âSo, youâve been to the elf lands before, right?â Searle asked.
âHuh?â Joan asked. âI mean, yes. Of course I have. It would have been pretty weird if Iâd never been there. I traveled all over when I was the Hero.â
âWhatâs it like there?â Searle asked.
Joan gave a small frown and tried to picture how to properly phrase it. âWell, Iâm sure youâve heard the stories from the few elves in the academy, right?â
âAssume we havenât all been to this academy,â Korgron said.
âOh? Are you asking too?â Joan asked, unable to keep the teasing out of her voice. âAnd here I thought only Searle was feeling nervous.â
âIâm not nervous,â Searle said, though she could see it was a pretty obvious lie by the way his eyes lowered.
âItâs fine,â Joan said. âItâs a unique place. Very clean, sterile. Bauteut, youâve healed some elves before. Can you explain that part?â
âIâve healed a handful from minor scrapes,â Bauteut said. âIâve hardly done research on them, so I donât see how itâs relevant.â
Joan gave a soft sigh and nodded. âWell, uhhh. Iâm not really sure how to phrase it, so please donât take it the wrong way.â
âThis might come as a shock to you,â Zorn said. âBut I donât believe any of us are elf. I could be wrong, mind. Korgron is quite the looker.â
âIâve probably got some in my lineage,â Korgron said with a light chuckle.
âI donât doubt it,â Joan said. âRight, I guess start with the obvious things. Theyâre kind of reclusive, for good reason. I imagine all of you, except Korgron, know that they rarely leave their homes. While they have some of the greatest healers in the world, they will often have the wounded come to them. Now, a few have left their homes, but those are usually short lived for one reason or another.â
âCome on, get to the good stuff,â Korgron said. âIs it true theyâre, in most cases, immortal?â
âNo,â Joan said, her stomach tightening slightly. That brought back some unpleasant memories. She remembered how excited she was to finally meet with the elves, even if they were a shadow of their former selves. But what she learned as the Hero was anything but the beautiful myths sheâd heard. âThey donât age, but theyâre far from immortal. Theyâre also⦠beautiful. In a special way.â
âIn a special way?â Bauteut asked. âHow is something beautiful in a special way? Lyndis seemed fairly normal.â
âItâs not as noticeable when thereâs only a handful of them. But get a bunch of elves together and theyâre like the fae,â Joan said. âThey have fae origins in them, which gives them a kind of aura. Itâs attractive, in many cases. Theyâre mostly immune to it, so they donât really notice. But other species tend to. The Chosen will likely be resistant to it. Bauteut, Zorn? Try not to get your hearts broken.â
âGood to know you have such faith in us normal people,â Bauteut said with a roll of her eyes.
âTheyâre also incredibly vulnerable to disease and wounds,â Joan said. âWhile they donât age, they donât heal well either. Itâs why they have such powerful healers. A small scrape, if not tended to, can quickly become infected and kill even a healthy elf. Itâs part of why they were almost wiped out centuries ago. The plague killed every single elf over a century old and most of those younger. While the humans, dwarfs and demons were still decimated by it before the Hero of that time could stop it, the elves were most heavily hit. The vast majority of their history was lost with it, including their records of lineage.â
âLineage?â Searle asked. âIs that important?â
âVery,â Joan said. âItâs part of why Neia was in so much danger. While they do have a ruler, of sorts, the elves have a kind of council as well. Six of them, with one designated as their ruler. King or queen, as it were. All of them were descendants of either a hero or chosen of the past. The plague wiped out almost all six of them and, since then, theyâve been trying to recover and figure things out again. Two of the council seats are still vacant, with the remaining four hotly contested. Neia is, currently, holding a seat. However, her seat isnât exactly stable due to her lineage being in dispute.â
âSo all youâve got to do is fix that?â Bauteut asked. âThen weâre good and weâre another Chosen down?â
âKind of,â Joan said. âSheâll still have enemies, but I doubt even the elves would be likely to move openly against a Chosen. While theyâre not always the most inviting, they wonât-- shit!â
All of them stopped, every eye on her with a mix of nervousness and anxiety.
âKorgron,â Joan said, quickly turning to the demon. âI am so sorry. I nearly forgot. I mean, I did forget, but it wasnât a big deal for us at the time. It probably will be now, though.â
âWhat? Whatâs wrong?â Korgron asked, staring at her.
âYouâre a demon,â Joan said. âWe almost always got you after we got Neia. Even the times we didnât, your reputation had spread a bit. Youâre going to want to hide that until⦠uhhhâ¦â
âMy skin is blue and I have horns,â Korgron said, giving her a flat, unamused look. âItâs not exactly something I can hide. I thought all of you people respected the Chosen?â
âWe do,â Joan said. âMostly. I mean, yes. But, errâ¦â Oh, she could almost feel the annoyance radiating off her friend. âItâs not quite that simple.â
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âWhat, are they going to try to light me on fire?â Korgron asked.
âYes,â Joan said. âOr stab you, shoot you with arrows, any number of other things. Once they know youâre the Chosen and word spreads? Youâll be fine. Mostly. But the elves donât, well. One might say theyâreâ¦â
âZealots?â Bauteut asked.
âThatâd be a word for it,â Joan said. âI mean, not that, errâ¦â
âJust how hostile are they?â Korgron asked. âShould I be expecting poisoned food, an assassin in the night? Would it be better for me to be doing something else while you travel here?â
âI mean, they only tried to assassinate you once or twice,â Joan said. âAnd I think you just laughed off the poison attempts. Whatâll kill an elf is a lot weaker than what will kill a demon, let alone a Chosen.â
âJoan, is this a joke?â Andreas asked.
Joan shook her head. âIâm afraid not. While the elves are far away from the front lines of the war, theyâve had plenty of issues with demons. Possibly more than humans. While only a tiny fraction of elves that try to become demonic survive the ritual, even when compared to humans, those that do tend to be a bit vicious.â
âA bit vicious,â Bauteut said. âIs that what weâre going to call it now? Weâve all heard the stories of what happens to the survivors of those rituals, Joan.â
âNo, please,â Korgron said. âTell me more. Iâd love to hear what you all think about my kind.â
âNot your kind,â Joan said before cringing. âI mean, kind of your kind. Your ancestors. But not really you.â She felt her heart pounding a little faster and her nerves rising. The look Korgron was giving her made her wish she could melt in place, fortunately for all the power the Chosen of the Crown wielded, killing with a look wasnât part of it. âMost humans who perform the ritual turn demonic and lose their soul, becoming vicious, violent, angry and murderous. How much they change externally can vary, sometimes they look demonic in appearance, while others might merely have their eyes change or grow claws, any number of small subtle shifts. Internally, though? They change dramatically. The person they once were all but fading away.â
âIs that how humans see it?â Korgron said. âMaybe you should be more careful which demons you perform the ritual with, then. So what about elves?â
âAll of the races react to it differently,â Joan said. âWhile most elves donât change much, if at all, physically? They certainly do change. Remember that aura I mentioned before? It becomes far stronger. Dangerous, as well. Beautiful. But their minds change, a lot. They become far more cruel. Vicious. Itâs said some can read and control minds. If they think Korgron is a normal demon--â
âI am a normal demon,â Korgron said.
âYouâre hardly normal,â Bauteut said. âYou know what Joan means, though.â
Korgron gave a light grunt before shaking her head. âFine. When we get closer, Iâll wear a cloak or something. If any of them try to attack me, though, Iâm making no promises about whatâll happen to them.â
âYou might want to do it soon,â Bauteut said before pointing ahead. âIt looks like weâre not that far off.â
âWhat?â Joan asked before she turned to look. She didnât see anything, though. It was--
Oh! There it was. It took her a few more moments to just make out the small stone tower rising out of the earth.
âWait, what?â Joan asked. âThatâs not supposed to be there. What even is that?â
âLooks like a watchtower,â Andreas said.
âThereâs no watchtower here,â Joan said. âOr at least, there shouldnât be.â
âAnother thing that changed?â Thalgren asked. âKorgron, you might want to hide your horns.â
Korgron gave a soft sigh before flicking her wrist. A moment later a robe of dark purple materialized, enveloping her body.
âYou know, with all your magic shouldnât you be able to just hide your horns?â Bauteut asked. âAn illusion might work.â
âOf course I could,â Korgron said. âBut I will not travel through these lands hiding what I am. I am only wearing this cloak long enough for you lot to explain who I am so I donât have to murder any of them.â
âSo, what is proper procedure when approaching an elven watchtower?â Bauteut asked.
âI have no idea,â Joan said. âThere really werenât many of these when we came here. I donât think we ever passed by any who didnât know who we were.â
âI guess just keep going,â Andreas said with a shrug. âWave if you see anyone.â
It was as good a suggestion as any, Joan supposed. However, she couldnât help feeling uneasy as they got closer and closer to the watchtower.
This unease only grew when she was finally close enough to see up to the top and there was nothing there.
âAre watchtowers often left empty here?â Korgron asked.
âMaybe it just hasnât been in use for a while,â Thalgren said. âPerhaps it collapsed or was torn down in Joanâs lives?â
âMaybe,â Joan said. She really couldnât remember ever seeing it. If it was empty she supposed it wouldnât have left much of an impression, though. Maybe she just didnât remember it.
Even when the tower was gone, though, the feeling of unease still enveloped her. Something nagging at the corners of her mind, telling her that something was wrong. That she had forgotten something important.
âHow long until we get to this town?â Korgron asked.
âNot much longer,â Joan said, before glancing back. The watchtower was now far behind them. As still and quiet as it had ever been.
Yet something was still wrong.
Something was DEFINITELY wrong. âKorgron,â Joan said.
âWhat?â
âIs anyone watching us right now? A spell, something?â Joan asked.
âOne minute,â Korgron said before snapping her fingers and muttering a quick incantation. âNo. Why?â
âSomethingâs wrong,â Joan said. âI donât know what. But something.â
âSure youâre not just being paranoid?â Zorn asked.
âI really hope so,â Joan said.
âIf that isnât the sign of ill omens,â Bauteut said softly. âShould we turn back?â
âNo,â Joan said. âWeâll likely need to take this road anyway. We have four Chosen with us as well. Iâm sure if weâre careful, we can deal with whatever it is. If Iâm not just worrying over nothing.â
She really hoped she was.
But sheâd been through too much and depended on her âinstinctsâ for too long to believe it was something so simple for a moment. Something was nagging at her mind and she had to be ready to deal with it before it exploded in her face.