69. Good Night
Added 2024-02-02 15:00:03 +0000 UTCAt the edge of town, Aisling stopped. She gestured ahead of her, where a ramshackle old stable stood outside a small farmhouse. âThey agreed to let us sleep in our stable.â
âGood, good,â Oz murmured. He lifted his head, gauging the area around them. Yes⌠this should do.
She paused, looking at the stable. âThey warned me not to leave after dark. Something terrible might happen.â
âThatâs ominous. Did that âsomething terribleâ involve hundreds of cursed wooden puppets?â Oz mused quietly, just loud enough for Aisling to hear.
She snorted. âI take it we arenât going to follow that advice?â
Oz shook his head. âWeâre here to investigate terrible things. If something terrible is happening, then we should be in the front row seats to see it unfold.â
Aisling nodded. âReasonable.â
He lifted a single finger. âBut not interfere. For now, we have to keep a low profile, no matter what.â
âIf thatâs the case, then is it goodnight for now? You still need to sleep, after all,â Aisling reasoned.
âYeah⌠true. Iâll see you in a little while, then?â Oz offered. He headed into the stable.
Aisling nodded, following after him. âIâll stand guard.â
He nodded. âThanks.â
Whereâs that leave me, huh? Am I just supposed to obediently sit here and sleep? Fflyn complained.
Yeah? Youâll be awake tonight, the same as me, Oz pointed out.
Fflyn snorted. Yeah, but⌠freedom!
Fflyn⌠Oz shook his head. Iâm going to have to learn a sleep spell. Iâm sure thereâs one somewhere in the library.
No, no. Iâm just joking. Iâll rest obediently. He sighed. What would I do in a tiny town like this, anyways?
Yeah. I donât want to be totally unfair. If we reach a city, and it isnât dangerous, Iâll give you some time in control.
Fflyn blinked. Are you sure? Is that a good idea?
Is it not? I mean, Iâll sit here watching you, ready to take back over at any moment. But I think you deserve a little time to yourself, Oz informed him. To himself, he thought, Iâm not that stupid. I canât risk giving him total freedom.
Alright! Iâll hold you to that.
Oz pushed open the door to the stable. The old hinges creaked, the wood dry and lightweight. Hay and animal scent mixed together, slamming into Ozâs nose. He stumbled back, overwhelmed.
A tired old nag and a cow stood in the stalls, already put away for the night. The cow looked up and chewed its cud at Oz lazily, placid eyes reflecting the sun.
He licked his lips. Yeah. I mean, itâs a stable, in a medieval country. Itâs in live use. His eyes traveled to the hay in the empty stall, and he gave it a good look. There isnât shit in there, is there? No⌠thereâs totally shit in there. Shit.
âIs there a problem?â Aisling asked, drawing up alongside him.
Oz glanced at Aisling, then shook his head. âItâs fine! Iâll go ahead and get comfy. You can go stand watch.â
She did a quick scan of the stable, then nodded. âUnderstood.â
Oz sighed. He put his back to the wall and scooted down, getting as comfortable as he could. The faster I finish reading the books and hit first stage, the faster I can get over having to sleep. Itâs so convenient to not have to sleep or eat⌠I feel like Iâm dragging down all the other cultivators right now.
When I head back to the library at night, Iâll be sure to read as much as I can. Itâs basically night studies!
He glanced at Aisling. âWatch over me while I sleep, okay? Make sure I donât do anything crazy.â
She nodded. âOf course.â
No trust, no trust! Fflyn complained.
FflynâŚ
Itâs fine. Go on. Donât waste your time watching me.
Oz disconnected from the possession spell and stood, stretching. He looked around the library. Right. Iâm safe here.
Safe for now. But I wonât be safe forever.
He quickly grabbed food and downed the antidote, then retreated to a nook with his food to flip through a few books. The hours piled on. Ozâs head dipped, and his eyelids closed.
Oz jolted back awake with a start. He wiped his mouth. Where am I? What happened?
Oh, right. Library. Right. Er, what time is it?
He leaned out of the nook, looking for a window. Darkness greeted him from the other side of the frosted glass.
Shit! He settled back into the seat, getting as comfortable as possible, then once more called on the power of the spell.
A startled Fflyn jolted awake as Oz took the controls back. Whoa. Warn me!
How?
âŚFair enough.
Oz stood from where they slumped against the wall and hurried to the door of the stable. He peered through the gaps in the old wood, sneaking a look outside.
Darkness cloaked the village. The last glimmer of light lingered behind the mountains, but shadow had already fallen over the valley. Stars glimmered through the darkening twilight. A pale glimmer of moon hung low over the mountaintops, as big and bright as it was slender, barely a sliver left.
He nodded. âLooks dark to me.â
Aisling looked up from where she meditated in a relatively clean corner of the stable. âIs it time?â
âWeâre about to find out,â Oz murmured. He glanced left and right, then carefully slid the gate open. His foot barely hit the ground outside before he leaped up onto the top of the shed, gliding down to the top of the old wood to land as lightly as a feather. Fflynâs instincts guided his movements as he hunkered low and lifted his hood, cloaking himself in darkness and using the hunker to disguise the shape of his body.
Aisling landed beside him. She copied his motions, squatting beside him.
For a while, they waited, sitting there in silence. The town laid before them, quiet and sleepy. Lights went out one by one in the houses, until not a single flicker of motion broke the stillness.
The moon rose. The stars crept across the sky.
Abruptly, a door flew open across town. A wooden puppet walked out, heading toward the mountain. Another door opened, then another, then another. A steady stream of wooden puppets marched up the hill toward the mountain.
âThereâs that question answered,â Oz muttered under his breath. He put a hand to his mouth. I really want to help these people, but I donât know how to break curses, and I especially canât risk revealing myself now.
Itâs painful, but this is a stealth mission. Stealth above all. Once I finish the mission, once I discover the true root of this situation, then I can worry about these people. For now, theyâre already cursed, and theyâre as cursed as they will be until I finish this out.
Plus, for all I know, this is part of the trap. If I make a move here, whoeverâs in charge of this whole mess will almost certainly retract their hands and vanish. I need to catch them red-handed, with irrefutable evidence. Not just for my own purposes, but to root out this evil once and for all.
We hold, here. This isnât the time to make a move. Not yet.
âThough⌠the puppets attacked us before the sun set,â he murmured to himself. Are there other villages with the curse? Or⌠His eyes travelled to the houses with dark windows, and he pressed his lips together. Are some of them already too far gone to return to human?
He shook his head and glanced over at Aisling. âLetâs go back to bed. Iâve confirmed what I needed to know.â
Aisling nodded. She lowered a crystal from her eye.
âWhatâs that?â Oz asked, mentally shuffling through the books at the same time. After a moment, he added, âA recording crystal?â
âIndeed.â
âGood idea,â Oz said, nodding. I couldnât afford recording crystals myself. I planned on finding better evidence to make up for it. Now I can supplement whatever I find with Aislingâs crystals.
He glanced at Aisling. âSpeaking of money, do you have any mortal money? Thereâs something Iâd like to buy.â
Aisling nodded.
âExcellent. Letâs rest now, so we can get started bright and early in the morning.â
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Comments
Aisling: Man, this Fflyn fella is so bossy!
Green0Photon
2024-02-02 15:13:04 +0000 UTC