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Seersucker
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Book 3 Ch 14: Learn or die

Dantes and Murk arrived at the Conclave in the center of the Veridian Expanse together. It was already late evening by the time they arrived, and everyone else was already sitting around a fire and eating a meal that smelled like a hearty mix of game and freshly foraged vegetables.

Traizen put down his bowl and approached them with his arms wide, wrapping both of them into an embrace. Jacopo had to quickly adjust where he was sitting in order to avoid the elf’s pale muscular arms.

“Murk, Dantes, it is good to see you. We were beginning to worry, particularly with how our connections were feeling. We were just talking about coming to help you.”

Dantes wiggled his way out of the embrace. “Murk was just having a bit of trouble. It happened to be something I could help him with on my way here, so I intervened.” Traizen didn’t need to know that Dantes was given little choice in the matter.

“He saved the life of my sister, as well as my own. I consider him a blood brother, and hope he would consider taking a mate from my pack.”

Dantes blinked a bit at that. He’d seen many times how often enemies could become allies, but this seemed a bit extreme.

Traizen smiled more widely than Dantes had ever seen him do so before, his eyes glinting slightly with tears. “I am so grateful that you have moved past your enmity to see one another as brothers.”

Dantes stood there awkwardly for a few moments, unsure of how to react to so much sincerity when he himself dealt in it so infrequently.

“So, is there any food left?”

“Yes, there should be plenty of the Mother’s bounty left for you.”
 Traizen moved for them to join everyone else around the fire and they were quickly given plates of fresh veggies and recently slain rabbit. It was good, though Dantes missed the spices he’d grown used to having access to in Rendhold. Jacopo didn’t mind much, tearing into a rabbit foot with relish.

Everyone gave him and Jacopo a bit of space to eat as Murk gave a quick and curt description of what had happened to him, taking only a few moments here and there to lick some of the small cuts his sister had suffered from during the escape. The bandit group had apparently learned of him and set a trap for his sister. It had been pure luck that they’d been able to capture her and take advantage of him. From there they’d had an entire forest and all of its life at their disposal. Frankly Dantes was surprised that all they’d managed with that much powers was a shitty bandit camp in the woods where they wore rags. They had different standards in the countryside he supposed.

As he listened vaguely he started to hear or feel something else. A kind of conversation below the one he was having. It was whispers at first, but once he turned his attention to it the voices grew louder. Even when he could hear them though, it took him a bit more time to actually understand them. They were commands, thousands and thousands of them, all emanating from the massive tree in the center of the grove where he sat. It was Berkilak, managing every small thing in the forest which he’d made himself a part of.

“You’re learning well,” said Berkilak, his voice, even as a whisper, causing him to shudder just a bit under the strain of it.

“It’s learn or die.”

“As it should be. Your own abilities are growing very differently than the others.”

“I’ve always been a little unique.”

The leaves around him seemed to rustle just a bit. Laughter?

“Your attention, you can divide it among far more creatures than any of the others. Any aside from our lost sister.”

“Serpica?”

“Yes. Her.” There was a note of sadness in Berkilak’s voice that made a tear involuntarily form in the corner of Dantes’s eye.

“I thought she’d be the next of us to bind herself to a locus as I have.”

“A sacrifice, a vow, a binding right?”

“Right. Perhaps it will be you that joins with your locus next.”

Dantes didn’t hide his bemusement. “The pleasures that would be denied to me are far more important than the powers that doing that ritual might grant me.”

“We shall see how you feel in a few hundred years.”

Dantes was about to ask what he meant by that, but decided on a different question instead.

“I’m having difficulty connecting to the life in my locus that was there before I became a druid. Is there some advice you can give me?”

The tree was silent for a moment. “I never had such a problem. The others did not either. All I can suggest, is being open to oneness with whatever is around you.”

That was easy to say when what was around you was beautiful forest instead. He was interrupted before he could ask more though.

“It’s rude to have side conversations at the dinner table,” said Traizen with a smile.

Dantes smiled back. “I don’t see a table? And if there was one then I’d say more than half of us aren’t allowed at it.”

Jacopo changed into his two-legged form. “I’d be allowed like this though, yes?”

All of the other druids and their companion stared at him in disbelief for a few moments.

He ignored them, digging onto Dantes’s plate with his bare hands to eat more of the food that had been prepared.

Dantes pinched the bridge of his nose and clenched his jaw. There were a lot of better ways to reveal his new ability to their fellows. Unfortunately, Jacopo’s growing sense of humor had outweighed any more rational thoughts he may have had on the subject. Not that Dantes hadn’t done the same to his own detriment in the past. In Jacopo’s defense it was Dantes’s fault that he had a sense of humor at all.

“What-”

“-The-”

“-Hells,” said the twins in their singsong alternating way of speech.

Things shifted into a lizard to quickly run up to Jacopo and inspect him.

“How?” it asked.

“We’re not sure exactly. I was in grave danger from an enemy of ours. He saw a vision of the God of Thieves unlocking something between us, and then he was able to become a man and save me.”
 Traizen frowned. “The god of Thieves… You followed him before the Mother brought you into our flock.”

Dantes nodded. “I think he’s the reason I can keep my clothes and items when I shift. I’m guessing this was his doing as well.”

Traizen shrugged. “I’m not a temple priest, but my guess is that Jacopo was granted something the Mother usually keeps locked away.”

“So, you don’t know of anyone else whose partner could do this?”

“No, but we are all capable of different things. We excel in different ways.”

“I would’ve expected him to look more like you,” said Mor-Gan-May as she looked him over.

“He’s much larger and more handsome,” said Lorna.

Dantes sighed and nodded. “The gods had to give him some advantage to make up for his personality.”

Fizz chuckled at that as he gently patted Thing’s head with a forefinger to comfort him. Thing shifted from a lizard to a feline somewhere between a lion and a housecat to better enjoy it.

Dantes reached for his pack. “I have the items that each of you requested,” he pulled out several small wooden chests. “These are enchanted with single use storage spells. Once opened, all of the items within will begin to fall out, after that the chest will disintegrate. I have the ones with the items you requested, and empty ones for you to put what you owe me into.”

“I don’t know much about magic lad, but couldn’t you have made a chest that can be used more than once?” asked Coal.

Dantes shook his head. “I asked my mage. Items that are meant to store things need to stay still to work that way. Because these move the enchantment is much more complicated. It can be done, but not as cheaply as I’d like.”

He shrugged, taking the chests and slipping them into the pack he kept on the side of his hog as he began removing some of the raw gold he owed Dantes and handing it to him.

“How are things working for you? Have my plans been helpful?”

“Aye, we’ve been making those greedy dwarves miserable every time they try to make it deeper into our caves. The kobolds hate the mites, though they’ve been more persistent.”

Dantes thought for a moment. “Kobolds are strange. They like friction and problems to solve. Things to work at. Maybe instead of just creating deterrents near you we need to also create a puzzle that they need to solve somewhere else. Maybe Mor-Gan-May can help?”

Coal nodded as he gave his hog a strong pat on the back. Mor-Gan-May hadn’t needed any help with deterring others from entering her territory. Her mastery of poisons had made that much simpler for her than it had been for everyone else.

The Twins were also successful in using the explosives he’d given them to destroy the farming equipment of those that had been encroaching on their plains. They’d also managed to make the farmer’s livestock uncooperative. Lorna’s workings had spread rumors of dozens of different monsters and dangers in the swamps she called her home. She’d been so effective in fact, that many people living in the city of Chitlan that bordered the swamp had begun leaving offerings at the edge of the wood to keep from incurring her wrath.

In return for all of this, Dantes was receiving chunks of raw gold from Coal, strange plants that caused all sorts of sensations from Lorna, and ivory from the twins. Along with that all of them had started making trades of their own for goods the others had. Dantes had even given them fine clothes from the city, soap, and other conveniences that they had little access to in their more provincial regions.

Having a bit of bartering at their gathering had done a lot to make Dantes more comfortable. There was only so much talk about seeds, winds, soil, and beasts that he could occupy himself with. 

After making an unsuccessful pass at Lorna, he was going to say his goodbyes when he was interrupted by Traizen.

“What did you speak of with Berkilak?”

“My progress, binding, Serpica.”

He nodded, his face darkening at Serpica’s name.

“Can you tell me more about her? If she’s made an enemy of me I’d like to know what I can.”

He grimaced, but nodded. “She was one of us for a long time. Very smart. Had a great understanding of those things which are the smallest. She was an incredible healer, and seemed to be able to see the most miniscule parts of things and fix them.”

“How do you heal? Is it differently than how she does it?”

“Yes. Hers was targeted at the smallest level. The rest of us simply push life force toward whatever’s hurt until it’s healed. You need a very strong and flourishing locus to do so. It would be… difficult for someone with a locus like yours.

Dantes nodded, recognizing one of his own abilities among those he listed as hers. “What was her Locus?”

“A battlefield.”

“What?”

“There’s a thin strip of land between two nations that argued over who owned it. I don’t know the details, but it was a place always full of death. Her first blessings were from flies and vultures. Not many have seen so much death and destruction as her.”

Dantes nodded, feeling as if he had learned a lot, but almost nothing helpful.

“How does she fight?”
 Traizen shrugged. “I don’t know. She killed a herd of my mammoths at one point, but she left not a single mark on them.”

“How did you know it was her?”

“The last of them told me before it died.”

Dantes wasn’t sure how to respond to that.

“If you encounter her, do what you can to tell us. We will all come to help you face her.”

Comments

Thanks for the chapter! So she can control viruses and bacteria or maybe a level above that the smallest insects to spread disease and death? With a plague sweeping the continent right now that does not bode well...

Gopard

Suspicious. Seems related to the plague sweeping across the continent. Skillfull foreshadowing of their future encounter!

Amin

That explains a lot. So obviously she is behind the Plague around Rendhold.

PlasmaticPi

From the sounds of it, Serpica might be using parasites, unless she made a locus out of viruses and bacteria.

BlackFire13th

Ah, if Serpica could heal on the “smallest” scale she could have done some form cancer growths within the mammoths body

Shelbo


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