《Castle Kingside 》Chapter 26: Mutated Turkey
Advertisement
His eyes cracked open.
Mellow green light from a star-filled sky filtered through a canopy of trees. It danced with the warm red glow of embers on Dimitry’s face. They popped from the fireside. The savory scent of chicken wafted through the air, filling his mouth with saliva and serving as a reminder that life went on.
A tiny weight shifted on his forehead. Golden eyes peered into his. “Dumitry!”
He smiled at the sight of a faerie whose golden ponytail tickled his nose. “I see the Church hasn’t squashed you yet.”
“If you don’t hurry and get up, they will.”
Dimitry rolled forward. He attempted to push off the ground, but an intense soreness permeated his arms, eliciting a pained grimace from his face. A glance at his right palm revealed bulging purple vessels and the imprint of a blue knight on the wrist. That really happened. Again. But what did any of it mean?
Who were Dimitry's opponents?
Why did he have a patron?
What did the tracheostomy patient mean by 'aberrant route'?
Despite the ‘dream’, did Dimitry lay on a forest floor the entire time?
Steadfast footsteps approached, and the answerless questions swarming his mind receeded.
Saphiria pointed to his arms. “Don’t push yourself, your circuits are overloaded. Any worse, and you'll need a thaumaturge to treat them.”
So that was what those purple vessels were called—circuits. “And how long until they heal?”
“That depends.” Her slender lips curved into a hesitant smile. “Do you have any more bridges on your hit list? I’ve made food if you’re hungry.”
Saphiria’s joke surprised Dimitry. Not only was it unexpected, but it also coaxed beauty from her historically stony face. The collar stole more than just her freedom. “I could do with something to eat.”
“Yeah, me too!” Precious said.
“Don’t you have leaves to munch on?” Dimitry mused as he stood.
“That’s the thanks I get for watching over you?”
“I’m sure you nagged all manner of vicious predators into submission.”
The faerie landed on his shoulder, her wings jingling like tiny wind chimes. “Don’t forget, you still owe me a gift.”
“I’m sure I couldn’t even if I wanted to.” He placed his hands by the fire to ward off nighttime frost. “You’ll remind me every chance you get.”
Dimitry glanced at a wide strip of bark carrying a roasted avian. Two of four wings were already missing from a shredded abdomen.
Escaping with Saphiria was the right choice. Her ability to forage and improvise in the wilds exceeded his own in every way. The only supplies they had were the clothes on their backs and the stuffed leather bag Dimitry accrued during his time at the brothel.
The contents wouldn’t last long.
Saphiria gently stroked the neck of a black horse. “Aerfowl was the best I could prepare given the circumstances.”
Dimitry noticed he watched the roasted avian carcass with glazed eyes for far too long. “It’s not that. It looks delicious. I was just thinking about what to do next. If we stay in the forest, our supplies will run out soon.”
“The Church is probably searching for us, too.”
“Makes sense considering what we did.”
The girl paused. “We should head to Vael to resupply.”
“That town?” He reached for a wing, whose charcoaled skin crumbled under the weight of his fingers. “Don’t they have a church there? I remember seeing one during our deliveries.”
Saphiria pulled the gray-glowing scarf out from beneath her cloak. “As long as I keep this hidden, a church that small won’t be a problem. I’ll enter Vael alone to avoid detection. Zeran patrols from Ravenfall are the real threat. They know what we look like.”
Advertisement
“What’s the best way to avoid them?”
“I suggest we stay off the main road and step further into the forest whenever anyone comes near. Few will be able to follow us. I’ll handle anyone that does.”
Having someone cautious and capable to bounce ideas off of eased the tension in Dimitry’s shoulders. He bit into poultry that had a crunchy surface but tender meat. Impressive what one could do with just a campfire. Back at the church, he thought Saphiria would stab him to death. Instead, she killed Delphine and was thoughtful enough to prepare a meal for him afterward.
“Hey, Saphiria.”
“Yes?”
“I was wondering,” he said between bites, “what were you thinking when I wrapped that scarf around your neck?”
She sat beside him. “I wanted to kill you.”
“Kill me?”
“But more than that, I was shocked that someone would assault a bishop. Before I had the chance to act, the collar lost its influence on me.”
“At least something worked out.”
Saphiria’s eyebrows furrowed, and her indigo irises stared at the side of his face. “That being said, what you did was dangerous, and I can’t help but wonder why you risked your life to help me.”
Dimitry considered lying to her, but there was no point—a perceptive girl like her would see right through him. Having a loud-mouthed faerie nearby didn’t increase his odds.
He dropped the aerfowl’s bones and buried them into the dirt with his boot’s heel. “I’d like to say it’s because I’m a good person, but the truth is that I need your help. As you can probably tell, I’m not much of a fighter or a survivalist.”
“Especially with your hands in that pitiful state,” Precious chimed in.
Saphiria spent a moment in silence. “So you wanted to use me?”
“I prefer to think of it as a trade. If you guide me to somewhere far away from Ravenfall, I promise to never bother you again.”
“I can kill you, steal your supplies, and escape at any moment. You have no reason to trust me.”
“That’s a calculated gamble on my part.” Dimitry wiped grease from his hands with a moistened rag. “But I have two things working in my favor.”
“Two?”
“The first is the fact you risked punishment to reveal Delphine’s plans of enslavement to me.”
“And the other?”
Dimitry smirked. “No one who’s as compassionate towards animals as you would hurt someone unless they had to. Well, that’s what I think, anyway.”
She looked down and away as if in deep contemplation.
He repacked his bag and strapped it over his shoulder.
“There’s a third,” Saphiria said.
“Oh?”
She stood and smiled. “You never finished telling me about your gemstone collection, and I want to tell you about the waterwheel-powered blast furnace bellows back home.”
A chuckle escaped Dimitry. “I’d love to hear all about it. I’m sure there’ll be plenty of time to talk.”
They left their camping spot and journeyed along the forested side of a meandering dirt road like Saphiria suggested they should. Although trudging through dense greenery slowed travel, trees and bushes provided cover from Church patrols. They weren’t uncommon. Dimitry occasionally saw them while delivering butchered corpses for Delphine. In groups of four, two armored male equestrians rode ahead of two robed women, eyes scouring every direction.
Tonight, however, the patrols were more frequent. Saphiria was right to err on the side of caution. Fortunately, not having to haul around a cart full of cadavers hastened their pace.
Advertisement
Julia carried them half of the time. According to Precious, upholding two passengers at once for extended periods irritated the black horse, so they alternated between riding and walking instead. By the next day’s afternoon, they reached Vael’s new bridge.
The structure, composed of rough hemp ropes and crude log beams, traversed a shallow ravine. It swung side to side and bobbed up and down with the slightest movement. Such a shoddy bridge made one feel as though any step could be their last. After coaxing a mortified Julia across, the group stood on the town’s outskirts, far from wandering eyes.
“Food, water, warm socks, and gloves,” Saphiria said. “Will we need anything else from the market?”
“Fent!” Precious shouted.
“Fent?”
Dimitry shook his head. “It’s kind of her thing—just one will last her an eternity. I know it’s a bother, but do you mind?”
With a contemplative frown, Saphiria examined the faerie. “Why? Will it brew ale for us?”
“Do I look like a brewer to you? I just rescued you from being some lady’s pet. Show some respect, hussy.”
Stroking his chin, Dimitry now understood why the inns and markets of Ravenfall stocked a melon that tasted like crap: it was an intermediary ingredient in producing alcoholic beverages. He wondered how much concentrated ethanol a single fruit could create. The knowledge might help when he established a clinic… eventually.
“The more fent we feed Precious,” he said, “the less she’ll talk. Isn’t that best for everyone involved?”
A feeble pinch massaged his earlobe.
Saphiria smiled. “In that case, I’ll make sure to buy lots.”
Dimitry couldn’t suppress his laughter.
“Fine. Next time you two are on the verge of lifelong slavery, don’t count on my help. I’ll sit there and laugh—just like this: Hahahaha!”
Disregarding Precious’ adorable threat, Saphiria glanced at the empty sheath strapped to her pants. “I need a new dagger. I left mine in Ravenfall.”
“Correction, you left it inside a lady’s throat.”
“I’m going.” After shooting a lethal glare at the faerie, Saphiria walked away. She stopped to pat the sides of her cloak as if looking for her car keys and twitched back. Her red face said it all.
Dimitry held out a small pouch that jingled with over a dozen coins. “Would one gold be enough?”
“I think so. Sorry.”
He pressed a gold gadot into Saphiria’s palm and smiled. “It’s not like I gave you time to prepare before the incident at the church. I saw your skill with daggers, so don’t be afraid to spend as much as you think you need.”
“Thank you.”
“By the way,” Dimitry said, “you mentioned a temporary shelter on the way here. Normally I wouldn’t mind waiting here for you, but someone might see me loitering so close to town.”
She pointed alongside the river. “Follow the trail, then head right at the second crossroads. There’s a barn in an abandoned village not far away. You’ll be out of sight of patrols.”
“Got it.”
“And don’t forget to feed Julia. Anywhere with grass will do.”
“I won’t. She deserves something for her trouble.”
Saphiria nodded and left for the market square.
“Hey.” Precious tugged on his tunic. “What if she ran away with the money?”
Dimitry stepped around a ditch containing a dark, rancid mixture. He wanted to trust Saphiria, but this cutthroat world necessitated constant caution. “That’s why I keep you around. What’s your professional opinion?”
“Hmm… aside from shame and fear and disdain for me, I don’t sense much else.”
All sensible emotions.
“Come on, Julia.” Dimitry tugged the black horse’s reins. The gentle giant exhaled, and her warm breath penetrated his cloak to tickle his neck.
The path they followed ran parallel to the river before swerving into a tiny village whose walls comprised shattered palisades. They barricaded four dilapidated cottages, a chicken coop with a collapsed roof, and a tall barn. A baby basket rotting in dirt hinted that the residents hurriedly fled a decade ago. Or perhaps they never left at all.
“Sense anyone?” Dimitry asked.
“Not really.”
“What do you mean, ‘not really’? Either you sense someone or you don’t.”
“Oh, Dumitry. When will you ever learn?” Precious pointed to the barn. “There’s a large animal there.”
“Large like a bear?”
“What’s a bear?”
“Nothing important, apparently.” Wondering what other Earth species didn’t exist on this planet, Dimitry creaked open the barn’s double doors.
Inside, a trough overflowing with brown water from past rainfall bathed a pig. Its alarmed eyes shot up.
“Will that be a problem?” Dimitry asked.
Sitting on his shoulder, Precious shrugged. “I’m only getting a little bit of nervousness. Nothing much in the way of anger. Usually, a wild animal would charge or run away, so I’m gonna guess it escaped from some peasant’s farm.”
Julia’s head peeked past Dimitry to gently snort at their surprise roommate.
The pig grunted back and continued to dig through moist refuse.
Did Dimitry just witness one of nature’s miracles? Exhaustion from a day’s hike through bumpy wilderness hills left him too tired to care. He released Julia’s reins at last and pointed to a massive patch of overgrown grass in the village’s center. “Hungry?”
The horse nudged his shoulder as she pranced forth, but Julia was in no rush to eat. Instead, she rolled in greenery and fell unconscious beside a mossy pole. It seemed even animals needed breaks from uneven forest floors.
Dimitry stretched his palm to ease the discomfort of gripping thick rope in his uninjured hand for hours. Strolling into the barn, the stench of moist and decaying wood assaulted his nostrils, but the smell of dissected corpses pooling in coagulated blood desensitized him to disgust. Mold wasn’t a threat, either. Frigid weather deactivated spores, and mycotoxicosis typically affected people who ate mold rather than inhaled it. Short-term exposure was harmless. If anything, the largely intact walls the fungi colonized on offered a reprieve from icy winds.
Rather than his own safety, he considered Saphiria’s. The Church hunted her while she shopped for and carried supplies across unforgiving lands. What if she got caught? Would they kill her? When Dimitry offered to take the risk in her place, she declined, citing her knowledge of the land and lack of pale green eyes as an advantage. He should have insisted.
“What’s got you so worried?” Precious asked.
“Think Saphiria will be okay?”
"I'm sure she'll be fine." She drifted onto the lid of a dented barrel and sat, slowly kicking its walls with tiny legs. “But you won’t because you don’t have fent to shut me up, right?”
Dimitry sighed. “You’re still ruminating on that? You know I didn’t mean it.”
“You did a little.”
“Maybe a little, but it was just a joke.”
Precious fell silent, such that the weak chiming of her green wings could be heard. She watched the floor with downcast eyes. “Dimitry.”
“Yeah?”
“I know I say dumb things sometimes, and even though I’m trying really really hard, I can’t always stop myself.”
To hear an apology from her came as a shock. He watched on with concerned eyes.
“Please don’t take it personally," she said. "I… I don’t want you to abandon me too.”
Unsure of how to respond, Dimitry paused. Although the faerie did indeed have a crude tongue, she kept silent on Dimitry’s request. And, instead of ditching him during their escape from Ravenfall, Precious risked her life to free Saphiria in return for a meager gift.
Good character showed through action, not words.
As someone who went from being a moron who considered terrorizing city streets a good time to a repentant medical student, he knew well the difficulty of personal transformation.
“As long as you really are trying,” Dimitry said, “I’ll have no reason to cast you aside. Keep working on yourself.” He flashed a comforting smile. “Sometimes, that’s the only thing we can do.”
Advertisement
- In Serial71 Chapters
Dead Tired
A young man stumbles into a deep, lost cavern, he seeks power and prestige, the ability to become someone, anyone, worthy of praise. When he finds an ancient crypt festooned in jewels and precious things he thinks himself the luckiest man alive. And then the lich in that crypt wakes up and kills him. That’s me. I’m the lich. Honestly, I just want to go back to sleep, and there’s no one, no ‘god emperor,’ sect, or uptight martial artist that’s going to stop me. Join the Official Discord to participate in discussions and view the next chapter being written live!
8 701 - In Serial130 Chapters
Techno-Heretic
Eli is an ancient man sentenced to death for the crime of surpassing the sacred number of 32.8, which is the allowed percentage of increased mental ability from the use of AI chips. As he journeys through death and into a world of fantasy and magic, he finds himself approaching never before seen heights of magical power and ability. Powers that will shape the world and would see him go down in legends for generations ever after. But just because someone acquires magical abilities, that doesn't mean magic is suddenly the most important thing in their life. Some people aren't looking to be all-powerful gods, have the world bow at their feet, or spend their days obsessing over accumulating ever more power. Some people just want acceptance, stability, and the warmth of their loved ones to drive away the cold loneliness of the night. And in a world where magic is the bedrock of society, where magic is what determines who is preferred for siring children, where people with high magical ability are destined to live in great luxury and those without magic simply live to make due, this difference in values and perspective could not have a starker contrast. As Eli and the people around him navigate the misconceptions and deceptions of this world, he will represent a great and magnificent future for the human race. One where humanity will stand above the elves, dwarves, orcs, fairies, and all the horrors of the world. Sadly, men's tools are as fallible as the people who make them, and in a society where the potential of an individual is determined solely through their magical level, this seed of promise may yet turn venomous. Note: This fiction is also allowed at webnovel under author skalnor This book is now available on Amazon, Ebook coming soon: https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B08N3K5D4G Discord Server: https://discord.gg/wP5ehQjeFz
8 676 - In Serial14 Chapters
My second chance is as Dungeon Master?
One day, every human transmigrated and spread randomly from the earth into another world as games for a higher being. When Elias suddenly wake up, he realizes that everything around him seems familiar. His master and his friends are still alive. Most importantly, he remembers everything that will happen in the following years. He comes back to when every nightmare starts. This time, he won't let them sacrifice themselves for him. This time is his turn to protect them.
8 133 - In Serial7 Chapters
M.M.O (Massive Multiverse Online)
An earth shatering revelation befalls human kind. The multiverse is real. And they would like you to join their newest, state of the art multy reality videogame. Are you willing to play the game to end all games? (Only the most recent chapter comments will be valid) This is a choose your own adventure kind of story, but I'll be writing out the choices step by step. I am not one of the most faithfull writers, so it may take some time between chapters. And the length of each chapter will vary depending on the choices and outcomes. Honestly, the space between each chapter may vary until I get a handel of things. At minimum, I'll always wait a day to let the votes tricle in. Note: While I will have poles, I hope people can voice what options I dont put out for some reason that seam apropriate. Or just generally talk in the comment section
8 214 - In Serial20 Chapters
Admin Rights
[Nudity Yes, but as of now no sexual content.] Phill is dying(Yeah, that cliche again). He has cancer and around a year to live. His degrading health has rendered him unable to go out as usual as once he used to do. Spending most of the time in the hospital, Phill plays Ulteria: the VMMORPG, which has time dilution giving him 2 years more than what reality is offering. That and all the world"s" of Ulteria to explore, but there will be someone and... READ THE CHAPTERS TO KNOW MORE. Note: *This story is solely focused on world-building. World-building that would help me with another project I have been working on for the last 4 months. That means it is a writing practice project for me. *Not a power fantasy. It is more inclined towards paranormal-romance twisted with virtual reality( no harem elements either), and how could I forget about the VMMORPG? So you could expect lots of new species, magic, races, system twists, and a lot of other things. That is if I update it( Naash scoffs at himself.) I am not going to update it constantly, not even twice a week. So any 1 or 2 stray readers who stumble upon this and mistakenly like it (Sorry in advance.) [I am sorry : ( I can't seem to get the spacing right in the chapter. I am going crazy, please ignore it. I will figure it out] This story is also available on webnovel under my username: Naash.
8 98 - In Serial194 Chapters
A Suspicious Lack of Horses
World: The framework of reality. The rules which govern interaction. The dimensions within which existence takes place. Soul: Mind. The source of thought, of consciousness. The means by which reality is observed. Body: Form. The means by which one interacts with the World. The substance from which reality is formed. Spirit: Life. The connection between Soul and Body. The anchor to the World. What happens when these foundational forces are given human form? When they're confronted with the truths of human nature, of human frailty? When the evils of reality are thrown in their face and the question is asked: What are you going to do about it? Why did anyone ever think they'd need horses? I upload ~30k word chunks at the beginning of every month, rotating through each character in order. I have at least four extra chunks on my Patreon. I suggest setting your reading preferences to indent and 30 pt paragraph spacing for the best reading experience.
8 251

