âWhatâs our next move?â Uriel asked Apollonia, who led the group silently. Their party, which included Tanyaâs second brother, was nearly to the base of Mt. Calt.
Just like the old woman had said, Tanyaâs brother was handsome and slender. With hair tied back loosely and a vague, dreamlike expression, he could have been mistaken for a traveling poet. He introduced himself as Tan, and his brothers as Ben and Lun.
Apollonia ignored Urielâs question. The closer theyâd gotten to Mt. Calt, the less talkative sheâd become.
âWeâre here.â Tan reared back his horse. In front of them lay a huge mountain range.
It was a strange sight. The mountings jutting from the flat terrain were dark and quiet. Grotesque, deformed trees twisted off the slopes, but there were no signs of life. The air was still and silent. It seemed like a place where thereâd never been life.
The mountains held a sense of lonely desolateness. In the center of the range lay the highest peak.
âThey say this was once a volcano, a long time ago. If you look closely at the peak in the center, you can almost make out the crater at the top â itâs called âCaltâs Heart.â Itâs covered by a grove of strange trees. The rest of the mountains in this range are all different in size and shape, and legend has it that God scattered this range across the continent just for fun.â
âThe story of the burning mountains is different from the volcano, right?â
âYes. The volcano is long-dead, and itâs not one of the Fire Mountains. After the mountains burst into fire, even the living things inside it are killed. Those trees are able to survive because theyâre said to have magical power. Theyâre protected from the fire. Without those powers, they too wouldâve been reduced to a pile of ashes by now.â
âWhat about the monsters?â
âThey stay away during the dry season, because thereâs no way to tell when the fires will ignite. Theyâll be back in a few months to build their nests. Itâs strange, isnât it? Entering this place, where thereâs no food or water anywhere to be found⦠I have a hunch that they might be attracted to something.â
âI didnât see any of the monsters on our way hereâ¦â
âKeep a safe distance from the mountains, and youâll be fine. The monsters wonât attack anyone near the mountains. But since the mountain can burst into flame with only a secondâs warning, getting too close would be like signing your death warrant.â Tan shrugged. Even though he was pretending like it didnât bother him, Mt. Calt was still an eerie place. Something about it bothered him.
âThere are countless stories about this place. Even the weather here is weird. When it rains over Caltâs Heart, the mountains surrounding it are sunny and dryâ¦â
âOther than Uriel, I want everyone to go back,â she ordered. Her tone was heavy and commanding, meaning she wouldnât accept any resistance.
âItâs dangerous. Iâll stay.â Sid knew what her tone meant, but he still decided to speak up. Apolloniaâs eyebrows creased.
âYou canât stay. If you do, Uriel would have to go back, and Tanyaâs family would be scared. Worst-case scenario, weâll run into a group of bandits â and Uriel can easily deal with that.â She mentioned Tanyaâs family half-jokingly, but Tan flinched when he heard it, as if it were true.
âIâm just going to look around the mountain. I need some time alone to think, so just go back to the house and wait for me. I wonât be long.â Her voice had softened, but it was still powerful in a way that was difficult to disobey. Sid had no other choice.
âPlease promise to never touch the mountain.â
âI promise.â
Sid was the only one who turned to leave.
âHold on.â
Tan took something out of the leather bag strapped to his waist.
âThis is an item my grandmother made last night. She said it would keep us safe. If youâre alright with it, you should put this on. Your safety is important.â
He winked at her as he handed her the thin robe. His flirtatiousness would sometimes show regardless of the situation. Although the cloth was thin and cheap, Apollonia thought it must have been special somehow, if the old woman had made it. She took the garment and pulled it over her coat.