Chapter 13 of 20

Chapter Thirteen – A Gift at the Edge

Hallowfang Chronicle's757 words~4 min read

The boy was gone by sunrise. No footprints, no lingering scent, no half-burned campfire. Only a shallow patch of grass where his lean-to had once stood and the faint indentation where his journal had pressed into the soil. Drak confirmed it: no signs of struggle, no signs of others. He’d left alone. Kezra stood beside the remains of the site, hands on her hips, eyes narrowed. “He moved like someone who knew he was being watched,” she said. “But he didn’t run.” Urr nodded silently, sweeping the area again. The air held no scent of fear—only something lighter. Kezra couldn’t name it, not exactly. But it felt like… closure.

They would’ve left without further thought had Vekka not spotted the satchel. Tucked into the roots of a wide tree, half-hidden beneath leaves, it wasn’t large. Just a simple leather pouch, stitched with coarse thread, fastened with a folded parchment tied in string. Vekka opened it slowly, expecting bait or poison. But inside, they found books—three of them. One with diagrams of traps. One with drawings of medicinal plants. And the third… was a journal. Not the traveler’s own, but a blank one. Its pages were untouched, save the inside cover, which held a message in careful script:

“I don’t know what you are. But I think… I was wrong. If you are people, this might help. If you’re monsters, I hope you use it well. I won’t tell them. Not yet.”

Kezra read it twice. Then a third time. Her hands trembled—not with rage or grief, but something else. Possibility. This was no map or a secret spell, nor key to unlocking magic or power. It was acknowledgment. A stranger, offered nothing in return, had left behind tools. Knowledge. It was dangerous le alone foolish. It was… human. Kezra had no idea what to do with it. She carried the satchel back in silence. No one asked to see the note. They just followed her home.

At camp, debate flared quickly. Rik argued it could be bait—marked, tracked, cursed. Sha disagreed. “He could’ve brought fire. Instead, he left books.” Urr remained on the edge of the conversation, ears twitching, arms crossed. Drak finally spoke after long silence: “He gave something when he didn’t have to. That’s not nothing.” Kezra agreed, though she kept it to herself. She flipped through the books that night, fingers reverent. The trap diagrams were crude but clever, far more efficient than the woven snares they’d used until now. The plants were labeled in both common and old tongue, their properties not only sketched but explained. One even matched a bloom that Sha had declared “bitterroot,” confirming its anti-infection properties.

Stolen story; please report.

Kezra didn’t sleep that night. Instead, she sat beneath the moons, the journal opened on her lap, quill in hand. She stared at the blank page for what felt like hours. What did goblins write? What should goblins write? Finally, she pressed the tip down and began.

“Day One. His name was never given. But he saw us. That matters. We are Hollowfang. We bleed. We build. We remember.”

The next morning, she called the tribe together. No fire, no feast—just purpose. “We keep the books. We copy the pages. We adapt what helps and burn what doesn’t.” She held up the blank journal. “This one’s ours now. Not to worship. Not to mimic. To record. For the ones who come after. If we vanish tomorrow, they’ll still have something.”

Some scoffed and some even nodded though none walked away.

Over the next few days, things shifted in small but telling ways. Sha began incorporating two of the human’s trap designs into their hunting rotations. Rik, though still wary, read the herb guide cover to cover. Vekka asked Kezra if she could start carving pictograms beside the journal entries—“For the ones who can’t read.” Kezra agreed without hesitation. And that night, they added a new mark to the firestone: a circle with three small lines pointing outward. A symbol, perhaps. Or just a memory.

Still, the old god said nothing.

But Kezra felt something—a tension, like a string pulled taut. The air seemed to hum when she wrote. The journal’s pages felt warmer than leather should. And when she finished her second entry, the system stirred:

System Trait Evolved: “Shared Memory – Hollowfang Chronicle”

Effect: History now shapes tribe identity. Small stat gains tied to journal milestones.

Future cultural unlocks possible.

She didn’t tell the tribe. Not yet.

Some truths needed to grow quietly, like roots in cold soil.

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