《Keepers of the Neeft》Chapter 5 - Cultists & Nine
Advertisement
The thick trunks of the trees surrounding Cadryn reminded him of the pillars of the Academy’s Arena, but there the similarity died. Soft leaves squelched under his boots and he was thankful for the cloying closeness of the fog for cover.
Gita winged from tree to tree, clinging to the bark half way to the canopy.
The path the cultists had dragged through the forest hauling their prize was easy enough that a blind man could follow. These people did not expect to be tailed, or simply did not care if they were. Both option worked their way through Cadryn’s mind, and he picked up the pace.
Only Gita’s hiss of warning stopped him from walking right into the clearing.
Ahead of them, without the canopy to protect it from the sun’s belated efforts, the fog was thinning. There, amid the remains of some time-worn ruins, moved heavily cloaked shapes. About a dozen cultists dragged and pushed slabs of corroded metal in an effort to create some kind of profane ritual site.
“I’ll get a better look,” Gita chittered from above, and before he could tell her not to, the Batsel was off into the ruins.
Cadryn waited, and waited, began to relax as he saw Gita sneaking along the side of an upright wall fragment. Then a cultist did something most people never did: she looked up, right at Gita, and before he could think to whistle, or shout, the cultist swung upward with her staff, swatting Gita to the earth. As he prepared to charge in, a voice like the wind itself licked along his earlobe.
“I wouldn’t, friend.”
Cadryn spun, blade rising, to find only empty woods. Then a human shape materialized in the crux of two gnarled oaks, seeming to step out of the empty air. Clad almost entirely in deerskin leather stained the colors of old bark, the newcomer moved with a fluid grace that belied great power. Above the earth-toned clothing was a face of sharp angles painted in grease the color of the mists. A pair of deep-set eyes studied him, two pools of midnight sky.
“Who are you?” he whispered, and the stranger tapped a sewn on badge at their shoulder: the Imperial Gauntlet.
“I’m a member of the Neeft’s Guards, this region’s Gamekeeper, name of Nine. You must be the new one Sefton was talking about the other night.”
“Cadryn,” he replied, nodding, “Now, Nine, we need to rescue one of ours.”
Nine tilted his head, the movement reminded Cadryn of an owl. “Do we? Gita is not human, so why care? The cultists are a threat, one we have a mandate to remove.”
Cadryn’s fist tightened around the grip of his sword. “I’m getting kind of tired of people telling me what is, and isn’t, important.” He said, “Now are you going to help me, or not?”
Advertisement
“You are a strange one, Cadryn,” Nine said, and smiling, readied a longbow. “I will aid you.”
For an instant, in that smile, Cadryn saw a lot more teeth than should have been present, and resolved to never be alone with Nine, if he could help it. “Good, I’ll distract them—” When he looked back, Nine was gone, but the same whispered words found him.
“I wouldn’t, friend.”
Taking a deep breath, Cadryn slipped into the clearing, the nearest cultist to him had his back to the forest and was shoving, with all his might, at a stubborn crescent of rusting iron. Even so, the man heard someone approaching him, and turned into the pommel-strike, crumpling under the blow, with a sharp crack.
Cadryn caught the man’s pry bar, but couldn’t stop him from crashing to the wet earth in a heap. The sound was painfully loud on the heels of the skull-crack, and he was sure someone would hear.
Someone did, almost instantly, a brute who could be the cousin of Wazo himself rounded a collapsed wall, and with a throaty shout, rushed in to attack, swinging a mason’s hammer.
Cadryn dove to the man’s right, flinging the point of the pry bar into his path.
Too slow, the cultist kneed it aside and swung in an overheard arc, to divot the sod where Cadryn’s head had been.
Rolling into a crouch, Cadryn lashed out with boot, folding the man’s knee.
Howling, the Cultist fell away from Cadryn, and as he shot out an arm to stop himself, Cadryn’s blade sliced out to kiss the inside of that elbow. Tendons snapped, and the man buckled to the earth atop his ruined arm.
Leaping to his feet, again, Cadryn was met with the sight of three more cultists rounding the far end of the ruins. Nearer, a man, and the woman that had capture Gita (now tied to her staff and unconscious), joined them to encircle him.
They were all dressed in darkly dyed robes, blues, purples, and blacks, with bits of glass stitched into them that twinkled in the fickle light of the dissipating fog. They were all armed, with various craftsmen’s tools. The man wearing the most ornate of the robes spoke up, addressing him in crude Provalian.
“Halt, fool. We only seek to prevent the apocalypse!”
Cadryn swallowed on a dry throat, pivoting to put his back to the wall. “If that were true, you wouldn’t be sneaking around in the woods. Doing . . .” he pointed at the hunks of metal, “whatever it is your doing.”
“Restoring an ancient ward, asshole,” the woman with Gita on her staff answered. “We asked you Imperials for help, but your man at the tower laughed us off.”
The image of Sefton talking to these people left little doubt, that, if such a conversation had taken place, what the woman claimed would be the outcome. “Even if that’s true,” Cadryn said, “you still attacked, and are holding prisoner, an Imperial citizen.”
Advertisement
The woman looked confuse.
Cadryn began to flush with more than the heat of battle. “The, the Batsel! It’s ours.”
“Bullshit,” she scoffed and bent to help her companion lift the man Cadryn had knocked out, “This thing was just flying around out here, and you’re no mage or warlock. I could use a familiar, and I took this one, as fair game.”
The wind picked up, twisting the fog into what Cadryn was sure were faces. The cultists noticed it, too, and made the sign of whatever false gods they worshiped. Then the wind became the voice of Nine.
“Fair game? By your thinking then, you, too, are fair game . . . for these woods . . . are mine.”
“You should all leave,” Cadryn said, but the warning came too late.
An arrow whistled from the depths of the woods to transfix the unconscious cultist’s skull with a sickening crunch. Horrified, the woman let the man drop. “Run, now!” she screamed, and the cultists broke at once for the opposite side of the clearing.
Cadryn made to follow, but was tripped up by the grasping hand of the man he’d downed.
“No, Gita!” he yelled out, and Nine replied.
“Save yourself, friend. The Unfortunate will be fine, you have my word.”
Before he could say anything, the massive cultist lunged upward, covering half of Cadryn body with his own, and seized him by the throat.
Training kicked in, and he flared the muscles of his neck, preserving his windpipe. Maintaining his calm, Cadryn brought the pommel of his sword across the crash into the man’s eye socket, knocking him away and off of him. Before the enemy could recover, he laid the edge of his blade against the man’s neck and drug it backward in a quick cut, opening it with a squelch.
Wiggling free of the dying man, Cadryn searched for the cultist witch carrying Gita. Saw her near the far line of trees.
She swung the staff in a slow circle over her head, drawing in fog to cover their retreat with her gifts. As she turned to flee, Cadryn saw the terror writ plain upon her face, and despite himself, turned to see the source.
Nine stood less than ten paces from him, yet he had not heard or seen his approach. This time, there was no mistaking the smile for anything human, or the eyes, or the too-long arms that drew back a bow of living heartwood. The Gamekeeper loosed the shot, and Cadryn watched the gleaming tip lance across the clearing to take the juking witch through the heart.
The woman shot rigid, staggered three steps, planting her staff to keep her feet, failed, and fell into the underbrush, vanishing from sight. Her staff, tilted briefly at the breeze, its various charms and prizes swaying lazily, Gita among them.
Cadryn refused to look back, and after what felt like an eternity, Nine passed by him at a stroll, speaking at him. “My word, is as the Lobeski in the First Times, Cadryn Bence. Remember this.”
“Where are you going?” he asked, setting aside his confusion for something reassuringly mundane in nature.
“To hunt some fair game, in these woods, which are mine.”
Cadryn Bence watched Nine go, and only after he was sure the man, or thing, was gone, did he get up. It was then, looking over at the corpse of the first man he’d ever killed, that he became ill. Fortunately, for his pride, no one was around to see it. By the time he retrieved Gita and the staff, the Batsel was awake and chewing at the strap restraining her.
“Thank the Gods,” she squeaked, “Or whatever Nine worships.”
“What?” Cadryn said, breaking free of his daze.
“Well I don’t see you holding a bow,” she replied, then seeing the blood, and corpse in the distance added. “But I see you came for me . . . sorry. I’m, I’m not used to people caring.”
“Nine didn’t,” Cadryn said, trying, and failing, to not sound bitter.
“Oh she cares, just not about people.”
“She?” Cadryn asked, now quite confused.
“Of course, I’ve never seen anyone with a cock move that gracefully.”
“Then you’ve never seen the Dancers of the Assemblage.” Deafening Silence called out, from the nearby tree-line, Korbinian emerged behind her, clearly winded.
“Nine’s a she,” Gita insisted, “Now will you please look at my wing? I think it’s broken.”
While Silence examined Gita, Korbinian handed Cadryn a nearly empty flask. “Drink up, kid. Your first real skirmish?”
Upending the container, Cadryn nodded.
“Well, you’ll need more than that,” Korbinian said, and leaned over to Silence, “What you say to hitting up Amber’s instead of going right back, eh, Healer?”
Sil seemed about to turn tell the old alchemist off, but meeting Cadryn’s eyes she took a slow breath. Nodded. “Very well, it’s not like we’re going to be of any use out here. Let’s collect the body of the one Cad killed. We’ll bury him in the rockslide.”
“What about her?” Cadryn asked, looking and the supine form of the witch, now so much smaller without the staff. “She doesn’t look too heavy to bring.”
“Nay,” said Sil, “but she belongs to Nine,” she added pointing to the arrow. “And that is not someone whose kill you take.”
“Aye,” Korbinian added, and with that, the older Keepers of the Neeft went to help their newest member lift the weight of his newfound responsibility.
Advertisement
- In Serial26 Chapters
The Obsidian Core
The world is a wide, wide place. And that's without taking into account the many creatures that inhabit it. When a new Dungeon Core is born deep below the surface, it faces challenge after challenge. The only question is; is it up to the challenge of living in this world? This is my first attempt at writing a Dungeon Core story. I'll gladly take any and all advice, comments, or criticism. Releases on Tuesdays and Fridays. Mostly.
8 174 - In Serial25 Chapters
Sword of Ending
Ollowyn’s Life began unlike any other. Born with snow-white hair, he was brought into the woods to die according to age old traditions. Left to the will of the gods, the helpless child waited for his death. However, the gods showed mercy. A young wolf cub, lost and cut off from its mother, stumbled over the young Ollowyn. Half frozen to death and dead tired, it snuggled to the warm body. When it was found by the mother just hours later, Ollowyn already smelled like one of her own. Adopted and cared for he grew up among wolves. He learned to live after the rules of the pack, continuously fighting to survive. As the years went by, he grew stronger than his brothers and sisters, hunted with different means. But even though he loved and adored his family, he noticed more and more that he was different. No fur, no claws and as much as he tried, his teeth would never find prey by themselves. What made him different? The urge to find answers grew with every day, until he set out aged seven to find them. But after days of searching hunger and exhaustion brought him to his knees as he collapsed on a dusty road. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- German Version can be found on RR as well. https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/19996/sword-of-ending-german. But it isn't written as well and only serves as my own template for chapters. For those of you that would like to join my Discord: Discord: Florean Fortescue Feel free to join, to ask questions, favours or interact with other readers. Enjoy reading. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8 185 - In Serial59 Chapters
Knights quest
EN, a being of pure immeasurable energy, tired of his lonely existence decided to create multiple universes to fulfill his wanting of love.But as time passed and these worlds advanced they grew to forget about EN....so to fill the void, EN created the nine stars...beings of pure light and with their creation they were each given two universes. As time passed each of the nine stars created five moons each.....these were beings of lesser light.....their task was to enter the universes and spread the Order and teachings of EN....as time passed the moons grew in power, which caused the stars to grow in power. This new found power caused some of the stars to question the strength of their creator,EN, however EN foresaw this, and created a being to rival any of the stars, The Black Sun, is what this being was called, and his sole purpose was to keep the stars in order. As the millenia passed the stars strength kept increasing, eventually the ones who questioned En persuaded the others to rise up against Black Sun, but they were unable to kill him, so they divided his body into six parts keeping them hidden in various worlds. Enraged even further by this, EN, placed the nine stars in a deep sleep, as he could not bring himself to kill his creations.The five strongest moons who were created by Black Sun took this chance to gather and revive The Black Sun, however before they could recover the last piece of him, the remaing moons,forty five in total, stood against them, unable to win they fled to the last remaining world, but they were out of time. So on this last remaining world they decided to spread their essence, which contained their memories and abilities so that someday they may be reborn. Years passed, before the first of the Five Great Moons had been reborn. He had awoken as a decent of one of the lesser Moons, he was known as King, a divine being task with the protection of the Ark. Now reborn as King, he retains his bodies pervious memories, to discover that the last piece of Blacksun's body is being used as the Ark, to give the knights of this world absurdly strong abilities. Hiding in plain sight as King he now waits for his chance to retake the last piece of BlackSun's body and to awake the rebirth of his fallen brothers.
8 117 - In Serial17 Chapters
Heart and Soul (Stingsu, Sting X Natsu)!
What happens when Sting and Rogue are beaten by Natsu in the grand magic games?! Well... we've seen that! What happens when they were beaten so horribly they were knocked out for days instead of hours and aren't cleared to return to their inn? Well that's where things go sidestep and start rolling in a different direction. No close calls with death for lector, and a whole lot of new friends and family for Sting and Rogue! Some characters are a little out of character because I'm a pretty shitty author, and I created my own idea for how to portray them somehow so... yeah!(Sting X Natsu)Any Rogue X Erza vibes, and jokes, aren't a ship but rather something quite devious that was cooked up for another relationship, *wink wink* *cough* Jellal *cough*
8 182 - In Serial21 Chapters
Taekwondo Blackbelt (Jungkook x Reader) [COMPLETED]
"I'll make sure to win, no matter what..."...Jeongguk is a talented high school student who's good at everything he tries. What he really wants is to do however, is Taekwondo... Will you help Jeongguk follow his Taekwondo dreams?BASED ON THE BTS WORLD GAME. I DO NOT OWN THE RIGHTS, THEY BELONG TO NETMARBLE AND BIGHIT!
8 91 - In Serial24 Chapters
Project Goddess || Percy Jackson x Reader
One day on Olympus, the gods agreed to test their powers and see what they could do. Which resulted in them creating a whole new goddess named (Y/n). (Y/n) must train and learn how to survive as an immortal goddess. But when the Fates arrive and tell the gods they have altered time in an negative way when creating (Y/n), they must send her to Camp Half Blood and live a life as a demigod without anything knowing she is a goddess. At Camp Half Blood she meets a certain demigod named Percy Jackson.[A/N] I wrote this when I was twelve, so I deeply apologize uhh this whole story is a mess[percy jackson x f!reader]
8 78

