《The Chronicler》Season I | Episode V | Chapter III
Advertisement
The next morning, Tarrick feels absolutely terrible. He’s slept fitfully, with an eye open. Now he knows why people are scared of walking around at night. That mask still haunts his waking hours. He can spot it at the corner of his eye. In the dark corners of the inn. He’s fallen asleep out of exhaustion more than anything, way past his usual bedtime. Tarrick has woken up groggy and frustrated. With gritted teeth, he stabs at the poor piece of bighorn-lizard egg in his plate. Rycrofth, Grandma, Prothea and Isolniel look at each other.
“Are you okay, Tarrick?”
“Do I look like I’m okay?”
Someone at a nearby table gulps. Everyone stares. There are people piling at the door to tell their story, but Tarrick doesn’t care. He can’t bring himself to care. His usual enthusiasm is gone. Replaced by anger and fear. He’s fought some dangers before. A few cave-ins in the Wide Canyons. The mountain scorlion. Old Leohomin’s mansion. But he’s never felt this… like this before. Terrified of what lurks wherever he’s not looking. Tarrick puts down fork. He can’t eat. Not like this.
“I’m sorry I snapped at you, Isolniel. That was uncalled for.” Tarrick drops his napkin in his plate and rises to his feet. All stare, looking up at him, still seated. “I can’t live like this.”
“Like what?” asks Grandma.
“In fear. We’re going to find Greglith.”
“But… we failed yesterday.”
“And we’ll succeed today. I feel it in my bones. Come on. Get up! We’re going.”
They exchange a glance again. Tarrick is already on his way to the door while the others are halfway to their feet. Wind whips at Tarrick’s face. He looks out at Yeagsant from his perch on the tavern’s threshold. It’s a cool breezy day outside, a kind he’s not used to anymore after the suffocating heat of the Wide Canyons. Tarrick is already walking down the stairs when the door opens behind him. It’s a long way down and he’d prefer to have a heads up. The longer they wait after sunrise, the harder it will be to find Greglith.
Prothea calls after him and proposes they go to the city archives. Maybe they’ll find something there. Isolniel, Rycrofth and Grandma acquiesce and Tarrick, beyond his frustration, has to begrudgingly admit she’s right. They can’t start their search without a modicum of information. And so, early in the morning, they sit in a half-circle at a table in the city archives, noses stuck in books.
“This is useless,” says Grandma. “We could be looking for years and never find the masked one. This feels like trying to find a needle in a mountain scorlion nest.”
Tarrick agrees. He almost throws away his book in frustration. Almost.
He’s not angry enough to get mad at a book, thank you very much.
“Guys?” They all look up at Isolniel. “I think I found something.”
She’s been reading Yeagsant’s address book. All lean around Isolniel. Prothea lands on Tarrick’s shoulder and looks down. Curiosity shines in her eyes.
“I don’t see anything,” says Rycrofth, eyes scanning the page back and forth.
“See this?”
Isolniel’s index claw digs into the paper on a particular line. She reads aloud: “Gregoriam Elorin, second house in Middle Rows Street. Look here.” Isolniel grabs another book and flips its pages to the letter E. “Gregoriam Elorin. Husband to Fawarlith Elorin. They live in Middle Rows street with their son Ulben and their daughter Venona. But here’s the kicker. Look here. There’s a little star next to almost all these names.”
Advertisement
“Except the son,” says Rycrofth. “They’re all… dead except him.”
Prothea jumps on the table and pushes the book closed with her nose. “That’s the name directory for five years ago. So now that kid would be… about twenty-years-old. Maybe a bit more.”
Eyes land on Tarrick. Searching.
“He could’ve been around that age,” he says. “It was hard to tell through the window. And through that mask. But I bet Greglith isn’t old. I don’t know if anyone past their twenties would just… get up and jump from roof to roof with no purpose in mind. For fun.”
“You’d be surprised,” says Grandma. “If I could do that… I would.”
“Anyway,” Prothea cuts in slowly, pointedly, “that poor boy has been living all alone for five years.”
“And Greglith started wreaking havoc about five years ago, I think,” says Isolniel.
“That’s a long time to be terrorize the city without being caught,” points out Rycrofth.
“And it didn’t take us long to figure out Greglith,” admits Tarrick. “Didn’t it?”
And so, they set off for Middle Rows Street. It’s located smackdab in the middle of the scamander web that forms Yeagsant. From where they leave the city archives, it’s only a short way down. They’ll be there in a few minutes. Still, the road ahead seems long. Tarrick grits his teeth. He’s tense. He clenches and unclenches his fists, at his sides.
“Are you sure you’re okay, Tarrick?” asks Grandma, walking with him at the front of the group.
“I…” He could lie. It would be easy. But two things stop Tarrick from lying. One: Grandma would know instantly he’s lying. And two: he doesn’t want to lie to her. That’s when things start to go downhill. “No. No, I’m not okay. Were you okay, when we met Rycrofth again, during the cave in?”
Grandma tsks. “No, I wasn’t. But I want you to know… whatever troubles you, you can always talk to me about it. All right? And take care of yourself. That will help, too.”
“Thanks, Grandma. I think I’ll sleep better once all this is dealt with.”
“We’ll all be.”
They walk down another flight of stairs and arrive on Middle Rows Street. They walk down the platform and reach Ulbin Elorin’s home. It’s an old, dingy little house, with cracked white-turned-cream walls and falling roof tiles. A garage that seems way too big for such a tiny house is wide open, like the mouth of a beast. Inside, a saw hisses. Sparks fly. Tarrick walks up to the garage wall and knocks.
“Hey! Sir! Mister! Hello!”
The saw stops and a Davrian lifts a full face mask up on his forehead. It’s Ulben. No question about it. But he doesn’t… he’s not like Tarrick imagined Greglith, the masked one, to be like. There’s no mischief in his eyes. He seems… tired. Exhausted. With drooping eyes and a slumped figure.
“Yes?” asks Ulben in a monotone voice.
“You’re Ulben Elorin, right?”
“Hm, hm.” Ulben wipes his paws on a greasy towel and throws it away. “Who’s asking?”
“I’m Tarrick. And I know you’re Greglith, the masked one.”
It doesn’t take long for Ulben to admit it. At first, he denies. Vehemently. But then Tarrick looks him in the eye and says “I saw you last night, you can’t lie to me.” Ulben sighs and nods. He slumps down in a chair, sitting amidst the knicknacks that is his workspace in his garage. Ulben runs a paw through his fur.
Advertisement
“I knew someone would figure it out. How did you find me so quickly?”
“We found you in a name directory,” says Rycrofth, stepping closer. The others follow. “We found your parents first. Gregoriam and Fawarlith Elorin. Greglith. It wasn’t hard to put two and two together.”
He smiles. In a sad kind of way. “It wasn’t hard, huh? Right.”
Prothea flies up onto Tarrick’s shoulder. “What happened to your parents? Or your sister?”
“Prothea!” protests Isolniel.
“What? Someone had to ask.”
Ulben doesn’t seem that impressed by a talking cat-owl. Instead, he simply blinks. He keeps on smiling in that sad kind of way. “What do you know about my sister?”
“Not much, I’m afraid,” shrugs Grandma. “She seemed… kind.”
“She was so kind. The gentlest soul you could ever meet.” Ulben’s gaze gets lost in the distance. “They all died on Affliction Day, five years ago. A floating isle from way up above landed on the city by mistake. No one was to blame but Nature’s whims. The houses were shaken, but held on. The people who were walking the platforms, though… a lot of them fell. They didn’t make it.”
For the first time since early this morning, Tarrick feels something other than anger. His heart grows heavy. He feels sadness and guilt and… maybe not quite pity. But his eyes water the same.
“My parents and grandfather died on Affliction Day three years ago.”
“I’m sorry. I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy.”
“Me either.”
“Is that why you’ve been Greglith ever since?” asks Isolniel.
This time, Ulben’s smile is genuine. He jumps up in one swoop, kicking his heels. Ulben rummages through his knicknacks hanging on shelves and wire racks on the walls. He grabs something, a small object Tarrick can’t identify, in his fist. Then, Ulben walks over to a slim box hanging from the wall. He unlocks the box - with a bronze key Tarrick couldn’t quite identify earlier. Inside the box, there’s only a non-descript button sticking out of the wall. Ulben pushes on it. Out of sight, pulleys grind and ropes hiss. A trapdoor slides open in the floor. A small platform rises. It stops a few seconds later. Everything stills.
“Meet Greglith.”
The mask is a lot less terrifying in broad daylight. Neither is it slightly warped into a demonic snarl by the glass of the window anymore. Now that Tarrick stares at it plainly, it’s quite beautiful. Golden and purple feathers glisten in the sun. There’s no fur on that mask. The fur belonged to Ulben himself, underneath the mask that half-covers his face during his nightly adventures. Speaking of Ulben, he grabs the mask and reveals a strange pair of shoes underneath. Are those… springs attached to the soles?
“This was Father’s mask from his old theatre days. And those shoes… Mother made them for Vinny, my sister. Mother taught me everything about the workshop. And Vinny loved to jump. At times, we had to…” Ulben smiles at the memory, eyes glistening. “We had to fight to get her to take them off and come home for dinner.” He grows somber. “After the accident… I decided to honor their memories and adjust these shoes’ abilities a bit. So I could jump higher than walls. But on my first night out, someone spotted me. And that’s when the tale of Greglith, the masked one, was born.”
“Who came up with the name?” Rycrofth ponders, picking up a bolt and running it through his fingers.
Ulben almost looks sheepish. Almost. “I did. I… foolishly amplified the rumours myself. Not that anyone would be able to tell anymore.”
“Where does the blood come from?” asks Prothea.
“It’s mine. I cut my finger once and thought it would be hilarious if I put it on the mask to give Vinny a scare. Mother begged me to remove the blood. No luck. It stained.”
“Ah.”
“Are you still going to terrorize the town, though?” asks Grandma.
“That was never the intention! I didn’t… I didn’t want to scare anyone.”
“Well, you do,” says Tarrick, “and I could barely sleep last night because of you.”
“I’m sorry. But… I can’t bring myself to stop.” Ulben’s voice cracks when he says: “I’ve tried. Trust me, I have! This… this makes me feel close to my family again. You’ve never felt the thrill of jumping from roof to roof with the wind in your fur. You’ve never seen the twinkling lights of the windows mirroring the stars like I have. Besides… it’s my only hobby. Times are rough and… I don’t really have the money to find myself another one. I can’t stop. I’m sorry.”
Isolniel snaps her fingers.
“I have an idea.”
They all work together. Tarrick writes a commercial slogan. Isolniel and Ulben work on painting posters. And Rycrofth and Prothea work to bend the metal. Soon, the tale of Greglith, the masked one, has become… a business. It all starts in Middle Rows Street, but as soon as Tarrick, Isolniel, Rycrofth and Prothea take that story to Zelenyphe’s tavern, it spreads like wildfire. Everyone wants a piece of the legend of Greglith. And when an “expert” on the subject - someone who has studied this spirit and tried to replicate his Meaningful abilities using mechanical shoes of his own - appears, all want fragments of what he knows. Ulben becomes that expert and soon, Greglith’s shoes sell like hotcakes. Roof Jumping - under strict guidelines and the watchful eyes of the mayor and the authorities - becomes Yeagsant’s favorite sport.
“I could never say thank you enough,” says Ulben one night, a few days after they’ve started selling Greglith’s shoes and after a particularly successful day at Ulben’s workshop in his garage. “I loved improving my Mother’s shoes, but I never thought others would love them too.” He stares down at his paws, wrapped around a teacup. “I feel like I’m spreading a bit of joy every day.”
“You’re welcome,” says Isolniel with a wink.
Ulben looks up. “How can I make it up to you? How can I say thank you properly?”
Grandma smiles at Tarrick. Tarrick smiles at Grandma. Tarrick grabs a familiar suitcase he’s kept under the table. He opens it and takes out his writing supplies.
“Well… I guess you could… you know… let me write your and your family’s story?”
Ulben smiles.
“It would be my pleasure.”
Advertisement
- In Serial15 Chapters
The Last Evil
Helena Rukh is the Last Evil, the Black Queen, the Leader of the Dark Pact… and half a dozen other equally silly titles. Or at least Rukh thinks they’re silly, but then, she’s never thought of herself as the villain, despite all the things she did back in the War. A war she lost. The treaty was signed. Her attempt to conquer all Reality aborted. Rukh’s retired now, to a hell-hole world called Sansara, a place where it rains ash and chaos-rents mar the sky, though the liquor is surprisingly good. But an old enemy is on her way to end that retirement, to drag Rukh back into everything she left behind. Trouble is brewing and the self-styled good guys are at a loss. Set a thief to catch a thief and all that....
8 190 - In Serial17 Chapters
Guardium
Year 3184: Earth remains divided. Five years ago, a comet storm known as Orbital bombardment ravaged the Sol galaxy and left many humans scrambling to find new lives beyond the stars. Those who stay face many challenges to keep their world alive. Though splintered, Earth still retains hope underfoot. Gaia, who emerged to save Her people that day. But ever since, she has remained dormant and hidden from the world when they needed her most. That is, until one Illian Jones answered her pleas. Despite his blue-collar occupation as an intergalactic diamond miner, Illian learns he is destined for greater things. He is the only one who can speak to Gaia. He is one of many Messengers who speak for their Gods in the mortal coil. In all iterations, they call their congregation Guardium. When an ancient army awakens to reclaim Earth through means of war, it will be up to Illian to unite his people and prove once and for all that Earth is not yet dead. --- Guardium is Science Fiction like you've never read before. Meet legendary figures, engage in exciting warfare, and learn what it means to be one part of a bigger whole. The perfect cross between Star Wars, Mass Effect, and Greek epics such as The Illiad! Also on Wattpad and Tapas.
8 152 - In Serial11 Chapters
The Chronicles of Tyfoon, The Chosen One
For hundreds of years the galaxy was kept in order due to the diligent work of The Council, the number one authority in the whole galaxy, and their appointed guardian of the galaxy, The Chosen One. The Chosen One was the face of order and justice in the galaxy and was the head over all the galactic military forces, answering only to The Council themselves. But after a rebel enemy force known as the Doomaki rise to power, they overtake The Chosen One and his military forces, known as The Peacekeepers. One final battle leaves The Peacekeepers outnumbered and The Chosen One is overtaken and presumed dead. Just when it seems the galaxy might fall to the evil reign of the Doomaki, they disappear without a trace. With the thread of the Doomaki gone, the crippled galaxy begins to try and rebuild and find a new Chosen One to lead them and prepare for whatever new threats may come. Tyfoon, the Chosen One's only child, was born during the battle that his father disappeared in, and the ensuing battle left him without a mother as well, dying soon after childbirth. 18 years from that night pass and Tyfoon is ready to follow in his father's footsteps and serve The Council, perhaps to be The Chosen One when he is ready. But this plan is cut short when the Doomaki resurface and threaten everything dear to Tyfoon. Tyfoon must rise up and finish the task his father failed: defeat the Doomaki once and for all.
8 245 - In Serial13 Chapters
Planet #3
Everyday life for everyone on earth is about to change as the reality we know in games begins to become implemented on earth. This is apocalypse for humanity and a time for monsters and other races to thrive.
8 197 - In Serial102 Chapters
Smile
"I've been through a lot of shit and something you'd think would give me a break is love, but nopeThat's kicking my ass too."-(G!P You)
8 107 - In Serial74 Chapters
(Discontinued) Outer Banks | JJ x reader
(Discontinued at the end of season 2)(Y/N) Routledge is John B's twin sister. Like John B, JJ is her best friend. Of course Kie and Pope are there too, but JJ has known the twins longer and you would just say them three were inseparable. (Y/N) has always had feelings for JJ, but you know, the rule: no pogue on pogue macking. The characters besides you are not mine and are all from Outer Banks. I apologize for any mistakes.Please try and tell me if there are any mistakes, I'd like to fix themI'm gonna give a warning right here. Im not exactly sure what I am going to write in this but there is always a possibility for something triggering. For blood, depression, anxiety, etc.
8 185

