Executedâ¦tomorrow at dawn⦠The Inquisitorâs words stayed with Shawn long after the man had left. Executed.
He hadnât truly understood the danger he was in, alone in an unknown world. He wriggled his hands again, attempting to escape the ropes on his wrists, but it was no use. His hands remained firmly behind his back. He persisted, frantically pulling on his ropes for hours until he could feel blood dripping down his fingers.
âOh, Shawn, youâre so screwedâ¦â He said to himself, still sitting on the cold floor. Theyâd taken his runes when he entered, but even if heâd had them, he wouldnât have been able to cast with his wrists trussed like this. Hours passed, and Shawn drifted into fitful sleep. Suddenly, the creak of metal split the silence and light taps slowly made their way to his cell.
âH-Hello?â Shawn called, squinting.
The taps approached, then stopped. There was a low scratching sound, and then a flame bloomed, appearing in the dark. The match was pressed to a candle, which flared to life, illuminating a face.
âYou the guy they arrested for Dark Runes?â the face asked. The voice was high and decidedly female.
âUhâ¦Thatâs meâ¦?â said Shawn, thoroughly perplexed. Why is she here? Is this some kind of trick by the Inquisitor?
âGood, I was afraid I had the wrong cell. Look, weâve gotta get you out. Tonight.â The woman fumbled for something in her pocket, then leaned towards the lock.
âWhat? Get me out?â Shawn asked, now more confused than suspicious.
The woman paused to give Shawn a disbelieving stare. âYou telling me you want to be executed? Yes, weâre getting you out.â She finally managed to insert the object, which Shawn now recognized as a key, into the lock of his cell, and opened the lock with another screech.
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She swung a leather pouch into his chest, and he instinctively grabbed it. It was his rune pouch, now with the runes of Earth and Energy within. âThis is yours, right?â
âUhâ¦yeah. Itâs mine,â Shawn replied, eloquently. Yeah. Eloquently. âDo you even know how to get out of this prison? And where will we hide in the city after all that?â
She grabbed his hand and tugged him along the hall, candle lighting their way. âYeah, I know a way out of here. But youâve got it all wrong. Weâve got to get you out of the city. Once we do that, we can actually get you to Longstriden. Weâll meet up with the rest there.â
âUm, excuse me. First off, who are you? And second, the others?â Shawn asked, trying to keep up with her.
âShhhhhhhh.â She put a finger to his lips, then started up the stairs. âFirst, Iâm Vena. Hi, nice to meet you. And second, âthe othersâ means the other members of the Allied Leaders of Change. Weâre a small group of those that actually acknowledge the prophecy and aim to help it to fruition. And now that youâre here, we can finally do just that.â
They reached the top of the stairs and the woman quickly clammed up, as they entered the lit halls of the upper keep. She trotted down one hall to the left, then paused to allow a sentry to make his rounds before continuing down the hall to the gate he had entered through. Perplexingly, she immediately turned, going in nearly the opposite direction as the gate.
âYou know, that was the gate back there,â Shawn told her, motioning behind them.
âYes, I did know that. I also know that itâs far too loud for our purposes, and thereâs a better way out.â
She continued leading him down the hall, eventually stopping at what looked like a small door inset in the wall at waist height.
âOh good. Your plan is to become gnomes. Good plan,â said Shawn, sarcastically.
âOh, shut up and just get in.â She pulled open the door quietly and motioned towards it.
Shawn hesitated for a beat, then began to climb into the shaft he could now see behind the door. âWhere does this even go?â
âIt comes out around the waste pile. Iâd recommend not breathing for this part.â
âWhat?â
She shoved him down the shaft.