like this… and no fool would survive that trial.

My train of thought was interrupted by a sudden flash of lightning over the sea. The spurious thunderheads that had followed me to Athedia had already caught up to me here, along the beaches that spun a sandy path to Empyria. The sea slapped at the rotting wooden dock I stood upon with strong, black waves as the storm choked almost all of the light from the sky. The impatient growl of thunder reverberated somewhere out over the sea. Another flash of lightning followed. Soon, a flood tide of fog blanketed the coast in a mysterious and overwhelming haze.

I thought I heard the sound of canvas rippling in the wind. Just as I was about to dismiss it as an eager thought, a dark shape loomed up out of the fog. As it grew larger, I began to discern some of the details; a sizeable vessel with a black flag flying above pluming scarlet sails.

It was the Misty Marionette. I’d still recognize that ship anywhere, even after all of the years that have flown past. She was one of the few pirate ships that still dared to sail the Medial Sea, all owing to the quick hands and feet of its crew and the prowess of its legendary captain. Speaking of whom, the next thing I noticed was what looked to be a little dinghy deploying into the waves and making its way towards me. I thought I counted three heads aboard – two rowers and a third who just sat and watched. Beyond that, the mist was too thick to tell much.

Before too long, that little rowboat made its way up to the rickety dock that I stood upon. A long plank of wood clattered against the dock to serve as a bridge. Two of the Misty Marionette’s crew members greeted me with smiles as wide as an alligator’s grin. One of them, a sandy-haired vagabond in a skimpy bikini, blew me a kiss. I crinkled my nose a little bit.

“Good afternoon, ladies.” I offered the two rowers a little wave and a polite nod. The red-haired lass with the rippling biceps snickered at her crewmate and punched her shoulder, which was met in kind with another punch back.

“Hail, Stormrider.” Before I could ask where their third passenger had disappeared to, I was interrupted by a familiar, mischievous voice to my left. Thankfully I caught myself before I looked – I had already fallen for this trick once, back when I was still wet behind the ears.

“Well met, Mistwalker.” I responded without moving. The fog seemed to swirl about me, damp and cold. Here and there, I caught traces of my elusive host, but I knew better than to trust my eyes or ears right now.

“I see you are no longer so easy to sneak up on, Mr. Harbinger.” Her voice was coming from all around me. The mist had gotten so thick that one could practically drown in it. Despite that, I closed my eyes and concentrated, waiting. She had gotten better at this little game over the years, but then again, so had I.

There. Two steps forward, one step right. Her presence was like a blazing torch amidst the darkness of a deep catacomb. The spark of life, as I like to call it. Unmistakable and irreplicable. It moved towards my right.

“It would appear so.” My hand shot out instinctively. My index finger and thumb pinched tightly onto a fine fabric. Suddenly the mist dispersed as the owner of that mysterious voice was suddenly apprehended by her coat sleeve.

There she was. The Captain of the Misty Marionette. I regarded the petite woman that stood before me and it took a moment for me to recognize her. I remembered her eyes first – pale green like a peridot. The short, dark bobs that used to cling angrily to the sides of her head had become long, well-kept braids pulled neatly behind her head. The black leather jacket she used to wear had finally been replaced with something a little more formal looking – a fine indigo long coat, thick and robust, probably a fine wool blend. I had to admire some of the gold embroidery running along the part and down the sleeves – all nautical in nature, depicting various myths and legends passed down in the wild lands beyond the bounds of the Emerald Ring.

She caught my eyes lingering on one in particular – a boy riding a dragon, and she chuckled. I went ahead and extended my hand. As she reached out and gripped it with her dainty black fingers, I thought I saw her start to smile. Maybe just a hint of one, at least.

“It is good to see you again, Captain Maura. Shall we depart and conclude our business, then?” I gestured towards the little dinghy parked at the end of the dock.

“Then let us discuss the matter of our payment and we can set sail.” Maura stood before me. I tilted my head to the side a little, shooting her what I hope was perceived as a quizzical look.

“No longer in it for the good will then?” I chided, then gestured at a sparkling gold bangle dangling from her wrist. That hint of a smile I noted before had vanished.

“Surely you and your crew have been quite successful in your own ‘business ventures’… what need of you for more trinkets?” I followed up. In hindsight, I should have seen this coming. My trip aboard the Marionette was a gift with strings attached.

“The time for joking is over, Mr. Harbinger. You want something from me. I want something from you.” She folded her arms across her chest and cocked her hip to the side. I couldn’t help but sigh, not at her, but at myself for not recognizing this eventuality.  I clicked my tongue.

“What’ll it be then?” I asked, feigning a smile.

“I want your word that the no storm will ever touch this vessel.” She squinted at me. What was she looking at, I wondered? Maybe trying to study my face to see if I was about to tell a lie? She wasn’t letting up, either.

“Hah… surely you jest, Captain.” I shook my head and for a few painful seconds, my hollow, forced laughter was the only thing anyone could hear over the lapping of the waves.

“You are joking, right?” I asked again. Stormrider. Of all the stupid stories I’d inspired, it was the one the most rooted in truth that always caused me the most trouble. As I started to think through an explanation, my train of thought was interrupted by a surprisingly loud guffaw from the miniature pirate standing before me.

“But of course, Mr. Harbinger. Or did you forget that I met you when you were still a wet behind-the-ears sea pup washed up ashore? Tch! Sacrilege, I say.” She pulled her hands behind her back and turned away from me, walking towards the plank to board the ship.

“I do have a request, though.” She stopped and turned to face me once again.

“If it is within my power, I will return a favor for a favor. Go ahead.” I swept my cloak to the side and offered her a mock curtsy. Maura snorted in response.

“We left the ballets behind us in Dalmar, Mr. Harbinger, or perhaps you managed to hit your head on the way here?” She rolled her eyes.

“Captain, please. I have pressing business to attend to.” I pleaded with her.

“Alright, alright. Don’t get your knickers all twisted up. Here it is.” She cleared her throat quickly before continuing, “You see, me and the gals here, we have grown weary of living under the shadow of that disgusting witch. I know you know of whom I speak. Every season, her abominations grow bolder and more numerous. We have already doubled the watch around Sonata Island. With my power, I can keep us hidden, but it is only a matter of time until one of those chimera stumble upon our hideaway.” As she explained her position, I couldn’t help but agree – it was only a matter of time until the Captain and her crew clashed with the Beryl Witch.

“Why not just… move? Surely you can just take your ship and sail off to some other, uninhabited island to enjoy yourselves?” I tried to negotiate with her a little bit. The Beryl Witch was not someone I would trifle with willingly. Not unless I had a really good reason to. Which I did. Just once though, when I was much younger and stupider.

“Ah, Mr. Harbinger, you say you are in a hurry and yet you continue to tell us jokes… alas, I’m afraid that your punchlines are a little bit… lacking.” She shook her head, taking a long, exasperated breath before continuing. For a moment, she reminded me of a wilting flower before snapping back to her normal posture.

“First it would be Sonata Island, then it would be Lanta. If she takes Lanta, even you will not be able to keep her in check.” As she spoke, she gesticulated as if she was annotating a map of Lanta and the nearby Blue Mountains.  

For the first time, I really chewed on what she was asking me for. Déjà vu washed over me like a wave of nausea as I recalled some of the horrors I’d faced there, beyond the Wall of Sleep. I took a deep breath. Sitting and dreading it would not change the fact that I could not accomplish my plan without making this… concession to the Captain. One thing at a time, I supposed.

“I agree.” I felt the my throat tighten as I spoke the words, spitting them out with a thick layer of gravel. With that, she tilted her chin up a little bit to look me in the eye and shot me a smug grin.

“I thought you might, Mr. Harbinger. Now then, let us depart. You have another ship to catch, as I recall…” Her voice trailed off in a sing-song charade of laughter that seemed to bounce all around me. As I contemplated asking her if that made for a good party trick, I remembered that I wasn’t much for parties to begin with and kept silent instead.

Soon I found myself boarding the little dinghy. The two crewmates stared at me the entire way. The red-haired lady tossed me a sly wink. I really wasn’t sure what to make of it. Did they find me attractive? Or perhaps this was some kind of joke to them? I offered her a polite smile and pondered it no more. There were more important things to consider.

Such as… what am I going to do once I board the flagship vessel of the Empyrian Navy, the Maeden Hammer, and come face to face with Nesden the Dread Pirate himself? Well, kill him, of course, but exactly how was still up for debate. After all, I had to make this look like an accident. There could be no signs of foul play. It wouldn’t be as easy as it was with Gideon, but what’s life without a few challenges to test your mettle against?

Soon I found myself climbing aboard the famed Misty Marionette. Many of crew stood and gawked at me from the forecastle deck. I’m not sure if any of them would recognize my face now, so many years after our chance meeting on Sonata Island. That said, I doubted any of them had forgotten what happened on the day of our chance encounter. I certainly haven’t.

“Mr. Harbinger… you’re sure about this, yes?” The Captain looked back over her shoulder at me and I offered her a resolute nod back.

“Have no fear, Captain. I’ve survived exploits far more suicidal than these.” I couldn’t help but crack a smile.

“Ah, but Mr. Harbinger, you only think that because you have never stood before Nesden the Blue.” She called out as she walked away.

Hah. We’ll see who has the last laugh.

‘The Stormrider’

(See also ‘The Nameless One”)

Throughout the City of Lanta, local folklore tells of the Stormrider, a mythical figure that rides a great, nameless Black Dragon, forever stirring the clouds of the Tumultuous Plains until they boil over and become violent storms capable of rending the earth with their fury. As the legend goes, the dragon covets the Silver Moonflowers, but alas, none of them grow upon his lands, for nothing can share a home with those calamitous storms. When one of those twisting maelstroms from the Tumultuous Plains breaks free and travels east, towards the mountain, it is supposedly the Nameless One hunting for the elusive Silver Moonflowers.

The legend of the Stormrider begins with a brazen young boy who took it upon himself to bring the dragon that which it coveted. As the story goes, the Nameless One wasted no time finding the boy upon the edge of the plains. As the sky grew dark around him, the sun faded away. When he presented the Silver Moonflower to the sky above, both the boy and the flower were swept away, engulfed by a sudden storm, and yet unharmed. The nameless dragon, an intelligent but lonely creature, decided that it would bestow its wisdom and power upon the boy, and so the boy became something apart from the human race entirely.

A commonly held superstition around the City of Lanta is that the Stormrider himself will appear before the wicked as a wild-eyed, long-haired teenage boy on stormy nights, warning them of the consequences of their continued actions. The superstition continues, positing that those who ignore the warning will be visited by the Nameless One and put to death by the great black dragon, or one of its mighty storms.

‘Silver Moonflower’

A rare and delicate beauty. Do not confuse this with your run of the mill Moonflower. Your typical Moonflower is white and can be found in various places throughout the Emerald Ring. Unlike most flowers, they bloom at night. This, along with their petal shape, size, and number, are the only things the common Moonflower shares with its cousin, the Silver Moonflower.

True to its name, the Silver Moonflower is not white, but a lustrous silver that sparkles even in the darkness, where it grows. These rare beauties can only be found in the deepest parts of the Lunar Woods, where the canopy is the thickest and the forest is at its darkest. It is only here, on moonless nights, may one find an elusive Silver Moonflower.

Even if you were so lucky as to find such a treasure, you must take care when handling it. First, the flower cannot be wrested from the earth, even by a delicate hand. It must be cut at the stem, just above the soil, by a sharp, swift blade made out of silver. If successfully extracted from the earth, great care must be taken to avoid letting any daylight touch the flower. It should be transported in a dark, secure container, if possible. If any sunlight should fall upon a Silver Moonflower, it shall wilt and die in a matter of seconds, and this is why they are so difficult to find and highly sought after by collectors.

There are two legends about the Silver Moonflower that are prominently known throughout the Eastern Wilds. In addition, throughout the City of Lanta, the Silver Moonflower is feared as a bringer of disaster.

The first myth tells us of the Nameless One, a great black dragon that stirs the clouds of the Tumultuous Plains with its massive wings. Supposedly, this dragon covets the Silver Moonflowers, which can only be found far to the east of its home. When one of the wild storms from the Tumultuous Plains breaks free and travels east, towards the mountain, it is supposedly the Nameless One hunting for Silver Moonflowers.

The second, related myth where the Silver Moonflower makes an appearance is the legend of the Stormrider, which involves a brazen young boy who took it upon himself to bring the dragon the flower which it coveted. As the tale is told, the dragon recognized the boy for his courage and decided to bless him with a portion of its power, birthing the Stormrider, a mythical figure that appears before the wicked and warn them to change their ways.

“The Second Day of Spring” Ch. 2

Cover artwork by @clya_lyren
Story written by “Jungle”




Traveling by horseback is a decent enough way to get around the Emerald Ring. Not everyone would agree with me, though. A Darterfly or a reliable ship would make for a shorter trip in most cases. A team of Mirwolves could run just as fast and they wouldn’t fall prey to some of the predators that prowled the forests of the Eastern Wilds.

So why was I bothering with a horse? Simply put, convenience is kingly.

My horse was such in shape and function only. Surely no real horse could race along as fast as a falling arrow flung from afar while making less sound than a tumbleweed rolling along the slope of a dune in the desert sun. Better still, this horse was always at my side, even when it wasn’t. My faithful shadow, always one step behind me.

The beaten paths we floated over seemed seldom used, but the overgrowth yielded to an unseen force, drawn back like a hand that had just been bitten. So too, did the animals and insects make a path. The hunter spiders fell back to their boroughs and dens, peering out at us from the darkness with their bulbous red eyes. Even the shadows that the trees cast seemed to shrivel up as the morning dragged on.

I had lost track of the time. Looking up, all I could see was a quilt of leaves, rich green, and slender branches, long like some wisping tendrils of smoke rising up from a mahogany pipe. It wasn’t until we met the crash of rushing water that I found a window by which I could still see the sky. I judged the time to be 9 ‘o’ clock in the morning with a small margin of error given in either direction. It’d only taken me a couple of hours to make my way west of Dalmar, past the crags of the Broken Mountains and into the nameless green forest that swallowed up the churning flow of the Godfinger Rapids before the river wound its way up into the Graytop Mountains, far out of sight.

Of course, all of this was a long detour. There was a bridge connecting the trade routes between Dalmar and Athedia. It would have been much faster to go that way, certainly, but I don’t like bridges. Too many people and too much open space for my taste. Maybe on a moonless night, beneath a cloud-covered sky. Besides, I had other options. Here, at the edge of the forest, where the Godfinger Rapids raged year-round, there was another path, albeit more treacherous.

If one were so inclined, they could cross the rapids by jumping across the stones that protruded from the water. Sure, treading from one rock to the next might have been a daunting task to most travelers, but I had become something that was apart from your typical adventurer. My mount effortlessly glided along the path of boulders and large stones that dotted the white waters.

After crossing and making our way back out of the forest, tall spires atop flagstone castle towers began to jut up from the soft carpet of the abundant meadows that lay to the west of Athedia. Windswept red banners whipped about, still bound to the flagpoles they hung from, but just barely. A gale must have kicked up from the sea while I’d ridden around the bridge, likely the remnants of a more violent storm that had managed to twist itself free of the Tumultuous Plains. A distant clap of thunder to the southeast seemingly confirmed my thought. How fortuitous for me.

Instead of making a beeline for Athedia, I decided to lay low along the outskirts of the Rainbow Basin. The rough terrain did not hinder our travel, but the heavy mist surrounding its outskirts served to conceal our passage. Soon my gaze swept across the kingdom’s backside – a sheer cliff.

The castle keep was located on the top of a small plateau wrapped in a flagstone cape and adorned with a matching crown. The noble quarters and the more important establishments, such as the bank, the barracks, and the access to the aquifer, sprawled out along the south side of the castle, flanked by yet another great stone wall. Beyond that laid the villages situated along the road to the Dalmar.

By concentrating most of its battlements towards the more vulnerable south side and using the sheer cliffs as natural defenses, Athedia had proven itself a difficult kingdom to conquer many times over, or so I’d read. While an army might have a tough time scaling their way to the top of the northern face unnoticed, I was not an army. I was just… well, me.

Or more precisely, a lone rider in black, galloping headlong towards that seemingly insurmountable mass of stone. No sign of slowing down. At the last possible moment, I leaned back as we sailed upwards. At first, it looked like we’d smash into the cliff, but we defied gravity’s tyrannical grasp and began to run straight up the side of the cliff.  As we climbed upwards, I tilted my head to the side, relishing in the gentle crosswinds caressing my cheek.  

Without warning, we sailed off of the cliff face, flying higher still, past the great flagstone walls of the castle keep. Soon it was only the tallest of towers that could rival us, that being a single spire higher than all of the rest; the Steward’s private quarters, complete with a garden balcony. It was as good a landing place as any.

We landed atop marble tiles, amidst a sea of red roses that were complimented by crimson banners bearing a golden coat of arms: a lion brandishing a thunderbolt. The seal of Athedia. With the wave of my hand, the ephemeral mare faded away, allowing me to gracefully descend to the ground. I tapped the tip of my boot against the smooth tiles as I noted the impressive workmanship surrounding me before turning towards a pair of violet curtains.

“I have answered your summons.” I called out. A tedious silence followed. From somewhere I could not place came a rare scent, like lavender but even more subtle. I could recognize it anywhere: Silver Moonflower. Not to be confused with your garden variety Moonflower, this was its rare sibling, known only to grow in the deepest parts of the Lunar Woods, far from the reaches of the Emerald Ring.

“Are you going to invite me in or not?” I tried again.

“Thought you might let yourself in, Sildahan.” A strong, sharp voice answered me as the curtains were swept aside by a gloved hand. A pair of sparkling, amber eyes leveled with my own as a tall, slender woman stepped out to greet me. Before me stood Lazira, Steward of Athedia, in what was unmistakably her battle garb – an intimidating breastplate resembling a snarling lion with a gaping, toothy maw on the front side, expertly molded from some kind of black alloy. Her skirt and her bracers were fortified with the same material. Beneath that formidable shell, she wore a form-fitting jumpsuit woven from flexible, charcoal-colored scales that descended into tall, black leather boots that only served to accentuate her own height.

“Have I done something to offend you?” I smirked as I gestured towards her rapier, another fine work of art on display. A bell-shaped guard that seemed to be carved out of one massive bloodstone protected a grip lined with dark fur. A hefty ruby had been set into its pommel. The blade seemed impossibly thin, like it was one single, rigid thread of a spider’s web. This must be the famous black rapier, Myranir, wielded by Lazira of Athedia, practically invisible to the naked eye. Certainly a curious instrument.

“Hm? Oh. This little potato peeler?” She held up the sword. “N’er to fear, Sildahan. ‘Tis that time of day when a lady must practice lest age and idle hands get the better of her.” With that, she casually turned her back towards me and walked back into the tower. I waited a moment and then followed after her, maintaining a respectful distance. As the velvet curtains were swept aside, I was greeted by a decidedly austere chamber, adorned by little else but the drapes and wall-to-wall mirrors. I gazed upon my reflection for a moment and wondered if I wasn’t a bit dressed down for this occasion. No matter.

“What has led you to summon me, Lazira?” I saw no reason to make casual conversation. Not today.

“Ah, I see you’ve a mind to cut me to the quick.” Lazira turned on her heel to address me. She let her rapier hang down at her side.

“I have a busy evening planned.” No smirks from me, just a cold, hard stare which she returned in kind.

“So be it. Kill Kendo of Valikorlia. This I ask of you and only you, Sildahan.” She came right out with it. “Quick and painless, if’n you please. And discreet.” She added quickly. No beating around the bush. Just as expected. I turned away from her.

“And what has the good Steward done to earn your ire, Lazira?” I found myself glaring over my shoulder at her when I decided to answer her. She turned to the side, minimizing her profile and obscuring her rapier from my sight. She sighed.

“Can’t think of a thing at all. Just simple facts: Kendo’s life or a full-scale war throughout the Ring. Surely you, Sildahan, can see the scales tipped to one side?” She continued to stand still. Poised to act, but not yet on guard.

“I think if you add the lives that would be bought and sold as slaves to that scale, you might think differently, Lazira.” This time I turned to address her.

“Oh, Sildahan… who would have thought you to have a bleeding heart.” She scowled at me  as she continued, “My say makes no diff’rence. They’ll bring slavers back to the Ring whether I do or don’t, but you see, the diff’rence is, if they decide to come after this nation, we’re not sitting on the opposite side of the sea. No sir, we’re already fenced in – Gideon to the south, and Nesden to the north. They would cut off our trade routes by land and sea, and all of us would starve.” She articulated her points with a particular rhythm. I also couldn’t argue with anything she was saying, but that didn’t persuade me.

“I will not kill Kendo. He has done no wrong.” I folded my arms across my chest and stuck my chin out.

“Oho, now I see. You fancy a bargain, Mr. Sildahan. Now it all makes sense. Well, I havn’t the mind or the time for haggling, so name your price.” She was doing a good job of maintaining her composure so far. Hmm.

“Hate to say it, but I’m not interested in any of the treasure you’d throw at my feet to prevent this war from occurring.” I turned away from her again and she laughed outright.  

“Are you so certain?” She asked. “Our vaults have trinkets even you may not have laid eyes on.”

“I wouldn’t be so sure. I did let myself in once.” I knew that she was a tough customer, but so was I.

“I see you are also quite a joker as well as a waste of time, Mr. Sildahan.” I saw her nostrils flare a little through the reflection of the mirror before me. Finally. A crack in her armor.

“If I’ve wasted your time, then I’ve wasted my own, and as I’ve already said, I have a busy evening planned.” I allowed myself the smallest of smirks as I turned to face her. She cocked one eyebrow at me.

“Ah surely you must have a full itinerary if you plan on dragging all the armies of the Emerald Ring down to Melram before this day is done.” Now it was her turn to smirk. My lips puckered a little and I turned my head to the side as if I were about to brush a speck of dust off of my duster.

“That would be far too vulgar a display of power, Lazira.” I shook my head to accentuate my position, then continued. “Only three lives are needed to restore the balance.” Her expression softened as it dawned upon her.

“You’ll murder three Stewards then?” She asked, eyes bright with curiosity.   

“Inevitably so, and you are going to help me, Lazira.” I flashed her a smile, but there was no warmth to it. No, it was more like I was baring my fangs.

“I think not, Sildahan. If you want to get yourself killed, that’s fine, but you won’t drag my country into an early grave alongside you.” She still hadn’t dropped that subtle defensive stance of hers.

“I could try to reassure you that this will not lead back to Athedia or Valikorlia. After all, if I were found out, then the Emerald Ring would already be at war instead of teetering on the precipice of it.” I let my hands dangle at my side and began to walk towards Lazira. She didn’t budge.

“Oho? And how might you accomplish that? Seems far-fetched to me.” She narrowed her eyes and shot me an incredulous look. I chuckled.

“Without a doubt, but that doesn’t make anything I’ve said untrue.” I stopped advancing head on when I was just outside of her reach – more than several paces away. Instead, I began to circle around her, towards her left side, away from her dominant right hand.

“Seems we’ve become at odds then.” Lazira declared. “Know this, Sildahan; I will drink your blood before I let you harm my people.” As I circled, so did she pivot on the ball of her back foot, keeping her profile minimized. The duel was well underway.

“How about we break this stalemate with a friendly wager, then?” I extended my right arm out to the side, palm outstretched and waiting. From beneath the shadow of my hand rose up a long, slender object. To her eyes, it might have resembled a blade already, but once I closed my fingers around it, there would be no doubt. In an instant, a black longsword appeared in my hand, and while its blade offered a peculiar luster, it did not seem to reflect any light. No, if anything, the light seemed to shrink away from it.

Now she pivoted to the side, turning her sword arm towards me. The tip of her rapier danced in the air, all but impossible to see.

“Sounds interesting, but I’ll be damned if I lose my soul to a kaern such as yourself.” She spat the words out with a surprising amount of bite. She pivoted again, this time showing me her sword arm. The tip of her rapier was all but possible to see as she leveled its blade with me.

“I don’t have any use for such things, Lazira. I’m not a god. Just hold on a moment.” It was my turn to raise my blade. Despite its length, I was able to wield it with but a single hand, for the otherworldly material it was made from was lighter and sharper than any kind of steel you’d find around the Ring.

“This is what I had in mind – a duel, first to draw blood wins. If I win, you must light the signal bonfire to signal your dissent. That is all. If you win, I will assassinate Kendo as you originally requested and you will get to keep your false sense of security. How about it?” There it was, laid out bare on the table. Would she accept the terms?

“… Deal.” She hardly hesitated.

“Then let us begin.” As soon as the words had left my mouth, she lunged at me. Her blade lashed out angrily, as if she could barely hold on to it. I felt its tip float past my nose as I instinctively stepped aside. A follow up strike nearly tagged my leg but I kicked my foot back at the last second. Another follow up might have landed had I not batted away her expert thrust with my longsword. Behind her gritted teeth and focused stare I could see her sizing me up, taking note of how quickly I could swing my weapon, the way I evaded her first series of probing attacks. This could be difficult. Unless…

My stomach muscles flexed, becoming like a stern girdle as I forced a deep breath down into my abdomen. With my free hand still resting behind my back, I clenched my fist, seeing the current in my mind’s eye, watching it course faster as I continued to backstep and circle away before my opponent could maneuver in range. She began to grow emboldened. It wouldn’t matter.

That familiar prickling along the back of my neck, that burning itch deep inside my left eye. The curtains behind Lazira begin to flow like molasses all the while the echoes of the storm roaring outside remained constant. My foe tried to step inside again, but now it seemed as if she was stuck inside an invisible pit of quicksand. Everything around me was happening in slow motion. Even my own limbs moved as if they were struggling against an unseen floodtide, and yet I felt relaxed. Calm. All of these were sensations that I had grown accustomed to.

There it is. That almost imperceptible blade of hers, cutting the air as it billowed forward. I slipped inside, twisting my torso as I watched her blade cleave the empty space where my heart had been just a second ago. She really wasn’t pulling any punches. Nor should she have. If I had to guess, it felt like she was moving at only a tenth of her original speed. That was probably a good thing, as I wasn’t confident my luck would have held out otherwise. She was quite good, but I expected as much, given her reputation.

Alas, I didn’t have all day to play, nor did I have a desire to. After all, this wasn’t really fair. She was only human. I was… something else. Definitely not a “god,” because those don’t exist, and not necessarily “better than,” your typical human. Just different. Standing directly before her, I raised my free hand up and pointed my index finger towards her cheek. A strand of shadow wrapped its way down my arm and up to my pointed index finger, where it became a sharp talon. I raised it to her cheek and pressed it just lightly enough for a single bloom of red to well up from beneath the surface. I continued on, stepping past her, enjoying the shocked expression that had just began to form on her face from one of the mirror’s reflections.

With that, I had won the contest. The world snapped back to its normal, impatient self. I gestured towards her cheek as she turned around.  She side-eyed herself in one of the mirrors and spotted the little red rivulet, like a bloody tear. Her sword clattered to the floor, and so I dropped my own, allowing it to fall silently and rejoin the rest of my shadow. Now came the real question; would she uphold her end of the deal?

“How?” She asked, jerking her temple towards me as if the question would dig itself out of her skull if it wasn’t answered.

“Trade secret, I’m afraid.” I offered her a thin-lipped smile. “With that, I must ask that you uphold your end of the bargain. I need Nesden to see that red smoke and react to it.” I strode towards her and stood before her once again. The way her lip quivered said it all – she was afraid. Not necessarily of me, but of the consequences that this would bring upon her country.

“But… Gideon and Nesden…” She stammered a little bit.

“Leave Nesden to me.” I offered her a courteous bow.

“And Gideon?” She asked. I closed my eyes and replayed Gideon’s last moments. My grin spread from ear to ear, like a scarecrow’s.

“I think you’ll find that Gideon couldn’t harm a fly.” With that, I sank into the floor, leaving only the echo of my twisted laughter and the tiny pinprick upon her cheek as the only evidence of my visit.



Next Chapter:

“The Second Day of Spring”, Ch. 3

Cover artwork by @clya_lyren Story written by “Jungle” The sun’s conquest had nearly come to an end, its day old empire a thing of the past. Even as it was saying its goodbyes, the red sun tinged the blue skies with orange and magenta streaks of vibrance. Across the sea,  that towering pillar of red…

“The Second Day of Spring” Ch. 1

Cover artwork by @clya_lyren
Story written by “Jungle”



Once upon the second day of spring, a blazing sun heralded the tides of war: a bloody phantom of smoke rising up from its grave, the horizon. The shade loomed tall and menacing – visible even from across the Medial Sea. An appropriate declaration of defiance. As I turned away from the saltwater spray of the docks, I felt a warmth I’d nearly forgotten as it washed over the scars on my back: the first rays of Dawn, embracing the day and casting the night’s cloak aside with her sweet refrain. I shivered at her touch.

Out of the corner of my eye, I spied an elderly gentleman with disheveled tufts of gray hair, matching spectacles, and clothing frayed in odd places, likely from sleeping on the cobblestone streets. He stood a little further down the alleyway, staring at the strange man who had just crawled out of his own shadow. I turned my head towards the gentleman, offering him a curt nod. His lip quivered and I saw my own reflection gazing back at me through his panicked eyes.

A few measured steps carried me over to the old man before his heart could finish palpitating. He looked as though he wanted to speak, but couldn’t grasp any words, only big, empty gulps of air that did little to calm his racing heart. He reminded me of a drowning sailor. I gently placed my hand upon his shoulder for reassurance. A stray strand of silver hair lilted to the side as I tilted my head, regarding the old man with my best impression of a warm smile shared between old friends.  

“Marvelous cloak you have there, my friend. May I offer you a gold coin for it?” Now I found the man tilting his own head to the side, much like the way a confused dog might look at its owner after an unfamiliar command. I almost laughed at the thought. With a quick flourish and the snap of my fingers, a single gold coin appeared in the palm of my hand, as if summoned from thin air. The bottoms of the old man’s eyes curved upwards with a hint of hope as he started to wrap his mind around the offer.

He reached for the coin, but I pulled it away first. His jaw went slack and I shook my head. He seemed hesitant, as if the deal was too good to be true. And why should it be? In many cases, he would be correct to mistrust a stranger. By my estimate, everything this poor fellow owned was probably worth less than one solitary silver piece. I casually cascade the gold coin over my knuckles, adding another, and then another. By the time he had seen the third coin, he was already hurrying to pull off his old rag and hand it over. The man’s eyes were so transfixed by the flash of gold that he did not notice the steady stream of what would appear to be rodents scurrying out of the back of my pant leg. Away you go, little denizens of the dark. Find that which I seek.

“Don’t spend it all in one place.” I took the garb and departed with a wink.

A couple of minutes passed and I found myself hunched over, wearing my freshly purchased, dirty, tattered cloak as I pretended to hobble my way down one of the main roads. West would take me towards the center of Dalmar’s infamous pleasure district, and so I kept walking, the sun nipping at my heels. Along the walk, I felt a dull pang in my chest, right below where my heart should be beating. What was it? Remorse? For the orphaned pickpockets that passed me by, figuring I had nothing? Or perhaps it was sympathy that I felt as I passed by the homeless mother sheltering her children? I leaned over and pulled a few more golden coins from the beyond before tossing them to her without a word, or even an acknowledgement. I simply carried on as she and her children stared at the coins with disbelief.

As my journey continued, the buildings grew more robust and lavish, as did the garbs of all those who would pass me by. Sport coats, fur coats, top hats, tuxedos, and all other manner of elegant formal wear flew away at the very sight of me, the homeless beggar hobbling his way into the upscale part of town. I suppose I shouldn’t judge them too harshly, after all – with every few steps I lurched, another black rat scurried off into the gutter, or scuttled inside of a bar or brothel. Every time I pretended to retch up a meal, a few more flies began to buzz around. As a party of nobles and other well-to-do’ers sneered and spat at me, I couldn’t help but chuckle to myself. To be ignorant and to be oblivious are two different things, but in this case, they were guilty of both.

I heard a shrill squeak in my ear and so I closed my eyes for a moment. One of the rats had found what I was after. The hazy image of a hanging sign emblazoned with, ‘The Dancing Doll,’ in elegant red script. Ah, Gideon. I should have known. He was a glutton, and the only thing he liked more than food and spirits was to break the beautiful and the elegant. There would be no shortage of any vice at the Dancing Doll, the brothel where only the ‘best’ dancers were allowed to perform, serve, or… service. I felt that familiar pang again. The muscles in my neck relaxed as I suddenly twisted my head from side to side, relishing the loud pop I received as a response.

I changed directions and set off once again, following the enthusiastic chirps of my little friend. Before much longer, I found myself standing underneath that same swaying wooden sign. I turned towards the door. The man standing guard there stared at me in disbelief for a moment before his brows furrowed. He puffed his chest out and glared at me.

“Beat it. We’re closed.” His voice was gruff, leathery. He smelled like smoke and piss. I couldn’t help but wrinkle my nose. Some people have no respect for themselves, I suppose. No matter. I straightened my back, rising to my full height, before standing chest to chest with him. His eye twitched as I tilted my head down to meet his stare.

“I just want… one drink, mister…” I put some extra gravel in my voice, ending the last word with a growl. The man responded by planting his hand on my chest and pushing hard. I didn’t budge. Instead, I grabbed his wrist with an icy grip like a steel manacle as I looked him dead in the eye.

“I’m coming in for a drink.” My words fell heavy with the weight they carried; the unsaid threat lingering behind my empty stare. I felt my gaze getting hotter as a little spark of electricity leaped from the surface of my left eye before diving back in like a fish jumping out of the sea before rejoining its school. The door man was stupefied, absentmindedly nodding his head as he stepped back to let me pass. I resumed my act straightaway, cowering down as I hobbled my way inside, leaving the doorman to convince himself he had imagined everything that had just transpired.

The Dancing Doll greeted me with a nauseating wave of perfume and smoke. Ugh. At the very least, the place was only dimly lit by the many candles dotting the faded, yellowed wooden walls. The daylight was kept at bay by the many curtains still covering the windows, protecting from prying eyes. Plenty of shadows, plenty of places to hide. I’m not above redundancy. I spotted the bar a dozen paces away, the bright center around which this depraved little world revolved. As I approached the barkeep, I spotted a small crowd of soldiers and took a second glance. A dozen or so Dalmarian Royal Guards, all standing at attention as a few dancers writhed about upon the stage, keeping step to the rhythm of a single guitarist hiding in the corner. Heavy, rumbling laughter reverberated throughout the room.

I cleared my throat so obnoxiously that the bartender turned to regard me with a scowl.

“Yeah?” He looked back and asked from over his shoulder.

“Gimme-a drink! A drink!” I slurred and leaned up against the bar. “C’mon, mister! I’ll pay ya tomorrow!” I meekly offered him a thumbs up. The bartender was not amused, nor did he appear to offer credit for goods and services. I kept at him anyways, my act growing more belligerent by the moment. Soon my drunken slurs were the only thing that could be heard throughout the Doll. Before long, the sea of armed guards parted to reveal a grotesque caricature of a man.

This man was known throughout The Emerald Ring as Gideon, the Drought of Dalmar. True to his name, he could drink anybody under the table, provided you could find a stool sturdy enough to seat all sixty stones worth of his blubbery guts. Indeed, Gideon was not so much a man as he was a twisted personification of one of the famed great white whales that lurked amongst the deeps of the Medial Sea… and yet despite that, he was filled with a pride as boundless as his endless waistline. I found it hard to believe that at one point in his life, Gideon used to resemble one of those little pickpockets I’d passed by on the way here. In fairness though… for all my barbs, it wasn’t hard to imagine what kind of appetite could have turned a starving child into a monster like him. I’d seen enough of the world to know firsthand.

“Barkeep! What’s that racket?” Gideon bellowed, his lips puckering as the jowls on his neck shook with each word. Now I had his attention.

“He’s a stiff! ‘E won’t g-give me a drink!” I shouted back, gesticulating wildly with both hands. A hushed murmur fell over the crowd.

“A drink? You’d like a drink, you say? Well then, come over here and drink with me, your Steward!” The massive tub shook with laughter. My grin grew wider as I sauntered over. I started to wonder if it would really be this easy when two crossed battle axes suddenly barred my path.

“Whu? C’mon! I thought we were drinkin’! Gotta drink before we get to fightin’, ahar har har.” I dropped the cloak I was wearing to reveal my naked torso beneath it, and with it, all of the scars that dotted each inch of tissue like so many constellations of stars. They could see that I bore no weapons. One of the guards in front of me muttered something over his shoulder before they decided to let me pass. I sat down at the table directly across from Gideon and showed him my biggest, dumbest grin. Gideon responded in kind with an insidious smile, his eyes flickering with malice.

“I’ll make you a deal then, you old beggar. You best me in a game of poison cup, and I’ll let you drink as much as you want. All you have to do… is pick the drink that’s not poisoned. What say you?” Gideon leaned back, tracing the tip of his pointer finger around the rim of his goblet. My head wobbled a bit as I did my best to keep up the façade.

“A’right! It’sa… deal! Hic.” I squeaked. Gideon’s laugh was cold and cruel. He grabbed the drinks from each dancer flanking his sides, even cuffing the one who didn’t hand hers over fast enough. I felt my jaw clench for just a second. Relax, Trent. Not yet. Gideon pivoted in his chair, trying to conceal both cups from me. I debated whether it would be out of character to ask why Gideon carries poison around, but I decided it would be wise to keep my mouth shut. Better to play the dumb mark than to let on that I know his game.  

His forearm jiggled as he set both cups down on the table and pushed them forward, towards me. I convincingly lost my balance and fell forward onto the table, or would have, but I recovered at the last moment. Gideon and his guards laughed knowingly. Any fool could tell this was a trap, that both cups were poisoned.

I’d expected as much from the Drought of Dalmar, though. After all, his exploits as both a poison taster and a poisoner were all well known throughout the Ring. Rumor has it that it was a gambit like this that had allowed him to usurp the Stewardship of Dalmar in the first place. Surely, he was a cunning bastard in his right mind, but wine and spirits are not vices that lend themselves to sound thinking. Surely, even the Drought would be tipsy by the time the sun rose, and what’s more – I knew he had cause for great celebration on this particular morning.

I began to sniff both of the cups despite the fact that any poison Gideon had used would have been odorless. His laughter intensified as I seemingly took the bait. While he and his guards were too busy giggling over what they thought would be my last moments alive, a single black fly buzzed its way from my shoulder into the cup on my left. Nobody noticed it except for me. The hook was set. My expression hardened as I clenched my jaw and took the cup on the right before pushing the cup on the left forward. I raised the cup to my lips and the room went completely silent as everyone took one collective breath and held it.

“’Ey, ain’t you gonna drink that ‘un, ssir?” I lisped a little bit and jerked my chin towards the other cup. The laughter stopped and Gideon’s brow furrowed.

“I already have a drink. See?” He raised his goblet and a few of the rubies encrusted along its surface glistened in the pale candlelight.

“C’mon naw, if you dun’ drink… then how do I know you didn’t, hic, poison them both? Hic! S’not much of a game now is it.” My chest shook as I sold that last hiccup. C’mon, you pig. Nobody has ever had to twist your arm to drink. Why should I start now? As if he’d read my mind, Gideon leaned away from the table. I felt my catch slowly slipping away. It was time to double down.

“Unless… mabbe… yer afraid? Afraid? Bahaha!” My words sliced into him like a butcher’s knife. His wounded ego would be my skeleton key.

“Afraid? Me? Of a little poison? Hah! You really are an old fool. Fine. Let’s drink then. On three… oh wait, can you even count to three?” That last line got a good rise from his lackeys, and so Gideon’s smirk returned, but I could tell my arrow had found its mark. I simply nodded at him and raised my glass.

“One… two… three!” The guards chanted. We both raised our glasses and we each took a long swig. For a moment, all was quiet once again. Then my eyes started to water. I imagined my throat tightening. I clawed at it, desperately, as if trying in vain to extinguish an intense burning sensation I felt there. The chorus of laughter returned as I fell to the ground, kicking my feet into the air as I pounded my fists against the floor in agony. Excruciating pain, if only in my imagination. The chorus only intensified. Soon, my eyes stared unblinking as my struggling body became still.

“Hah! Old fool! Let that be a lesson to you in your next life, then!” Gideon’s cruel bellow is all that could be heard now. As he opened wide to guffaw once more, the black fly perched inside of his cup flew past his two rows of yellowed teeth and beelined straight for his windpipe, where it lodged itself.

“Ack!” Gideon coughed, realizing he had swallowed the fly. Nobody seemed to notice. Everyone was too busy having a laugh at the expense of my life. Nobody realized that it wasn’t a fly Gideon had just swallowed, either. No. It was a puppet, one wrought from the only thing that would follow me no matter where I wandered: my shadow. Now that ‘fly’ had grown to two times its original size. Three times. Ten times. Larger still. Soon the outline of its grotesque eyes could be seen bulging out against the fleshy prison of Gideon’s neck.

He tried to scream, but not a sound could be heard over the continued roar of laughter. He grabbed his throat with one hand, flailing the other blindly at anyone within reach. His pink cheeks tinged blue as his chest quaked, struggling in vain to capture even the smallest bit of air. To the rest of his party, it looked like he was just having a good time. A really good time. In fact, it looked like he was laughing so hard he might even fall out of his chair. Then he really did fall out of his chair, which only forced all of the royal guards to laugh all the harder. Even the bartender started chuckling. Laughter is contagious, after all.

As Gideon laid on the floor, dying, a break in the forest of legs and boots allowed us to lock eyes for a moment. He was panicked before, clearly, but now, with all of the color drained from his face and a huge lump in his throat growing larger by the second, he was clearly horrified. The corners of my mouth rolled up like two ends of an unruly carpet that refused to lay flat.

“Baal… za… bod…” He quietly mouthed the word, Baalzabod, a name given to me by the nomadic tribes that roamed the deserts far in the southwestern reaches beyond the safety of the Emerald Ring. Roughly translated, it meant, “King of the Rats,” a title I still find quite amusing. Gideon became still as the laughter began to die down. Finally, his entourage noticed his distress. They were already too late though. Gideon’s eyes had rolled backwards in their sockets, and his cheeks had turned a deep shade of purple. His tongue bulged out of his mouth like an overripe sausage forgotten in a dumpster.

Gideon the Drought was dead. With this realization, his guards began to shout and stomp about in a panic – so preoccupied with the death of their Steward that nobody noticed the corpse of the old man had disappeared, leaving only a tattered cowl and a small puddle of poisoned wine behind as the only clues to his crime.




‘The Misty Marionettes’

“‘Ay there, laddy! Would you care to come aboard? We’re need help with some hard labor. Would you care to lend us gals your muscle?”

An hour later…

“Those boys were just as gullible as the last! Pass me another bottle!”


The Medial Sea and the rivers, streams, ponds, and lakes that it connects to are a prime source of transportation for many denizens of the Ring. Traveling by boat is much less expensive than hailing a Darter to get around, plus boats are better suited to hauling heavy cargo. Many of the most prosperous city states in the Ring have their own port and the largest have navies as well. Together, all of these ships on the water act as a kindling, which, when it met with the spark of human greed, led to the rise of piracy across the Ring.

Pirates are not uncommon on the water. They tend to lurk in the rivers and tributaries on the outskirts of the Medial Sea, where they can easily hide their ships. Then, when the time is right, they will attack their targets and flee just as quickly as they arrived. Naval ships are not often used to pursue pirates but are merely a deterrence to keep the pirates from coming too close to civilization. Deploying multiple ships could leave a city-state at risk, while deploying a single ship could result in state-funded piracy, depending on the competency of the crew. For these reasons, the naval ships typically do not pursue pirates onto the open sea.

Pirates typically operate as independent groups from one another and the Misty Marionettes are no exception here, even though the group itself is exceptional and noteworthy. A group consisting entirely of lady pirates, they are known for their daring and ingenious heists as well as their lavish tastes. Worth noting, the Misty Marionettes will typically not kill their victims, although they’ve been known to rough up and even maim a man or two, given the right circumstances. With all of their success on the open seas, they have managed to cultivate quite a hideout on Piano Island. This island lies to the east of Lanta City and holds the ruins of what was seemingly a castle long ago. Since the Marionettes moved in, it has since been repaired and outfitted to capture some of its long lost splendor.

The Misty Marionettes are not without their leader. Maura the Mist is the Captain aboard this ship. She is a small woman, sleight of frame, with short, dark, wavy hair and chestnut brown eyes. It is rumored that Maura is a Disruption user with the power to call forth a heavy fog on open waters, hence her nickname, ‘Mist’. Not much is known to the public about Maura to the public though.

‘The Medial Sea’


“You know… I’ve seen my share of maps. Even the old maps. The ancient maps. The maps crawling with secrets older than your grandparents. The older the map is, the more likely you’ll see the big secret. What secret, you ask? Well, I’ll tell you: the single largest body of water in this land wasn’t always here. All of this seawater you see? Solid land, for the most part. The Medial Sea just… up and appeared one day.”


The Medial Sea. A completely landlocked body of water around which the Ring circles. The Medial Sea serves as a key transportation network throughout the world. Boats, both large and small, are common sights across its surface. The combined naval might of the Fellowship of Five Towns keeps the main body of the Medial Sea safe and free of pirates. Well, mostly free of pirates. The Misty Marionettes have been known to inhabit the waters and rivers around the southeastern part of the Medial Sea. This makes the City of Lanta all the more isolated, as many are unwilling to risk an encounter with pirates to get there.

As you could imagine, the Medial Sea is the subject of many a tale and piece of folklore. Many have wondered exactly how deep the darkness stretches beneath its surface. Many have imagined what secrets the depths concealed. Some speculate that there is a large serpent lying dormant in the water, perhaps a relative of the serpent chained to the bottom of the Sea of Fire. Others whisper of a sunken city full of forgotten treasure. Who knows what the truth could be?”

‘Turtle Rock Island’

“Hey, wasn’t there a little island dotting the horizon there the other day?”


Turtle Rock Island. While cartographers may disagree exactly where it sits within the Medial Sea, they are all in agreement: it exists. Somewhere. What these cartographers do not know is that Turtle Rock Island is less of an island or a rock and a lot more of a gigantic turtle that floats around the Medial Sea. Those in the know have often speculated what motivates the turtle to move around the sea, but even fewer are in the know when it comes to the inhabitants of Turtle Rock Island. Perhaps even more confusing is the fact that several onlookers have reported seeing a small cottage on the back of this behemoth.

Here dwells the mysterious Moonstone Witch, a sociable recluse accompanied by her many familiars. Those close to the Moonstone Witch know her by her chosen name, Seles. Her pets come in many shapes and sizes: a toad, a black cat, and a raven, to name a few. She is no stranger to the Five Townships and will visit them as her whims dictate. She is known as a lawful Witch throughout the Ring and so it is not uncommon for denizens of Andante to seek her out in hopes of some blessing or boon. For this reason, among others, her visits are always brief and unannounced.

‘Black Orchids’

The Black Orchids are a beautiful but deadly species of fauna known to grow in the Eastern Ring. More specifically, these tend to be found around the Misty Mountains. These flowers are rare to find in great numbers, as they have excellent medicinal properties. Harvesting the Black Orchids is not without its pitfalls, though. They must be handled with care, as their pollen is an intoxicant able to put even sizeable animals to sleep in a matter of minutes. This special property is the reason the flowers are sought out in the first place – they are a primitive, yet effective anesthetic.

There is one place where the Black Orchid can be found en masse. This location is known as the Wall of Sleep, a huge construction of stone encircling the fortress atop Blue Mountain. Here the Black Orchids grow in great abundance around the wall. Many who have ventured to visit the Wall of Sleep have disappeared, never to be found. The fortress protected by the Wall of Sleep is rumored to be the home of a powerful witch, but no one has ever managed to confirm this.

‘Sentry Owls’

Horned Owls are a fierce predator known to hunt in the forests at night time. Their relative, Sentry Owls, are known to do the same, although there is a noticeable size difference between the two. By most estimates, the Sentry Owl’s wingspan can reach up to four paces across whereas a Horned Owl would top out around two paces. The Sentry Owl’s talons are incredibly sharp and durable, capable of rending flesh, muscle, and ligaments alike. Their beaks are powerful enough to pry apart its meals with ease. These owls, like their relatives, hunt exclusively at night time and they have developed huge, almost comical-looking eyes that are adept at seeing in the dark.

The Sentry Owl is known to eat a variety of small woodland creatures. They can take down foxes, dogs, even small wolves without any issue. They typically do not attack humans unless they feel threatened, but if you are traveling through the woods with small children or animals, you had best take caution. Although these owls don’t typically hunt during the day, some can and will break the mold if they get hungry enough.

The Sentry Owl does not have many natural predators, but among its most feared is the Hunter Spider. These spiders just as big as a Sentry Owl, but they are much heavier and are more than capable of leaping great heights to take down a Sentry Owl. That said, the Sentry Owl’s natural defenses are more than enough to turn the tables, depending on the situation. To protect their young, the Sentry Owl will typically not nest in forests, but instead look to find an isolated tree in the countryside instead. Fiercely territorial, the Sentry Owl will remove (and kill) any birds that are currently trying to nest in its desired tree.