You Need to Reload

Upon the oaken shelf where shadows lie,
Three trusted forms in burnished silence rest;
Their tempered steel beneath the lantern’s eye
Shines like the stars on midnight’s solemn crest.

No idle tools, but comrades tried and true,
They stood when winter’s howl besieged the door,
And in their weight, I find a purpose new—
A bond that echoes through the powder’s roar.

The flintlock, aged, yet noble in its grace,
Doth whisper tales of valor long ago;
The rifle, sharp and steadfast in its place,
Keeps watch o’er fields where wandering winds may blow.

So with a grateful heart, I guard these three—
For in their craft lives trust, and loyalty.

A Letter to her Beloved on the Journey to the Markgraf House

Hello my Beloved,

Vissivind is beautiful. The houses are not as lovely as your hometown (Soon to be ours) but the parties are divine! But it was not for the parties that I traveled down South. I wanted to rally support for the almshouse.

The Almshouse! For those destitute and those that cannot pick up a sword to fight in battle, for those kicked from their farms in the latest raid. The church pleaded for support and while I cannot take a small hungry charge on my own, the guilt haunted me for weeks until I decided to find support in the way that I could. I cannot gather supplies, but I can gather funds!

With nothing but my name and my charming wit I traveled to the great Markgraf House in the Cold Throne of Njordr to attempt to rally support for the Alm house. In the weeks it would take to gather money from the Knight of Diamond, I could parry from those in Njordr. Thankfully my Lady allowed me to depart from her side to try and support the will of the Church. To help those less fortunate.

I hosted a great party! Well, no. Not the food, or the ever filling wine glasses, but instead the entertainment for a week long gala! We played so many games those weeks at the House of Markgraf and we even had a promise of funds being sent to the church from their houses! I must have done well…But of course I am. I am of the House of Hearts, we can entertain a room.

We had contests of stories late at night, we shared poetry, and I even heard the youngest of the Markgraf’s play their silly little instruments! They adored me, mostly because I doted on them that day. I knew that, to find favor with their parents, one must be the center of their children’s attention. But after a day or two…I found it less of an act and could not stop entertaining the children whenever they found me. The children were so full of joy and I spent much time with the children on my lap and bouncing them during late night conversations.

I know it is my duty to birth an heir. Only for a small amount of time will they be in my hands in Cappacionne before they are sent to be raised in my childhood home in Valeria. Where they will be guided into another suit of cards…perhaps one of the Club or the Diamond perhaps. And I wish them success in their endeavor! If I am to keep them in my home they will not rise to their namesake. But as I spent days in Vissivind I realized how different our houses can be.

The Markgraf House is nothing like the Jokeri house. The rooms were full and the children …Well they reminded me of Jaqueline and me before we were pitted against each other – Before he was sent to academy. They played so many games and none of them were told to steal trinkets from their companions, like I was when I was their age. None of them were performing to be given a higher status in their parent’s eyes, they were performing for simply the applause of the adults in the room.

Not that I am not grateful to the Jokeri Family! But between us…It was lovely to see the cousins so unguarded. When I tucked them in after a long game of hide and seek, the one that was found first was not forced to sleep under the bed like I was when I was young.

I am getting distracted, perhaps it was the four glasses of port. I am grateful to my GrandFather, but I will never forgive my parents for birthing me into this family and being so willing to pass me to another suit. And I expect my children to never forgive me for the same sin.

Thank goodness none will see these thoughts. If I die, I wish for you to burn this notebook with me after you devour these words. You may take the ash and do what you wish with it, but please allow my secrets to burn with me.

With all my heart,

Lorelei

I had to add more! I was just in bed when the bells started to read with news: King Maynor of Einsland has died! It was sudden and now there is scheming to be had! Who will be leaning in for the crown? I only have a few words to spare, as the ink is too valuable tonight.

I will be staying up till dawn writing letters to secure alliances. I do not know who yet my Lady wishes to put her banner behind, but banding support for allegiance to her choice is what I must do. While the guilt of my sins had originally brought me to Vissivind, perhaps it was God’s hand leading me to where I must be in order to put forth his divine will.

Njordr will now be the center of all gossip of Gothic, and the Knight of Hearts is in the center of it! How grand!

The Cleanse

𝘓𝘢𝘵𝘦 𝘚𝘶𝘮𝘮𝘦𝘳 – 𝘌𝘢𝘳𝘭𝘺 𝘈𝘶𝘵𝘶𝘮𝘯
There are certain images one never forgets. For most people, it’s a first kiss or the sight of home after a long journey. For me, it’s Aurelia—shirtless, passed out in a herd of sheep, with her tiara thirty yards away and a trail of wine bottles glittering in the grass like breadcrumbs of her shame.

It was a stifling night in late summer, the air thick enough to drown in. The taverns had long since emptied, and I’d begun to worry when she hadn’t stumbled home by dawn. I sent the wards to find her. I should have gone myself, but I was too tired—too used to cleaning up after her disasters.
They found her just outside the pasture on the edge of town.

Damascus Steel discovered her first—silent as a grave, holding that damned tiara as if it were a holy relic. Dong Quixote was trying to herd the sheep away, muttering about protecting “the dignity of the fallen lady.” Cass A’Nueva stood nearby, fanning himself and insisting she looked “positively mythic in her ruin.”

She was snoring, face-down in the grass. It took all three of them to drag her home.
The next morning, she insisted the whole scene was “a spiritual experiment in humility.” She said this while draped in a blanket like a monarch in exile, reeking of wine and regret. I informed her that if enlightenment required nudity and sheep, she could pursue it elsewhere.

That, mercifully, was the breaking point.
For the first time, Aurelia admitted she was tired—of being drunk, of being pitied, of disappointing herself. I’d heard such words before, but this time something in her voice cracked differently. The wards rallied around her as if she were a general in need of an army.

Damascus poured every bottle in the house down the drain, humming a hymn while Aurelia wailed like she was attending a funeral.

Dong Quixote gave stirring speeches about the “discipline of the spirit” and vowed to train beside her, as though sobriety were a duel to be won through agility and honor.

Cass, of course, turned it into theatre—declaring he’d chronicle her “glorious ascension from vice to virtue” and calling her Saint Aurelia of the Empty Cup.

Each day, Aurelia watched as the wards proudly etched a mark on the mantle for her sobriety. It lasted a week before they got distracted.

I woke up the other morning and didn’t reach for the scarf Santiago left. The one he gave me. It’s still tucked away in my pack, but today it stayed there. I don’t need it. I don’t need any of the things he left behind.

I started with the simplest things—his old boots. They’ve been sitting by the door for far too long, gathering dust. They’re still sturdy, still useful, but they’re a reminder of him, of how he used to stride through this place like he owned it. I didn’t think twice. I gave them to Dong. He looked confused at first, but when I told him they’d be better off being worn than sitting around gathering dust, he smiled and slipped them on.

It wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be. Maybe I’m not as attached to those little things as I believed.

𝘌𝘢𝘳𝘭𝘺 𝘞𝘪𝘯𝘵𝘦𝘳
The frost has begun to bite again. The air feels thinner in Runeheim this time of year, like the world itself is holding its breath before everything ices over. I can see it from my window—the river slowing, the trees bare, the streets quieter. Fewer drunkards stumble about now that the taverns close earlier. Fewer of Aurelia’s bottles clink against the cobblestones.

She hasn’t had a drink in nearly two months. I write that with some hesitation, as if to commit it to ink might jinx it, but I suppose there’s no magic in honesty—only record. She’s even started sleeping in her own bed again instead of collapsing wherever gravity saw fit.

I still think about that night in late summer when we found her—the wards and I—sprawled in the pasture, half-buried in wool and shame. A herd of sheep had taken her for one of their own. Shirtless, of course, because she’d apparently “grown too radiant for the fabric to contain her,” as she put it later. Her tiara lay thirty yards away like a fallen star, and there was a breadcrumb trail of wine bottles from the barn to her final resting place. Dong Quixote nearly fainted from the moral scandal of it all, Cass A’Nueva recited a tragic ballad right there in the field, and Damascus Steel… well, he just slung her over his shoulder and said, “Boss, we’ve gotta start locking the cellar.”

That was the night I decided we’d help her. Or at least try.

The weeks after were a circus of stubbornness and tears. Aurelia snarled like a cornered cat for the first few days, alternately blaming me, Tomaso, and the gods for her suffering. I hid her bottles, diluted what she didn’t notice, and forced her to eat. Dong Quixote attempted to deliver morale speeches about purity of spirit—until she threatened to dunk his head in a bucket. Cass wrote poetry about her “heroic battle against the siren song of the vine.” Damascus mostly guarded the doors to make sure she didn’t escape to the tavern.

It was chaos. Exhausting, infuriating, and strangely… hopeful.

Then, in early autumn, she called for her family. I was surprised to meet, not Tomaso, but her three elderly matriarchs—the ones she’d adopted long before coming to Runeheim: Abuela del Ron, Tía Besitos, and Abuela Pan Duro. They arrived in a rickety cart piled high with quilts, bread, and unsolicited opinions. Within an hour, they had taken over my kitchen, replaced my spice rack, and declared me too thin. Aurelia cried when she saw them. I hadn’t seen her cry in years. It felt raw, real. I almost cried too.

Abuela del Ron (whose name, ironically, means “Grandmother of Rum”) was the first to scold Aurelia into staying sober, after she mistakenly fed her a shot of rum. “You have to drink life now, mija,” she said, slapping Aurelia’s hand away from a half-empty flask I’d missed. Tía Besitos smothered everyone in affection and unsolicited kisses, while Abuela Pan Duro smacked Damascus with her cane when he swore. Dong Quixote tried to duel her for honor—she won.

They’ve become a strange sort of family, this motley assembly in my home. Aurelia has been working again—slowly, carefully. She forges during the day, tends the fire at night, and sometimes hums old Hestralian songs when she thinks no one is listening. Her hands no longer tremble when she holds the hammer.

I catch myself watching her and feeling something I didn’t expect—pride.

There was a time when I thought I’d never stop thinking about Santiago. I’d trace his memory like the edge of a wound, reopening it just to remember it still hurt. But lately, when I think of him, it isn’t sorrow that fills me—it’s quiet. I’ve poured all that aching into something else: into helping Aurelia stand again. Perhaps it’s easier to mend another than to dwell on what can’t be repaired.
She’s not the same woman I dragged from the sheep pen. She’s steadier now, with laughter that isn’t forced. She still slips sometimes—her eyes wander too long when someone pours wine—but she’s learning. She keeps an expensive bottle of wine marked “for special occasions” by her side, but I monitor its contents regularly and not a drop is missing. I suppose we both are growing. I have thrown the scarf Santiago left behind into the fire to show her my own growth; my own sobriety from the love sickness that haunted me.

If this winter must be cold, let it be a cleansing cold. Let it freeze what we were, and make something new of what remains.

And if spring comes again—and gods, it always does—I hope to find us both thawed, standing side by side, sober in more ways than one.

𝘔𝘪𝘥𝘸𝘪𝘯𝘵𝘦𝘳
The snow has come down in heavy curtains this month, swallowing the city in silence. Runeheim looks clean from the window—pure, untouched, like the world has finally managed to wash itself of its own sins. But beneath that blanket, you can hear the creak of beams, the groan of carts, the quiet muttering of the cold as it seeps into bones and doors alike.

Inside my home, it’s another story entirely. Warmth, chaos, and bread crumbs everywhere. The old women have turned my hearth into their throne. Abuela del Ron sits nearest the fire, knitting something I suspect is meant to be a blanket but looks more like an elaborate fishing net. Tía Besitos sings lullabies no one asked for, sometimes to the soup, sometimes to herself. Abuela Pan Duro patrols the halls with her cane, ensuring no one tracks in snow, dirt, or “sin.” She’s struck Dong Quixote twice already this week for “prancing indoors.”

Aurelia is doing well—better than I ever dared hope. She still smells faintly of smoke and metal, but no longer of wine. The forge has become her cathedral. I watch her work sometimes from the doorway; she doesn’t notice. The glow of the fire outlines her in gold, her face set in that fierce, determined way of hers. She looks alive again. I think the heat and rhythm of the anvil are what’s keeping her sober—the structure, the sound, the focus.

She’s taken to mending things. Not just weapons, but hinges, door handles, even a cracked teapot. “I like fixing what’s meant to be last,” she said one evening, her hands blackened, her hair a mess. “Even if people don’t.” I didn’t know how to answer, so I just nodded.

Dong Quixote has been drilling outside daily, even in the snow, claiming that “a knight must be ready for winter ambush.” He nearly skewered a passing courier last week. Cass A’Nueva has written four new poems about frost and despair—three of which he read aloud until Abuela Pan Duro threw a slipper at him. Damascus Steel built the ladies a wood rack so high it blocks half the window, then tried to race a sled down the frozen river and broke my broom instead.

And somehow, through all this absurdity, I find a kind of peace.

The days are short now. Nights stretch on endlessly. I’ve taken to writing after everyone’s gone to sleep, when the only sounds are the fire’s quiet pop and the faint snore of Tía Besitos from the couch. Aurelia often lingers up too, working by lamplight. Sometimes we speak in murmurs, other times not at all. Silence has stopped feeling so heavy between us.

She’s been marking the days on a small scrap of parchment for her own record. One line for each sober day. She doesn’t show it to anyone, but I caught a glimpse once when the paper fluttered loose from her apron. Seventy-three days. I don’t think she’s ever gone that long since I’ve known her.

I told her I was proud of her last week. The words came out awkwardly, like they weren’t meant to be said aloud. She froze, then laughed—genuine, bright, surprised. “Don’t go getting sentimental on me now, Nosey Nephele,” she said, but her eyes softened. For a moment, I saw the Aurelia I used to know, the one who smiled without guilt, the one Selena raised before life chewed her up and spat her out.

It’s strange—I used to fill these pages with thoughts of Santiago. Now his name rarely crosses my mind. When it does, it’s like a soft echo, not a wound. I wonder what he’d think of this little household, of the chaos and warmth we’ve built. I think he’d laugh. He always said I needed something to tether me—“a reason to stay still for once.” Maybe this is it. Maybe it’s not about forgetting him at all, but about finally living beyond him.

The solstice passed quietly. We burned a bundle of herbs and hung them above the door, as the old women insisted. Abuela del Ron declared it would “keep the spirits of old cravings away.” Aurelia laughed at that but kept the herbs hanging anyway.

I don’t know what spring will bring, or whether Aurelia’s resolve will hold. But for now, in this frozen, firelit house full of mismatched souls, I feel something I haven’t in a long time—contentment.

If this is what healing looks like, it’s louder and messier than I imagined. But it’s real.
And I’ll take real over perfect any day.

tl;dr Not Much Happened

Another market. Not much happened.

Somebody tried to assault the city, as usual. Svart sent his best generals, Knut and Ragnar, to deal with it. There was no need for Svart to go. Svart certainly wasn’t scared of Gorm. I am an adult now. Things don’t make Svart scared, because there is nothing that can hurt Svart. I am too quick and smart.

I wonder if Svart should learn blacksmithing. Then I wouldn’t have to pay the two copper to get my weapons unkept. I could do it myself. I could also melt down my gold ore to bars. Along with my jewels, I could make a gold crown. Svart was able to get the secrets out of the color wizard. He let it slip that his gold crown protected him from magic. He was very nervous when I spoke of gold weapons. I could make some of those too, possibly. It is possibly time to bring back some of the holy steel that Svart has been saving up to be made into his weapons.

Things are turning now. Runehiem is protected. Svart has many friends now. Svart’s many enemies are on the run.

Rhyme and Reason got their magic suppressed. After the magic had left, there was little left of what humanity that was left. They were confused as to what they were doing and impressionable. They wandered around and others were trying to take care of them, the fire magic had eaten away at their soul and mind, just as Wolf-Rik had described happening to him, and what was left was a fragment of what their prior human self must have been like. It was sad to see them in that state. Then their magic came back later and they returned to their hateful state and leered at Svart and made threats. The thing inside of them knows I will be its doom.

Heavy is the head who wears the crown

I do not know why I continue to write in this infernal book. Outside these pages, no one listens. Perhaps that is a blessing; here at least, my voice is not interrupted by sneezes, groans, or the incessant chatter of idiots. I am overworked, underappreciated, and yet I receive not so much as a “Thank you, Aurelia, for trying to save me” from Nephele. After all my efforts — tending her bar, learning the delicate art of pouring drinks without spreading her pestilence, pleading with every fool in Runeheim who might know of a cure — the wretch looks at me as if I’ve merely spilled flour across the floor.

She lingered, snot oozing and breath pungent with illness, questioning every step I took as though I were some mortal threat to her delicate constitution. Nosey Nephele, indeed. That childhood nickname still fits her perfectly.

Then, as if my life were not already a gauntlet of frustration, my charming brother swooped in. He bullied the townsfolk into concocting some foul remedy – one I already had well underway – and of course she treated him like a god-sent hero. How infuriating that she lavishes gratitude on him while treating me as though I were an inconvenient shadow. The injustice! The gall!

Out of sheer spite, I agreed on her behalf to a Saltworks — a laughably pointless addition to the harbor — simply to see her flinch under the cost. Let her taste disappointment, the way she dishes it to me daily.

Saturday I spent slaving over her birthday cake, a masterpiece of Hestralian splendor: pineapple, cherries, sugar, exotic flavors she could not begin to understand in this frozen city. When I arrived with it, she barely glanced up, asking instead where I had been. The little wretch. Only after much coaxing did she mutter, “You’re my favorite cousin,” but I could feel the falseness slicing through me sharper than any blade. Why did my mother favor her so? Why did she squander my inheritance on Nephele rather than me, her own daughter? Truly remarkable.

After Nephele vanished to tend her bar, I sat with Steiner, learning that she had been paying him and the other crewmen three silver each forum — a betrayal of principle that demanded restitution. When I confronted her, she waved it off with her usual flippant grace, citing trinkets and gifts as if they could balance the scales of my suffering. Four silver coins later, safely in my pocket, I promised myself a drink — a private celebration of justice in a world that otherwise refuses it.

I kept Nephele company while she prepared for the feast later in the evening. A kindness she hardly deserved. The feast, however, was incredible. So many foods from so many townsfolk poured in to fill the tables. The options were so many that I found it difficult to decide where to begin with my indulgences.

Later on into the evening, I managed to procure a schematic that our family had been longing to obtain. Nephele seemed both relieved and distressed by the price of it, but it was a momentous occasion for us to finally be able to obtain the piece of paper. I’m sure she might consider showing more gratitude later.

We parted ways so that I could make it in time to greet my little old ladies that were set to arrive off the shores. She asked me to swear to behave, as if she were so innocent as to not be the one needing to swear.

And then… my ladies arrived, Sunday afternoon.

Abuela del Ron was first, descending upon our house like a tempest in a dress of rum and sweetness. She waved a shot glass in my face and stuffed a pastry in my hand simultaneously, while declaring that “if the world is ending, at least your mouth will be happy for the afterlife.” Her advice was harsh and sugary, her love administered in dangerous doses. I suspect my liver will never forgive me.

Next, Tía Besitos floated in, perfume and lipstick first, kissing me on both cheeks with the zeal of someone who believes affection can solve all problems — especially Nephele’s. She immediately began offering matchmaking advice for the entire household. “You see that man?” she whispered, pointing at a passing beggar. “He is destiny!” I nearly choked on my patience.

And finally, Abuela Pan Duro, goddess of flour and discipline, arrived with an oven at her back and judgment in her eyes. She began baking immediately — the smell of yeast and fire filled every corner of the house. When Dong Quixote tried to steal a morsel, she smacked him with a loaf so hard it could have felled a moose. He apologized on the spot and has since adopted a permanent posture of fear. I do not blame him.

Nephele’s wards — Dong Quixote, pacing and muttering about “honor and dough,” Damascus Steel, attempting to charm Abuela del Ron into granting him more shots, and Cass A’Nueva, sprawled like some tragic poet who believes sobriety is a performance art — added further chaos. I watched them all, trying to maintain the illusion of composure, and failing spectacularly.

And Nephele? She arrived shortly after. Pale, silent, detached. She glanced at the scene with a look that might have been fondness, or disdain — I cannot tell which. I reminded myself: I am Aurelia. I am magnificent. I am indispensable. If she cannot see it, that is her loss, not mine. Also, that would make her blind.

Finally, I could breathe. The madness of my Hestralian ladies brought a strange warmth, the familiar chaos of home amidst Runeheim’s frozen absurdity. Tía Besitos kissed my cheeks, Abuela Pan Duro handed me a loaf — more of a cudgel than bread, but a cudgel I could respect — and Abuela del Ron offered me a shot, harsh as life itself. For the first time today, I felt seen, in my own way.

Perhaps this is what it means to survive Nephele: not through gratitude, not through fairness, but through the loyal insanity of friends who remind me I am worth the effort.

Though I do have to admit… I rather like the crown she got me.

Find a cure for sentimentality

Friday Night
My head is pounding like a cursed drum, and I am fairly certain death has come to collect the tab I’ve been running since I arrived in Runeheim.

Something has me — some vile sickness that laughs at priests and mocks the so-called physickers. It’s only a matter of time before I start coughing on customers and doom the city. Terrible for business.

I tell Aurelia to get pen and parchment — time to draft my will. She should inherit the bar, keep the money flowing, and maybe name a cocktail after me. She immediately starts fretting about my “outstanding orders” and suggests bleeding me to get the sickness out. I nearly die from the idea alone.

Runeheim truly has no healers, only hopeful sadists.

Just as I prepare to start writing farewell letters, salvation bursts through my door: Tomaso, my shining idiot cousin, yelling, “Nephele! Make me my favorite drink!” I tell him I’m dying. I tell him I might’ve infected Knut. He calls Knut a hypochondriac and storms off to badger every apothecary in town until someone hands him a cure — or dies trying.

He returns with a wiry Hestrali who orders a fruity drink. I make him a Blue Hestrali and later learn he’s into feet. I assure everyone this is not a cultural trait. They call him Cherry Tomaso now. I prefer “Fruity Hestrali” until proven otherwise.

Then Tomaso — the true one, not the fruity one — returns, holding what looks like the contents of a latrine bucket and calls it medicine. I drink it. I gag. I live.

He saves me again. My hero, my curse.

We move straight to business talk — naturally, as soon as I’ve stopped convulsing. He asks about the shipyard plans; I confess I got distracted building stables. The look he gives me could sour cream. We settle on building a Saltworks instead, which delights Graham to no end. I try to look equally thrilled, but inside I am already budgeting the ruin of my accounts.

Note to self: Never get sick in Runeheim again. Next time, just die quietly. It’s cheaper.

Saturday
I awake at dawn, miraculously alive and deeply annoyed about it. My head feels like it’s been kicked by a mule. Aurelia is missing — probably napping in a barrel somewhere. I ready the bar for the town feast, wondering how long before I keel over again.

By late afternoon, Aurelia finally appears, carrying a cake. She declares it’s my birthday. I had entirely forgotten. The cake is pineapple — Hestralian, sweet, golden, achingly nostalgic. For a fleeting moment, I remember our childhood and almost forgive her for existing. Almost.

I share it with Svart, Steiner, Bryn, and Reidun. We laugh. For once, Runeheim doesn’t feel like punishment — more like the world forgot to be cruel for a few hours.

Then Vindicta announces that the king is dead, and the city must choose between her and the Bearhide Kjarl. I glance down at the contract Santiago got me — tax exemption, blessed be his charming recklessness — and my choice is obvious. Vindicta, of course.

Then comes the real madness: she proposes secession from the throne. I almost choke on my drink.

“Trade routes, Vindicta!” I think. “Money! I like my independence, but I like gold more. Empires may be tyrannies, but at least they pay invoices.”

The night turns to revelry — laughter, feasting, unity. Everyone together for once. It’s unsettling. I keep waiting for someone to stab someone else.

Svart lingers. Odd, twitchy man. Loyal, though. I consider adopting him like I did Butch and Bryn. My collection of strays grows daily. Perhaps I should start charging rent.
Later, I buy a recipe said to repel sea serpents from ships. A glorious victory, except it costs me nearly everything I’ve saved. Every coin I count feels like a funeral bell. I tell myself it’s for my family — Aurelia, Tomaso, the two bottomless pits in human form. Surely they’re worth it.

…Probably.

Note to self: Invent cheaper family members.

Sunday
It’s raining, because of course it is. I pack my bar in the downpour, muttering curses at the sky. Aurelia has left already, swearing she won’t cause trouble. Which means she absolutely will. I hug her goodbye anyway. I never learn.

I find Svart and beg to borrow his wagon. He agrees without asking for coin. Saints preserve me, there are still good men in this city — they’re just all slightly unhinged.

Then Knut appears, walking beside me in silence. A strange comfort, really. We talk politics, trade, Vindicta — all the things that keep Runeheim spinning. He seems broken in some quiet, unspoken way. Perhaps it was just a reflection of myself.

By the time we part, I’m soaked, freezing, and strangely… hopeful. I think I’m starting to care about these people.

Horrifying realization.

Note to self: Find cure for sentimentality before it spreads.

Joy of Tales Returned

When comrades wander forth through time and space,
To chase the fruit of study, toil, or chance,
Each tale they bear doth gild their weary face,
And bids our hearts to join their glad expanse.

The scholar’s word, by candlelight conceived,
Returns as treasure, richer than pure gold;
The traveler’s song, in distant lands achieved,
Breathes life anew in stories brave and bold.
Yet truest bond is friendship’s gentle thread,
Which time may stretch but never rend in twain;
Its voice abides when fleeting hours are fled,
And lifts us up through joy as well as pain.
So joy is sown in every voice we hear,
For each farewell returns as something dear.

Joy of Windswept Victory

The gate watch had seen the dust long before the wagons came thundering up the road. Two wagons, neck and neck, jolted over the still rough mountain road as the drivers urged them on with reckless grins.

“Ha! You’re losing your touch, Felix!” Damian called, his cap nearly flying off in the wind, Silvester holding on tight just behind him.

Felix cracked the reins “Not yet I haven’t!” driving Buttercup on with stubborn pride.

Crouched low with the cargo, Mitch looked ahead, gauged the narrow stretch to the gate, and made his decision. “You’ll never make it at this pace with me slowing you down, Mr. Porter.” Before Felix could protest, Mitch lept.

Hitting the ground rolling, Mitch came up coughing up dust, but was waving and hollering as the Wagons lumbered on. Suddenly lighter, Felix’s wagon started to creep ahead of Damian’s and crossed the gate just moments ahead of him.

While the gate watch cheered, Felix stood in the front of the cart, waving and bowing to the onlookers. Mitch jogged into the fort and got a rough clap on the back from one of the guards.

“What are you still doing in the Wagon?” Damian snarled at Silvester.
“Because I didn’t want to die?”
“If that’s the case you should have jumped!” Damian took a swing at him and Silvester jumped back in the bed of the Wagon, managing to both not get hit and stay on.

Then came the inevitable voice

“By Benalus’ beard, have you both lost your senses?”

The stablemaster stormed across the yard, his face as red as the sunset. “You’ll lame our best stock racing like drunk sellswords! Look at these poor beasts!” He gestured at Buttercup and Red Spade, both dark with sweat and sides heaving.

Damian turned back “We’re just keepin ‘em sharp, sir”

The stablemaster’s expression showing he did not agree with the younger Porter’s assessment, Felix interjected “We’ve gotta get these to storage right away, we’ll make it up to the horses later!” Shooting Damian a glance, he tapped the reins to get a trot going to their destination, and the two wagons with Mitch on foot made their way to the stone warehouse up against the wall.

—-

Gilbert was putting back some extra beams from the project in the yard when he heard the wagons approaching the warehouse. Brushing the sawdust off his doublet, he made his way out the door and broke into a wide smile.

“Well, well,” he said. “looking like you’ve run from the Rimelanders themselves.”

“Worse,” Damian said solemnly “It was Felix and Mitch.”

Gilbert nodded in mock understanding. “Sounds like the wagons made the whole trip despite that excitement though. Why’s Mitch covered in dirt?”

“Because we won.” Felix said smugly, without further explanation.

Gilbert continued to nod in understanding. “Naturally, what other reason could it be. How’s summer treating you lads?”

As they unloaded the carts, they traded their stories of the summer so far. Mitch’s path to his path, the sights and sounds of the southern reich. Silvester’s hunting stories and tales of the other hunters in Mecorton. Felix and Damian argued about who had a harder time delivering their cargo, with Felix suggesting that it was Silvester who had it worse. Felix also shared how Woodsman was getting on showing his son the ropes in Survold. Gilbert had been in the fort the whole time, and shared stories of the continued improvements and the various visitors who came through.

They laughed loud, easy laughter that filled the warehouse and echoed off the stone. During Damian’s recounting of surprising Silvester in Mecorton, Gilbert was quiet, before interjecting.

“Each tale they bear doth gild their weary face,
And bids our hearts to join their glad expanse.”

The mood changed immediately, but Damian’s excitement was the most palpable.

“Is this what I think it is?” He asked, looking to Felix for confirmation

Felix gave a weary sigh. “Making himself useful. That’s how things get done.”

Joy of a Challenge Discovered

These trips as of late have not been as long as my normal, but they have been lonely all the same. Having Sil with me on the way back has been nice even if he has been preoccupied with a more important task. I find myself playing little games to pass the time. How many clicks of that back right wheel will I hear before we get to that rock? How many of Gil’s sonnets can I recall without checking my notes? “Disturb me not, lest death itself ye crave”. How many white hairs are in Felix’s beard now? Just little things to keep from pondering the solitude.

That is the benefit of this trip though, the majority of the crew will be together again, even if only for a moment. Sil did his job, I am sure Mitch is faring well. I think I might need to request a job that keeps me in one place a little longer. Get back to sewing a bit.

Oh shoot, did I miss a turn?

“Sil did I fu-“
“You are good keep going straight you will see it soon”

I look back into the wagon. He isn’t even looking. How did he know? He better not be – oh no he is right. Whatever. No wait, not whatever.

“Sil is that Felix?”

Sil gets up this time to check. “Yup. I’ll grab onto something”

I tighten my grip, “Giddy-up! We gotta beat him!”

Joy of Paths Unfolding

As the wagon clattered southward, wheels striking stones hidden by the morning mist, Mitch rode in the back with his pack, knees loose, shifting along with the sways as though they meant nothing to him. His easy seat in the back of the wagon marked him as a man long accustomed to rough travel.

Ahead on the bench was Mister Porter, guiding the horse with steady patience. Kevin, another of the porters, sat in the bed of the wagon with him, humming in fits and starts with his eyes on the horizon. Before long, the wagon would stop in Survold, leaving the two of them to finish the rest of their journey on foot while Mister Porter collected materials from Erik in Survold.

Mitch leaned back against the sideboard, his gaze drifting back at the road they’d come down. The fort lay behind them, its walls rising pale in memory, his sister within them. When he’d left, she’d smiled and waved him off, but unease clung to her like a faint shadow he couldn’t shake. Too many eyes seemed to linger on her lately, hushed voices speaking when they thought no one else listened.

Recalling the night he crept through those shuttered windows, he involuntarily clenched his fists. The parchment, the seal broken by his touch, the words, though they meant nothing to him, their meaning had been given voice, clear and inescapable. He had memorized them by sound alone, carrying them not in ink but echo. He burned the page after, watching the flame eat away the lines until there was nothing left but ash. Her safety was secured by his own hands… yet the echo remained, heavier than the pack between his knees, pressing on him even now.

The wagon lurched hard in a rut, and Mitch steadied himself without effort, catching the sideboard as though born to the motion. Up front Mister Porter cursed in Rogalt, glanced back, offered the faintest nod, and returned the to reins.

“Quiet today, Mitch” Kevin said, settling himself back to his spot after the bounce.

Mitch managed a smile, “Just thinking about how much nicer my path’ll be than yours”

While true, it wasn’t what occupied his mind. While the stones ahead would be lifted with back and hand, the burden behind was a different kind of weight entirely. He carried it in silence, hoping this path he forged would lead him nearer to his sister’s safety.