The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 23 free porn video

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Treya heard a metallic clicking sound as she scraped the shovel through the layer of dirt and grime on the floor. “I think I found something,” she said, then looked up. “Are you all right?”

Sarette was leaning against a collapsed stone structure. Her eyes were closed and she was rubbing her temples. The two of them were exploring the middle of the cavernous room while the rest of the group navigated around the edges, searching for tunnels and stairs.

“I just don’t like all this rock over our heads,” the other woman said. “I’m supposed to be above the mountains, not below them.”

Treya nodded. She’d felt a vague sense of unease herself ever since they’d reached the cavern. “Let me know if it gets worse,” she said.

“I’m fine now,” Sarette said, standing up straight. “What did you find?”

“I’m not sure yet.” Treya brushed her hand through the soil she’d turned over, pushing aside several pebbles. Two of them glinted in the illumination from the mage light trapped in the lantern resting nearby. She rubbed the dirt off. “Buttons, I think. That metal that doesn’t rust.”

Sarette gazed out across the cavern. “How many little bits and pieces do you think there are in a room this big? I hope Ellerie doesn’t want to dig the whole thing up.”

Treya laughed. “Probably only if we don’t find anything more interesting.”

“Did you hear something?”

“Just the others. Why?”

“I thought ... never mind. It must have been an echo. Shall we try over that way?” Sarette pointed to some lumps on the ground about thirty feet away.

The two of them headed in that direction.

“Is that cloth?” Treya asked as they drew closer. “Clothing?” The shape was disturbingly familiar, but something about it wasn’t quite right.

They stared for a moment.

“We’ve got to know,” Sarette said. She used her staff-spear to push the cloth to the side, uncovering a skeletal hand.

They exchanged glances, and then Treya held the lantern directly over the body so they could get a better look.

“Where’s the head?” she asked.

“I don’t know, but look, there are more of them.”

The new bodies, three of them, did have heads—or rather skulls.

Then, farther away, Treya saw a round object. The missing skull was staring at her, standing upright on the ground. The jaw had separated, but it was otherwise intact. “I found it,” she said with a sigh.

“How did they die?” Sarette asked.

Before Treya could respond, she saw lights heading their way, and soon the others had joined them.

“What’s this?” Corec said. “Are those bodies?”

“Four of them,” Treya said. “One’s missing its head. It’s over there.” She pointed it out.

Sarette said, “Clothing wouldn’t have survived for thousands of years, would it? Are these the people who dug out the rockfall?”

“Possibly, but possibly not,” Bobo said. “Look around this place. It’s a bit of a mess right now, but I don’t see any indication that the structure itself has collapsed. Ellerie and I found stairs and tunnels around the north and east sides, and most of it still looks perfectly usable to me.”

“We found them along the south side, too,” Corec said. He’d been partnered with Shavala.

“What does that have to do with the bodies?” Ellerie asked.

“Simple,” Bobo said. “The people who were capable of building this place wouldn’t have been bothered by some rocks covering up an entrance. They’d have just unburied it, rigged some contraption to prevent it from happening again, and then gone about their normal lives. The avalanche must have happened after they abandoned the city—possibly a long time after.”

“So, this group may have discovered the tunnel before it was buried?”

Bobo gave one of his expressive shrugs. “I can’t say for sure, but it’s not like the mountain is hard to find. It was on the map. Over thousands of years, hundreds of people must have reached it, even if they didn’t know what it was. Most probably stopped at the buildings to the south—maybe that’s why we didn’t find anything there—but some of them must have explored the mountain. And I doubt the cave we came in by is the only entrance. We’re not that far into the mountain. If the city extends throughout, there must be other ways in.”

Ellerie sighed. “Then this place may be just as empty as the buildings outside.”

“Not completely,” Treya said, showing her the buttons. “And we saw a lot of things lying around. Some of it looked like stone from a distance, but not all of it.”

Corec said, “We saw stuff too, but I think rainwater has been flowing down the tunnel into this room and rotting everything away. The upper levels may be better preserved.”

Bobo nodded. “There’s plenty to explore, especially if there are other sections of the city through those tunnels.”

“What do you think happened to them?” Ellerie said, glancing at the bodies.

“Some sort of disagreement?” Corec suggested. “Perhaps they ran into another group that didn’t want them here.”

They stared silently at the bodies for a moment.

Finally, Treya said, “You found stairs?”

“Four large stairways leading up to the first landing,” Ellerie said. “They seemed to be spaced evenly, about every hundred yards. I thought this chamber was a circle at first, but now I think it might be more of an oval. It’s hard to tell without more light.”

“We only found two stairways, but we didn’t make it as far as you did,” Corec said. “We stopped to look around a few times. Just one tunnel, and it was smaller than the one we came in through.”

“We found a smaller tunnel to the north and two larger ones to the east,” Bobo said. “I can’t decide whether it would be better to go up and see what we can find here, or go east and try to figure out just how big this place is.”

Ellerie said, “There’s a lot to do, but we should plan it out carefully. For today, I’d like to check out the upper levels. We know there’s something to explore there. The tunnels might not lead anywhere.”

“I hear something,” Shavala said. She peered to the south.

“So do I,” Sarette said, holding up one of the mage-light lanterns.

Shavala said, “I just saw something moving, out past the lights.”

“An animal?” Corec asked, detaching his scabbard from its harness and drawing his sword. The blade glowed green, shifting to blue as he held it.

Shavala shook her head. “No. I can’t feel it with my elder senses. It’s like there’s nothing there.”

“I just saw it,” Ellerie said. She summoned another mage light and sent it to the south.

A dark figure stood in the distance, beyond even the new light. It looked like a person.

“Hello!” Corec called out. He stepped in front of the others. “Who are you? Can you understand me?”

The figure didn’t speak, but slowly shuffled closer to the light. Treya drew in a sharp breath. It was a man, but he was naked and his left arm was missing. His skin was darkened and bruised. He was looking their way, but with a blank stare, not focusing on anything.

“Bloody hell,” Corec muttered. He raised his voice. “Do you need help?”

The uneasy sensation Treya had felt since reaching the chamber grew stronger. “Something’s wrong,” she said. Her healing senses usually only worked at close range, but she could still feel something unnatural about the man. Unnatural, but familiar.

“I can’t sense him,” Shavala added.

“What do you mean?” Corec asked. “Why not?”

“There’s someone behind us!” Bobo exclaimed.

They whirled around to find a woman lurching toward them. She, too, was naked, though she wore a tarnished metal bracelet on one arm. Her neck was tilted at unnatural angle, and her skin was battered and bruised like the man’s. She was close enough to make out her features. Her ears were angular, with a point to them, but not as much as an elf’s. Her stare was blank and her eyes were white, as if she had severe cataracts.

“They’re already dead,” Treya said, her mouth going dry as she realized why the sensation of wrongness felt familiar. It was the same feeling she’d had with the skeletons she and her friends had encountered outside the wizard Lodarin’s home.

“Zombies,” Bobo said, his voice wavering. He clutched his cudgel close to his chest.

Zombies were creatures out of old stories and legends—dead bodies returned to a false life so they could take revenge on whoever had wronged them. Of course, skeletons had been legends too until Treya saw one for the first time.

She heard faint padded thumps behind her, as if someone was running across the dirt floor, and then a commotion and Corec’s startled shout. Turning back, she found that another of the creatures had grabbed Corec’s arm and was attempting to chew through his brigandine armor.

“What the...” Corec exclaimed. He pushed the figure away but it sprang back, clawing at his face. This one was another man, with no obvious injuries other than its bruised gray skin.

Corec wrestled with it and forced it down to the ground. Standing up, he reversed his grip on his sword and stabbed down into the zombie’s chest. The creature didn’t stop moving, instead grabbing the blade and trying to pull itself up. Corec kicked at it, then stomped on its neck to hold it down as he pulled his sword out. Stepping back from the zombie, he swung down, beheading it. The blade struck sparks as it cut through the layer of dirt and then an inch into the stone flooring below.

“This one’s getting closer!” Bobo shouted in panic.

Ellerie whispered the words to a spell, and one of her beams of light hit the woman in the face. The creature collapsed.

Shavala extended her hand and flames billowed out toward the first one they’d seen. Its skin burned but it didn’t otherwise react, continuing to take short steps in their direction. Shavala kept the fire burning, and finally the zombie fell, too damaged to continue moving.

More of the creatures appeared at the edges of the light, some moving faster than others.

“Sarette, guard our backs!” Corec yelled. The two of them took positions at opposite sides of the group. As the zombies approached, Corec stepped away from the others, clearing enough room to maneuver his sword. He swung at the first of the creatures, hacking its arm off and cutting into its side. The zombie kept coming, not appearing to notice the injuries. Corec grunted, then swung the glowing sword in a wide arc, slamming it deep into the creature’s torso. The zombie went slack and slid off the blade, collapsing.

On Sarette’s side, one of the faster ones ran close, but she rapped the butt of her staff-spear against the ground, charging it, then thrust the blade into the zombie’s stomach. A flash of blue and white light flickered over the creature and it fell to the ground twitching.

More creatures neared and Corec waded into their midst, swinging with strength rather than finesse and taking down one target after another.

Sarette danced fluidly between the zombies, the creatures collapsing when she touched them with her weapon. But then the lightning magic on her staff-spear faded and she was forced to fight them normally. Stabbing them with her spear didn’t have much of an effect, and she was soon surrounded. Then she tripped over something and fell to the ground. One of the zombies loomed over her, but Ellerie killed it with another beam spell.

Treya rushed at the nearest of the creatures, striking its throat. It didn’t react. She kicked it in the back of its leg and it fell to its knees, but despite her continued assault, it managed to stand back up. Letting her breath out, she focused all her energy and reached out to lightly tap the creature’s chest. She heard the sound of the zombie’s ribs cracking at the center of impact, and it flew backward, falling and rolling until it came to a stop lying face down. It pushed itself up on its hands and tried to pull its body back to her, clawing at the ground.

“I can’t hurt them!” Ellerie shouted as she pulled her rapier from a zombie’s throat. She started whispering the words to a spell but the creature came at her again and she had to dash away. Then Bobo was there, crushing the thing’s head with his cudgel.

“Neither can I!” Shavala said. She lowered her bow, facing a zombie with three of her arrows embedded in its chest. She cast her flame spell again, enveloping her new opponent.

“Their heads or their spines!” Corec called back. “That stops them!”

Sarette had clambered back to her feet and switched to a new tactic—hamstringing the zombies by cutting the tendons at the back of their knees. It didn’t kill them, but it knocked them down, giving her time to hack at their necks.

Treya faced off with another of the creatures, a smaller woman. She grabbed it by the shoulders to stop its advance, forcing herself to hold on despite the cold clamminess of its skin. Then she swept her leg against its ankles, tripping it and forcing it down to the ground. Straddling its chest, she grabbed its head and slammed it repeatedly against the floor, shattering the skull into fragments. The zombie finally stopped moving.

Treya stumbled back and wiped her hands against her tunic, trying to get the gooey black blood off her fingers—and trying not to think about what she’d just done. It felt wrong, but then, so did the zombies. And there were dozens of them, maybe hundreds, coming into view at the edge of the light.

There had to be a better way. Centering herself, Treya tried to shout, as she’d done that day with the skeletons, but all that came out was a clear bell tone. A white burst of light rushed outward from her body, and the sound of the bell tolling echoed back and forth across the chamber, growing louder and louder. Her entire body was glowing with a white light, she realized. She flung her arms out to her sides, not knowing why. With each ring of the bell, another flash of light pulsed out from her body in a perfect circle, and as the light and sound intersected, the zombies collapsed to the ground.

The rush of magic was beyond anything Treya had ever experienced, and she tried to scream—whether in pain or in exhilaration, she didn’t know—but the only sound she could produce was the ringing of the bell.

She could no longer feel the floor beneath her feet. Her posture had gradually arched backward, her face pointing up, and she had to force herself to straighten her head and look down to find out why. She was hovering a foot off the floor. She stretched her legs out as far as she could, but the ground was too far to reach.

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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 10

“No!” Ellerie snapped, after Marco had asked her the same question for the third time. “I’ll tell you where we’re going when you need to know, and not before.” “Then how do you expect me to plan for the trip?” the factor asked. He was a tall, slender man with a carefully groomed mustache and black hair that had started to gray. “I don’t. You’re here to handle the finances and to translate. We’ll listen to any advice you want to give, but Boktar and I will take care of the planning, with...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 24

“There’s too much to explore, and now we’ve missed the whole afternoon,” Ellerie said, speaking to a small group after the sun had fallen. “Without Leena, I guess we’ll have to go back and resupply before we can do any more looking around.” Boktar said, “Even if Leena was here, we couldn’t stay much longer. She can only carry so much, and we’re already running low on oats for the horses again.” Ellerie sighed. “We need to have more time. Even another trip would only give us a few days. It’s...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 5

“I remember there being more people here,” Sarette said as she and Katrin wandered through the market stalls. “You’ve been to Lanport before?” the other woman asked. “Once, years ago.” Her parents had taken her so she could see the ocean. “Well, it’s cold and wet today. It’s not a surprise that the market’s quiet.” Sarette hadn’t considered that. She hadn’t even noticed it was raining, and the temperature would have to drop much lower before she’d be bothered by it. Cold rain was a fact...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 24

“Change the world how?” Rusol asked, narrowing his eyes. “You’re a son of Larso,” Leonis said. “You know the scripture. Magic is too dangerous to be allowed loose, uncontrolled. It’s only safe when it’s granted as priestly blessings.” “What does that have to do with anything?” Leonis smiled again. “What if all magic was priestly magic, given only to those the gods deem worthy?” “That’s impossible. The gods have no say over elder or arcane magic.” He just barely stopped himself from...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 25

Constables escorted a line of gang members down the street toward the city center, past a row of jeering citizens. Razai stood amongst the crowd in her Vash-like disguise, grinning widely at any of the thugs who looked her way. She’d had nothing to do with their arrests, but if they were set free, she wanted them to come for her rather than the divers. As the last of them passed, she saw a flash of a familiar face through a window across the street. Renny Senshall—and if the girl had known...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 26

When the guard opened the door to the cell, Ellerie realized she’d been scratching her brow again. She forced herself to stop. “We’re ready for you now,” the guard said, waving her through. He’d taken the redheaded girl away thirty minutes earlier, and Ellerie hadn’t seen her since. “Is Boktar all right?” she asked as she followed him out of the room and down a corridor, past other guards who watched her curiously. “Who?” “My friend! He was shot!” “I don’t know, miss. I heard some people...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 28

The nearest peaks in the Coastal Range were visible even from Circle Bay, and it hadn’t taken long to reach the foothills south of the city. Corec was setting up his tent when Ellerie and Boktar returned from climbing the nearest hill for a better look. “Did you see anything?” he asked. “The road curves around to the east,” Ellerie said, “but if my maps are right, we don’t want to go that way. There’s not enough land between the sea and the mountains for what I’m trying to find. There’s...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 13

While Corec and Bobo went into the city, Katrin spent the day practicing on her harp and getting to know Shavala. The elf girl talked about her training as a druid, her brother and his wife and their young son, and a friend named Lele who Katrin eventually figured out was a squirrel. For her part, Katrin admitted she’d been a thief, and that the penalty Shavala had overheard them talking about was a way for her to stay out of prison. Shavala knew what a thief was, but it was clear from her...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 16

The stop at Dalewood was uneventful. Corec had asked at The Smiling Jester, but there hadn’t been any packages needing delivery. He was starting to believe that working as a courier wouldn’t pay any better than being a caravan guard, unless he could get hired on full time by one of the houses. They got back on the road the next morning. At the edge of town, the West Road split into the Trade Road, which led to Four Roads and then through the hills into Larso, and the Old Road, which led into...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 21

“It doesn’t make any sense!” Ellerie exclaimed, shutting the ancient book and setting it to the side. “I have no idea if we’re in the right place or not. It’s just miles and miles of dead land!” “Things change over time,” Bobo said. “Not this much! There aren’t any landmarks left. I don’t even know if the river we crossed yesterday is the right one. There was no bridge, and it was miles from where it should have been.” “Rivers can change course,” Josip said. “I’ve seen it happen.” “I...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 15

“Where’re ya headed?” the man with the missing tooth asked. He wore chainmail and carried a mace on his belt. There was a small shield strapped to his back. “And why don’t you got any shoes?” “Four Roads,” Treya replied. “I’m visiting some friends. I’ve got shoes in my pack; I’m just not wearing them.” “Four Roads?” the other man said as he looked her up and down with a wide smile. He had long blonde hair and a bushy beard, and wore a leather breastplate. There was an arming sword sheathed...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 25

Ellerie shined her lantern over the fallen stone and dirt. “This one’s blocked too,” she said with a sigh. It was the third tunnel they’d found leading away from the southern area of the city to what they expected would be another section on the east side of the mountain, but just like the first two, it was blocked by a cave-in. Boktar rapped on the tunnel wall, then shouted and listened for the echoes. “This one’s man-made, so it sounds different, but I don’t think there’s any point in...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 16

Shavala woke up the other women, then rolled her bedding back into a tight bundle. She’d volunteered to sleep on the floor the previous night after having gotten a look at the sorry state of the room’s straw tick mattress. Sarette and Treya had joined her, leaving the bed, such as it was, for Katrin and Ellerie. The tiny inn they’d found in the village of Elmsford only had two rooms for guests, but it was worth it to stay indoors and get out of the biting cold. In the nine days they’d been...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 18

“It’s done,” said Cenric, a bulky, brown-haired man who’d become the spokesman for the former red-eyes. He spoke in a dull, tired tone. He and his remaining men had spent the entire morning building two massive funeral pyres, one for the red-eyes who’d died and another, larger one for the villagers. Corec looked up from where he’d been conferring with Sarette. “Then line everyone up. I want to speak to them.” Cenric trudged back to where the others were standing in a dispirited group, with...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 21

Shavala and Katrin rode Socks and Flower to the elven quarter, since Katrin had suggested it was too far away to walk. After two hours, Katrin finally said, “We’re getting close. I think.” Shavala glanced back at the way they’d come, confused. She didn’t know her way around the city, but she had a good sense of direction, and it felt like they’d taken a roundabout route. “Couldn’t we have just come through there?” she asked, pointing. “I led us around some bad neighborhoods,” Katrin said....

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 11

“It reminds me of Circle Bay or Valara,” Leena said, gazing at the whitewashed buildings surrounding the market square. “I think settlers from Circle Bay built up Kitish after they drove the pirates out a hundred years ago,” Boktar said. Leena nodded. Kitish was one of the larger islands in this part of the Gilded Sea, and the only one with a deepwater port, making it a frequent stop for ships heading between Tyrsall and Nysa. There were other islands where ships could stop along the way,...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 2

Katrin hummed to herself, then played the same tune on her harp before marking it down on the sheet of paper before her. While she hummed the next few notes, Shavala came into the room and greeted her. “Back to trying to write a song?” the elven woman asked. “Now that my fingers aren’t constantly frozen, I figured I should. I just can’t think of the lyrics. I’ve finally got two decent melodies, but they’re not good enough to stand by themselves. I need to put words to them, and I just can’t...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 17

Six days after meeting Treya—and fighting the red-eyed men—the group reached Four Roads, a town of thirty-thousand people in the middle of the free lands, halfway between Tyrsall and Telfort. They’d met Jak’s caravan along the way, which was heading back east carrying wheat from the beginning of the harvest season. The caravan had been accompanied by dozens of farmers hauling their own, hoping for better prices in Dalewood or Tyrsall than they could get in Four Roads. As Corec had expected,...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 20

After over a week of staying in inns on the way back to Tyrsall, they ran into a stretch of road where they wouldn’t reach another village in time for nightfall, so they camped out. Following the same pattern they’d used before reaching Four Roads, Shavala took the early morning watch. Sometimes Bobo or Katrin kept her company, but she liked the quiet watches, too, when there was no one awake but her. An hour after she’d relieved Corec, she decided to make another circuit around the camp,...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 21

The blizzard arrived just before dawn, with enough force that it almost extinguished the bonfire despite the windbreak. Fergus trudged over to Sarette. “Come help me!” he shouted over the howling of the wind. “If we move the firewood and build another wall closer to the fire, it’ll keep it from going out!” “I’ll do it!” she yelled back. “You should be in your shelter!” “The work will keep me warm!” Other than Sarette, Fergus was the last person still out and about. A few of the other...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 22

Shavala kept watch during the early morning hours on their fifth day out of the city, while the air grew an autumn chill and a thick fog rolled in. She’d bought thicker tunics while she’d been in the elven quarter, but she would need to find a replacement for her old human-style winter coat the next time she was in the city. She liked the pockets that came with human coats. Setting her bow to the side and rubbing her hands on her arms to warm up, she felt the comforting weight of her new...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 2

The chilly autumn rain poured down as the horses trudged along the South Road, nine days north of Circle Bay. For the first seven days, the road had followed the coastline and they’d stayed in fishing villages when they could find one, but then the main road had curved west, cutting through a forest. It wasn’t the Terril Forest—they were too far east and the trees weren’t tall enough—but the area was heavily wooded. According to their maps, the reason the road had turned inland was to go...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 8

Present day... “Thank you for allowing us to camp out here,” Corec said to the farmer as he handed over five copper coins, on top of the two silver he’d given the man the night before for additional supplies. With the pack mule to carry everything, and by supplementing their meals with what they could find or catch along the way, they’d have enough food to get to the elven border camp and then back to the West Road before needing to buy more. After saying their farewells, Corec and his...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 18

The plan fell apart before it even got started. Early in the morning, Corec had tracked down some of the fishermen who worked the local lakes, and found one that was willing to sell him a large net. Then he’d bought a heavy crossbow, wishing he hadn’t sold the last one. While he was doing that, someone at the Three Orders chapter house helped Treya find a local farmer who knew where the drake was nesting, and could take them to it. Bren, the guide, led them north up the Farm Road for an...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 29

The visions from the staff had repeated themselves several times before Shavala realized they were gradually being stretched out over longer periods. Now, after carrying it for hours, a scene that had once been just a brief glimpse might last for over a minute, without showing anything more than it had the first time. The things she was seeing had to be elder magic, and likely druidic, but the visions didn’t give her any indication of their purpose. The arms she occasionally saw holding the...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 35

“I wish you’d stop messing with that thing.” Shavala looked up from where she was sitting cross-legged with the staff laid across her lap. “It’s not saying anything now,” she told Katrin. “It’s a hunk of wood—it shouldn’t have said anything at all! It’s creepy.” Shavala stood and leaned the staff against the wall, then went to sit next to the other woman. “It was more like it was thinking than talking. It just didn’t like what I was doing.” “What if it happens again?” She didn’t have an...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 9

“Maybe you should go back and wait at the inn with Bobo,” Corec said to Katrin as the group headed to the constabulary building. “But what if I can help?” she said, hefting the flute she held in her left hand. He sighed. “The only weapon you’ve got is that dagger. I worry about you.” “I wasn’t the one that rushed straight at a group of five ogres.” “That’s different.” She raised her eyebrows. “Oh?” “I trained for that sort of thing, and you don’t wear any armor.” “The armor didn’t seem...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 28

The sun had set by the time Corec and Ellerie made it back to the surface. When Boktar let them know Sarette had seen people in the barrens, they’d decided to head back to camp rather than waiting for the stranger to wake up. Leena came as well, in case they needed to send a message to those who’d remained inside the ruins. Exiting the cave, they met Sarette and Katrin returning from the southern side of the mountain. “Where’s everyone else?” Katrin asked. Corec told her what had...

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