This is not a happy story. Fairies and butterflies died with the Oldworld countries. Children of the Edmund-Valyn war will have to settle for Autotoxins, war orphanages, and bedtime stories of a fabled spy working both sides of the fight.
Prologue:
I run my hand gently along the curtains draped in front of the massive windows of Heylend House. Their pattern isn't ugly, not even close, but it is something that has long since been out of fashion. Swirls of paisley run up the sides, complemented by dots and stripes in horrible, alternating pattern. They're just slightly off, like everything else in this house. Like the owner of this house.
"Miss Uten," A deep voice comes from behind me. I whirl around to see the elephant of a man, bags upon bags of loose skin hanging from various crevices in his face, deep-set dark eyes shining with intelligence. He's tall, towering over me, but he's got some girth to him as well, his belt straining against his bulging belly that just emerges from beneath a heavy black cloak. "I thought it'd be long before you dared set foot here again. Much longer than this."
I raise my eyebrows. "But it's always such a pleasure to see you," I purr, "I would never miss the opportunity." He closes his eyes in exasperation. When he opens them again, they're no longer dark, but grey and only lightening. His wrinkled, frail old hand tightens around the thick wooden staff he holds at his waist and his knuckles whiten past the full moon.
Swallowing hard, I back away. His eyes are nearly blank now, milky and just brightening. A faint yellow smoke pours from his eye sockets, billowing out in what almost look like clumps. His mouth drops open and I can glimpse the yawning of the cavern that is his throat, how his teeth rot, crumbling from the crowns down, like one sees at a failed dentist's after years of decay. The smell of sulfur falls over the entire room and he careens dangerously towards me, his feet tripping forwards as if he's lost control of his body.
My heart pounding, I start to run. Through the room, out of the house, out of the yard. My feet don't stop stumbling until I'm a half-mile into the woods that surround him. The dusk shadows of trees rise all around me, their branches reaching to my bones and pulling me back. The moon just shines through the dense forestation, a brilliant orange against the midnight sky.
A tremor runs through my spine and I muffle a swear. Not now. Not here. But it shivers again, and again, and I'm losing control of my limbs, I'm flailing about. My cheek hits the muddy ground with a splat but I can't move. My lower body is entirely paralysed, locked in place by a force beyond my control. If I can get to Zone, I'll snap out before dawn. Before the Jkaje come.
As I close my eyes, praying for once to snap into Zone, one single, horrible thought enters my mind. Even if I manage to ward off the Jkaje, Traligh knows I'm alive. Coming here was a mistake. I just hope it wasn't a fatal one.
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LU is a new feature I'm adding. It stands for "Last Updated" and is a nice new way to keep track of the story if it's bookmarked. One glance will tell you if you've read the last edit.
Critiques and comments are totally welcome! Please comment them in quotes, though, so it's easy to tell that they aren't a part of the story. Thanks!