Bracken Glade swallowed the caravan like a river mouth devouring drift-wood. Branches arched overhead until daylight bled emerald and the road became a narrow bruise of mud between walls of tangled fern. Sound behaved strangely here; hoofbeats smoothed themselves to hush, and even conversation seemed to fall flat, absorbed by moss.
Rowan rode point beside Marra. Every few steps the katana in its sheath gave a tiny, eager pulse, as though it could already taste metal beneath the shadowed leaves.
âBad place for wagons,â Marra muttered, nose twitching. âTrail forks, but maps claim only one road. Smells like grown-over cart pathsâperfect for ambush leap-lanes.â
Rowan flicked a glance at Castorâs thin, worried silhouette on the forward bench. âArchivist chose speed over safety. Letâs keep him from regretting it.â
The Green Hush
Orrik and Feylin walked close behind, comparing field repairs on captive-built crossbows theyâd salvaged from the quarry. The freed caravaneers pushed carts in single file, eyes wide. Brother Joss brought up the rear, humming hymns that sounded more like drinking songsâyet the tune never carried far before sinking into mossy stillness.
Half an hour in, Rowan noticed the hush deepen: birdsong vanished; insects quit their chorus. The katana buzzed again, sharper.
âWait,â he hissed.
Too late. The mud beside Rowanâs boot quiveredânot with wind but with the tremor of something huge beneath the topsoil. A heartbeat later the ground erupted. Nets woven from gut-cord shot upward, spores puffing from clay pots tied to their knots. A sweet, choking odor flooded the road.
Rowan dragged Marra clear of one net but coughed as the fumes nipped his lungs. âSlumber-spore,â he rasped. Smugglersâ favorite: strong enough to drop oxen, lethal if breathed too deep.
Shadows detached from tree trunksâslim shapes in bark-dyed leathers, blades curved like pruning hooks. Glade Runners, the smuggling faction that haunted every back trail between Valehart and Dyn Targan. Their leader, a woman with white paint across her eyes, signaled wordlessly.
Trap, Springing
Rowan lunged forward, Steel Flow surging. One cut severed a net before it cinched around Castor; another sliced a spore pot from its cord, sending it spinning into the ferns. Marra speared a Runner through the shoulder and hauled him off his feet like a childâs toy. The prisoner shrieked; the others broke formationâa misstep born of arrogance meeting real resistance.
Feylinâs palms glowed azure; she spun a quick glyph that caught drifting spores and pin-wheeled them harmlessly skyward. Orrik, eyes watering, charged a sapling and snapped it with his hammer, creating an improvised quarter-staff to bat away hooks.
Rowan picked the leader out by her white-streaked mask. He closed the gap in three strides, katana ringing. She met him with twin sickles, each edge laced with glinting resin.
Steel kissed ironwood; the sword vibrated, eager. Rowan forced his breaths shallowâavoid the spores still hanging lowâand drove the leader backward. She parried deftly, tried to hook his blade, but the katanaâs polished spine slipped free. He feinted high, rolled low, clipped her calf. One sickle fell; a second later Marraâs lance butt slammed her ribs, ending the fight.
Scattered Runners melted into underbrush; Rowan let them flee, lungs burning. The hum in the sword ebbed to a satisfied purr.
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Interrogation under Vines
They bound the masked leader with her own netting. Brother Joss fetched water to clear lungs; Orrik hacked down saplings to widen a makeshift clearing.
Castor knelt, ledger open. âName, creed, command structure?â
She spat green phlegm. âLathe of Bracken. This trail levies toll on men, goods, hope. Pay it or bleed.â
Rowan squatted eye-level. âFunny. Black Banner paid in corpses yesterday. You supplying them?â
Silence. Rowan drew the katana half an inchâthe hum turned menacing. The prisonerâs eyes flicked to it, shivered.
âWe trade all factions,â she grit out. âBanner, Auditor, even your feathered scribes if coin gleams bright enough. We just keep roads hungry so heroes stay profitable.â
Feylin crouched beside them, holding a dagger-cracked spore pot. âYou sold these to the Auditor too?â
The womanâs face drained. âAuditor doesnât buyâshe collects.â
Castorâs quill paused mid-stroke. âDefine she.â
âThe black ghost with glass knives.â The smuggler shuddered, as if the very title cooled her blood. âPays in promise of untouched boneâfails to keep it.â
Rowan exchanged a look with Orrik. The assassin from Fox-Hollow.
Spoils of Secrets
Tessan scavenged the abandoned camp deeper in the brush: caches of arrow shafts, crates of healerâs liquor, one cedar box lined with waxed parchment. He jogged back, excitement shining.
âLedgers!â he exclaimed. âQuantity codes and sigils matching that spiral-in-flame carving.â
Castor flipped the top ledger: columns of dates, tonnage, destination initialsâRH, BT, DFâalongside spirals drawn in red ink.
âDF,â Castor murmured. âDyn-Targan Freeports. RH⦠Redfenn Hall? That towerâs keepership.â
Rowanâs pulse spiked. âSomeone inside Redfenn is buying from smugglers and equipping Black Banner.â
Marra bared fangs. âSo the gaol weâre marching our captain to may shelter his paymaster.â
âOr his executioner,â Feylin added softly.
Fire-Route Decision
They gathered in a loose circle, prisoners bound, carts ringed. Map spread across a wheel hub.
âOptions?â Castor asked.
Brother Joss thumped his cudgel. âStraight west to Redfenn, expose the rot before it widens.â
Orrik rubbed beard stubble. âOr veer north to Valehart garrison at Knollbrock and deposit Brass Mask under larger guard.â
âKnollbrock adds three days,â Tessan warned, finger on contour lines. âRedfenn sits one dusk away.â
Rowan looked at Brass Maskâstill shackledâand the smuggler leader, then at the sword that had almost sung for blood when heâd threatened her. Two enemies, two paths, one feather weighing heavy.
âRedfenn,â he decided. âCorruption thrives on delay. We take proof to the commander, chain the Banner captain in their courtyard, and see who twitches.â
Marra nodded. âIf vipers lurk, weâll know by the strike.â
Castorâs pen scratched. âConsensus noted: direct route.â
Nightfire Oath
That evening they camped at the gladeâs far edge, where the tree line thinned and the western sky glimmered ruby. Rowan sat sharpening the katana under firelight; sparks danced like fireflies.
Orrik joined, passing a whet-stone. âBlade nearly sings a tune these days.â
âItâs gaining lyrics faster than I can read them,â Rowan replied.
He told Orrikâat lastâabout the midnight stranger at the way-station. The beckoning hand, the arrow that chased him away, the vanishing. Orrik listened without interrupting, then exhaled.
âGift a sword, haunt its bearer. Traditional fairy-tale.â He gave Rowan a crooked grin. âGood thing weâre grown-ups.â
Rowan couldnât help a laugh. âDebatable.â
They sat in companionable silence until Feylin wandered over with a pouch of bitterleaf tea. She laid a rune-stitched cloth on the log between them.
âSigil from the obsidian dagger,â she said, unwrapping black shards that still hummed faintly with Flow. âMatches the ledgers. Whoever the Auditor serves, spiral-fire binds them all.â
Rowan set the katana across the cloth. For a moment sword steel, glass shards, and spiral runes glowed together in firelight like fragments of a single, terrible mosaic.
âTomorrow,â he whispered, âwe walk into a keep where that mosaic might hang on every wall.â
Feylin poured tea into tin cups. âThen drink. If not courage, it helps with sleeplessness.â
Rowan raised the steaming cup. Across their rag-tag circle, each companion mirrored himâOrrik with blackroot still jammed between teeth, Marra cleaning lance tines, Castor writing by cinderlight, Brother Joss whisper-chanting psalms while the smugglers hissed in their bonds. Even Brass Mask watched, unreadable.
âTo Redfenn,â Rowan said.
The reply came as a low chorusâsolemn, determined. Beyond the camp glow, Bracken Glade rustled like something exhaling a secret goodbye, and the katana quivered onceâno threat, no hunger, only agreement.