《The Shimmer》Chapter Twenty-Six: The Nameless
Advertisement
In the silence of the early morning, Faye found it easy to confront herself about what had happened over the course of the previous two days. Many of the decisions she’d made since leaving earth were based on urgency and reaction. Their plans were half-formed, and it had resulted in the deaths of Dane and Dillon. They’d only gotten the upper hand on the Hob due to Dillon’s eccentric collection of gadgets, otherwise they’d all been beaten to a pulp or worse.
She shuddered at the implication.
Nonetheless, every time she thought about sacrificing the idea of running back to the portal, the less comfortable she felt. Less comfortable, but more hopeful. Hopeful that if they used their heads, and focused first on survival, the better their chances of finding said portal, and navigating their way through the thousands of soldiers to pass through it.
Then there was the wild card that nobody had really discussed.
What was going on back on Earth?
Canada would fight back against the invaders. Of that she was certain. Nothing the invaders had– not even the dragons– would be a match against a well-organized modern mechanized infantry.
But then what? What would they do once they’d won? Would they cross through the portal and bring the fight back to the invaders? Would they just roll through and obliterate them?
Faye’s entire career was built on information, and for once she found herself without even an ounce of it. She’d taken the ability to read the news every morning for granted.
The thing they needed more than anything else if they were going to get home wasn’t food or weapons. It was information.
And it was hard to get information when you were lost in the woods potentially being hunted by goblins and soldiers.
But survival came first. Then information. They’d decided the night before that they were going to pack up their things and use the temporary camp as a staging area to find the creek again. From there, they would attempt to find the road.
From there, they would attempt to find some kind of settlement. What to do at that point hadn’t been fully explored, but they all agreed that at the very least they should find a better place to operate out of. The wilderness was far too unpredictable.
Next to her, Emma and Owen slept huddled together for warmth. They didn’t have anything to warm them but the fire and the clothes on their back. Faye was still part of that huddle. She stretched her toes and winced in pain. She still had cuts all over her feet. When they found the creek, Faye would have to wash the bindings and clean her feet. The last thing she could afford was an infection.
She lost herself in the sound of the birds singing. It was surprisingly comforting and familiar. She wondered how many bird species there could be found on Earth. Besides the goblins and the dragons, everything else looked as though it would be right at home on Earth.
As she listened, she tried to pick out their songs– the caw of a crow, the melody of a sparrow. Sounds that back home she generally took for granted now reminded her of home.
She began to note a shift in the tone of the bird’s songs as the first signs of dawn rose over her head. At first, she thought it was heralding the arrival of the sun, but then she realized it was only shifting in a certain direction.
The birds were reacting to something nearby. Something that, from what she could tell, was drawing the attention of more birds.
Advertisement
Was she imagining it? She didn’t want to wake up the others for a false alarm, and Faye really didn’t know enough about bird song to–
Suddenly, the bush at the edge of the clearing shook as if something big was behind it. Faye froze in place for a moment, her eyes trained on the bush.
She began to nudge Owen as he slept next to her. First gently, then almost violently as a small humanoid shape emerged from the bush.
It was a goblin.
No, it was the same goblin she’d first seen near the creek. The same goblin that had met her eyes after she’d killed the Hob.
Owen and Emma both jolted awake, drawing the attention of the goblin, who once again met Faye’s eyes.
Faye quickly grabbed onto the sharpened stick she’d slept next to and used it to rise to her feet, holding it aloft.
“Stay back,” she ordered.
Oddly, the goblin broke eye contact with her.
And then it kneeled to the ground and leaned forward, pressing its forehead to the ground.
“What… what’s it doing?” Owen asked, now standing with his own stick.
Faye looked back and forth to Owen and the goblin.
The goblin suddenly started to chatter– it was an unintelligible mess, but it was clear it was trying to say something. Whatever it was, Faye couldn’t tell, but she got the sense that it was trying to show it wasn’t a threat.
Fortunately, Faye was no idiot. She scanned the area. Where there was one goblin, there’d be others. This one had to be distracting them.
Then she spotted a shape behind the first goblin, and her heart sank as she realized it wasn’t just one shape– it was several.
“There’s more in the bush,” she informed the other two.
“We should leave,” Emma said.
Two other goblins then emerged from the bush and took spots next to the first, kneeling and pressing their foreheads to the ground. Then two others.
Five goblins in total knelt on the ground before them. As far as Faye could tell, that was all of them.
She took an experimental step forward.
“Faye, what are you doing?” Owen asked.
She didn’t respond. Instead she took another step toward the goblins. They remained perfectly still.
“Hah!” she yelled. “Go on, get out of here!”
The goblins flinched, but didn’t move. One shook as if freezing, but Faye suspected it wasn’t that– the goblin was terrified.
So why kneel like that?
She took another step forward, then jabbed the blunt end of the spear in the grass only a few feet away from them.
Another flinch.
She took a moment to look back to Owen. “I think they’re surrendering,” Faye said.
“Surrendering?” Owen asked. He looked down at the goblins and observed them for a moment. “That doesn’t make sense. We were running away from them. Why would they track us down and surrender?”
The lead goblin began to chatter again, and the others followed in kind. A sixth goblin then emerged from the bush. Faye pointed the tip of her spear directly at it. It looked different from the others. It had a long grey beard and walked with a limp, but it was carrying something. A piece of yellow cloth with marks of red on it.
It stepped in front of the others, and made no attempt at eye contact with Faye, then lay the cloth on the ground in front of her. She looked down to it, then used her spear to pick it up.
Advertisement
The first thing to strike her was the smell– the cloth smelled terrible. Like it had been worn for weeks without a wash in between. The red markings were–
–blood. It was blood.
She quickly realized whose blood it was. She was holding the clothing worn by the Hob she had killed. She had the very same blood on her clothes.
The old goblin lowered himself carefully to the ground. It seemed to struggle with it, but forced itself down.
“What is it?” Emma asked.
“It’s the… the clothes the Hob was wearing,” she said.
“Oh shit,” Owen said. “You don’t think…?”
“Think what?”
“Well we killed their leader,” he explained. “Or rather, you did.” He put down his spear and took a step forward. “If they try anything, get stabby, okay?”
Faye nodded as Owen approached the old goblin. Owen lowered himself to his haunches and reach out to touch the old goblin’s shoulder.
The goblin looked up and met his eyes, then they darted over to Faye, and then back to Owen.
Owen stepped back and allowed the old goblin to stand again. The old goblin then began to speak–
–not that they understood the slightest word it was saying, but the tone in which the goblin spoke was not of fear or hate– it was of reverence.
Faye suddenly understood.
They weren’t surrendering. Their leader was killed. Faye had killed him.
That meant they needed a new leader. And somehow they got it into their head that was meant to be Faye.
“Oh no,” Faye said. “No, no. I am not dealing with this right now.”
“It’s better than them trying to kill us,” Owen added.
“They might be able to help us,” Emma added. “Help us find a way home maybe?”
“We can’t even speak the same language,” Faye argued.
“That doesn’t mean we can’t communicate,” Owen said. “Besides, we’re going to need friends here if we’re going to make a go of this. This might just be what the doctor ordered.”
“Well then you do it,” Faye said.
“It’s not me they revere,” Owen said. “It’s you.” He looked down to the old goblin and smiled at it and gave it a thumbs up.
To Faye’s utter amazement, the old goblin flashed a toothless grin and returned the gesture. It said something else, and the other goblins slowly started to look up once more, and get back to their feet. They each looked at Faye, but were careful not to meet her eyes.
They feared her. That much was clear. That certainly wasn’t a bad thing.
She got a better look at the other goblins. The one in the center was the one she’d originally seen. He wore a pale blue bandanna over his head. Two of the others were surprisingly– and clearly female. One of the males was smaller than the others, but stood proudly before her, even if he didn’t meet her gaze. The last was huskier than the others.
Six goblins stood before her. There was something disarming about the whole thing. Awkwardness hung in the air with the whole innocence of it.
She wasn’t entirely convinced she could trust them yet, though.
“You,” she said, pointing at the main goblin. The one she’d first seen the day before.
The goblin looked up at her, then immediately away again, bowing his head in shame.
“No, no,” she said, then kneeled down a few feet away. This seemed to alarm the goblins, but she didn’t care. “Look me in the eyes,” she said to him.
She wasn’t sure if he understood what she was saying, but he seemed to get the point.
“If this is a trick, I’ll get you just like I got your friend,” she said. “Do you understand?”
“Unnn,” the goblin began. “Unnerstan.”
“Holy shit, now I’ve seen everything,” Owen commented.
“He’s just repeating after me,” Faye said. “Aren’t you?”
“Yuuu,” he replied softly.
Faye stood up again and gestured to herself. “Faye,” she said.
“Faye,” the goblin replied. He wore a wide smile, then fell again to his knees and pressed his forehead to the ground. The others followed in suit, each repeating her name.
“Hey,” Faye said, reaching over and pulled the goblin up. “No, no. Don’t do that.”
One by one, the goblins got up once again. This time, they seemed less awkward. In fact, she recognized the look of relief on each of their faces.
Faye pointed to Owen. “Owen,” she explained. She then turned to Emma and said her name as well.
The goblins repeated them without fail.
“You?” she asked, pointing to the goblin.
The goblin blinked in confusion. He shook his head and said something in Goblinese.
The old one then replied to him, and she watched as the goblin with the blue bandanna crossed his hands.
“You don’t have a name, do you?” Faye asked. She took stock of the goblin. The other goblins seemed to be following his lead. Even the old one, who seemed to be in a class of his own, perhaps a sage or something of the sort, seemed to defer to the one with the blue bandanna.
“Leonardo,” she said. She knelt down again and put her finger to the goblin’s chest. “You’re Leonardo.”
“Liunaaro?” it asked. It gestured to itself.
“Leonardo,” she repeated, carefully sounding out the syllables.
The goblin started to beam with pride. It was so genuine it completely disarmed Faye. The others were right. It would pay to have friends in that world, and even if they couldn’t speak each other’s language, there was nothing stopping them from putting ideas across to each other.
Leonardo started getting congratulatory slaps on the back from the other goblins. She supposed getting a name would do that to anyone, but she had to wonder– the goblins seemed to be at least as smart as a child, and were at least capable of communication. Why didn’t they have names?
“Did you seriously name him after a ninja turtle?” Owen asked.
“I think it’s cool,” Emma added. “He’s green, the bandanna… it all kind of fits, doesn’t it?”
“Leonardo?” Faye asked.
The goblin whipped his head toward Faye. He was positively beaming.
“Do you know where the creek is?” she asked. She tried to mime water moving, but the goblin only cocked its head to one side.
She started to use her spear to draw a river. The goblin looked on with interest and started to point at it excitedly, then up to Faye. “Acha!” he exclaimed. He did his best imitation of running water, then pointed off to the south.
Faye looked back to the others. “What do you think?” she asked the others.
Owen nodded. “I think it’s worth a shot. Even if we can find the creek. But we’re going to need food as well. Supplies. Directions.” He motioned to the goblins. “And if they’re going to be hanging around, we need to factor them in as well.”
“All of us stay on our toes,” Faye said. “We don’t let them separate us, and we keep those spears handy. At least for now. Sound good?”
She got a nod from each of them, then turned back to Leonardo. “Okay little guy,” she said. “Lead the way.”
Advertisement
- In Serial28 Chapters
The Deathseeker [Under Revision]
NOTE: This story has dark elements, but it's neither grimdark nor particularly edgy. It's also currently being revised. Satan's Axe...Lord of High Honor...The Immortal Giant...The Black Maelstrom...Son of Thunderfield...The Gods' Retribution. Dalric had many names. None were as fitting as his last, Dalric the Deathseeker. Born from an unwanted mating between the greatest warriors of the time, death was his only true kin. It birthed him, molded him, and now standing in the middle of a lifeless battlefield, it drenched him. The blood of thousands of soldiers soaked his skin. Two hundred thousand men approached him that day. All of them sought his life, none of them left with theirs. But they would not die in vain, they had accomplished their mission. Hidden beneath a thousand layers of their blood, was Dalric's very own. Feeling his life fade, he gazed weakly at his work. A seemingly endless array of corpses laid battered and disfigured before him. Some bore faces of horror, most had no face at all. His most trusted companion floated in front of him, blocking the view. Waves of sorrow flowed between them. “My time has finally come. I’ve begged for death and it’s finally arrived. My work is done...and so is yours. You’re free to be who you were meant to.” With his contract with the gods fulfilled, they were truly free. The centuries of torment would end. No longer would they have to walk the path of a monster. Little did Dalric know, the devil was in the details. What To Expect: A good time. In a few more words than that, a cast of believable characters in a unique world dealing with conflicts and problems a little bit more complex than punching the big evil guy in the face. Just a little though. Minimum Word Count a Week: 5000 Release Time(s): Between Friday 12pm EST and Monday 6am EST I also write A King in the Clouds
8 87 - In Serial25 Chapters
Malfus: Necromancer Unchained
Malfus, a wanted necromancer, has finally run out of luck. Not that he had much to begin with. Now he just wants to escape. Captured by an Inquisitor who would like nothing more than to see this sarcastic wizard tortured and executed for his crimes against the dead. After they are forced to take refuge in a backwater fort under siege by an army of gnolls, fate may have other plans in store for them both. Will a common enemy create an unlikely alliance? Or an opportunity for one to gain an edge against the other?
8 187 - In Serial55 Chapters
Petrichor
Cody is adrift. Emily is alone. Sara is spiraling into darkness. Andrew is out of control. Chris is losing his mind. Grace makes the mistake of being friends with all of them. The friendship this six share will forever shape who they are. In the town of Darkwood, Washington they are forced into the harsh reality of the world as the consequences of their actions catch up to them. Their lives are entangled in the hands of fate as a collision course to their demons fast approaches.
8 86 - In Serial8 Chapters
Plants VS Zombies Post Apocalyptic Fanfic
Steven Weller thought he survived the worse of doom's day. That food shortages and zombies were the worse of his problems. Oh was he so wrong? Now even plants can kill. I planned is a story to be a new original post-zombie apocalyptic with the monster plants from the Plants vs Zombie games. This story is full of zombies, betrayal, giant toothy zombie flash-hungry plants, tower defense like monemts, and lots of bullets. I named it a Fanfic because I don't want to be copyrighted by the Plants vs Zombie people. I hope only good positive things to come from this.
8 194 - In Serial74 Chapters
Serenity's Children
Mothership Serenity The most beautiful vessel to ever grace the Milky Way. At 310 kilometers in diameter, the sheer metal moon was Humanity's greatest endeavor. A near-eternal symbol of peace, of togetherness and forgiveness. The day of her maiden voyage would be the end of a long and bloody history of constant conflict and strife. Such were the feelings infused into the miniature planet fitted with every luxury and facility imaginable, from giant casinos to expansive natural reserves and multi-purpose factories. However, the stars had a far different fate for the vessel, her escort ships, and the six hundred thousand souls aboard them all. Bitter rivalries between interstellar nations, personal hatreds, vendettas, righteous fury, and horrors that lurk in the lightless empty - one can only ask, what else could be awaiting them? All we know is that a select few souls will lie at the center of it all. They who will eventually be called; Serenity’s Children. (New chapters will be posted once a week, around Friday or Saturday 8:00 PM. They might also be posted on Tuesdays depending on the backlog I have built up, to allow for substantive editing just in case.)
8 203 - In Serial25 Chapters
Her Wolf Heart
Book Three in Her Destiny Series ||| ❝And she thought they were heartless monsters.❞ ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫She had nightmares about the creatures that lurked in the night and howled to the moon. One of them nearly killed her once and since the accident, she has never been the same. She tried to avoid the wolves at all costs but it was one snowstorm that intertwined her destiny with them. She found them by accident and despite all odds, she welcomed six orphaned wolf pups into her life and promised to raise them. Little did she know that they would change her life forever and for the better. ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫▫This book CAN be read as a stand alone.This is NOT in Reeve's point of view.⌦ WARNING! This book contains dark emotions and themes, disturbing and graphic content, language, emotional triggers, spelling mistakes, and possible plot holes. Read at your own risk! ⌫ ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫▫ ▫▫▫▫ Cover is made by me. Copyright © 2018-2021 Josie Marie Any relation to other stories or characters is entirely coincidental and not intentional.
8 168

