Andrea squeezed Palan’s hand as she turned around to look at the gatekeeper’s back. She tilted her head as the two walked along a jagged stone road covered with sand. Her foot caught against an uneven rock and she stumbled.
“Hey,” Palan said as he held her up. “Watch your step. Always pay attention to your surroundings.”
Andrea nodded. “Why doesn’t he let everyone else in?” she asked and turned her head towards Palan.
“He gets paid to keep unruly people out,” Palan said. “Troublemakers aren’t allowed in town. The boss decides who stays and who goes.”
Andrea blinked as she stared at Palan’s chin which was still covered in blood. “You’re not a troublemaker?”
“Nope,” Palan said and ruffled her hair. “The boss is a greedy glutton and I happen to be very good at feeding gluttons. This way.” Palan tugged Andrea’s hand and pulled her into a one-story building. Inside of the building was a counter with a middle-aged woman sitting on a chair behind it, chewing on a plant’s stem. A torch hung next to her on the wall, lighting up an assortment of clay jars on the shelf behind her. The woman raised her head when the door swung open, causing the torch’s fire to flicker.
“H-hello,” the woman said and stood up, knocking her chair over. She removed the plant stem from her mouth and placed it on the counter. “Buying or selling?”
“Both,” Palan said and placed his leather sack on the counter. “I know the market price for everything in here. Cheat me and I’ll kill you.”
“U-understood,” the woman said and nodded. Her hands trembled as she untied the sack and revealed the contents within. Inside were a few roots and jars, releasing earthy-smelling fumes, along with a pouch that contained animal teeth of all sizes. The woman weighed everything with her hand and sniffed the contents of the jars while peering inside. After ten minutes, she nodded and wiped sweat off of her brow. “I can give you 327 stones for this.”
Palan stared at the woman and she bit her lip. Three seconds passed before Palan nodded and held out his hand. The woman bent under the counter and wrapped a bunch of glittering stones inside of a pouch before she rose back up and handed it to Palan. Her hands trembled as Palan weighed the pouch and stuffed it into his sack. “I need two jars of poison. 100 stones.”
The woman nodded and took two of the clay jars off the shelf and handed it to Palan. He opened it and sniffed before letting out a cough. He nodded and handed the woman the payment as he wiped his now-bleeding nose. He grabbed Andrea’s hand and the two left the store. The woman let out a sigh of relief and collapsed into her chair, placing the plant’s stem back in her mouth.
“Why was she so scared of you?” Andrea asked after the duo left the store. They walked along the road, towards the center of the town.
“All the shopkeepers are cowardly,” Palan said and readjusted his bag. “It makes it easier for the boss to control them. He provides them a safe place to live and they work for him. Speak of the devil.” Palan pulled Andrea closer to his leg and stopped walking. A man with leathery wings and two pointed fangs jutting out of his upper lip walked towards the pair of siblings.
“Oh, if it isn’t Palan,” the man said and smiled. He raised his eyebrow and shifted his gaze to Andrea. “Did you bring me another snack?”
Andrea hid behind Palan’s leg. He narrowed his eyes. “Not today, boss.”
The man frowned and shrugged. “Ah, that’s a shame. Some other time then,” he said and licked his lips as he looked beyond Palan towards the gate. “I already do have quite a feast waiting for me. I mustn’t keep them waiting.”
Palan stepped to the side and the boss smirked as he sauntered towards the entrance. Andrea stared at the wings on the man’s back as Palan pulled her forwards. She asked, “He’s going to eat them?”
“Some of them,” Palan said. “He’ll eat the aggressive ones and use them as a lesson for the cowards.”
“Did he try to eat you?”
“What makes you think that?”
“You’re aggressive.”
“No one thinks I’m aggressive.”
“Because you killed everybody who thought you were.”
Palan smiled and ruffled her hair. “I’m glad my sister’s not stupid. As a reward, you can pick out whatever you want here.”
Andrea smoothed out her hair and looked around at the town square lit up by a fire. Vendors sat with their wares displayed in front of them. Women stood in alleyways on the fringe of the bonfire’s light radius. People were wandering through the square, inspecting the items. Multiple guards stood near a watchtower with bone spears in their hands.
“Those guards look strong,” Andrea said and pointed at the cluster of armed men. “Can you beat them in a fight?”
“Of course I can,” Palan said and snorted. “Who do you think I am?”
“What if they all attacked you at once?”
“Doesn’t matter. I can beat anyone.”
Andrea tilted her head. “Is that your pride talking?”
Palan didn’t respond and shifted his eyes away. He pointed at a stall with roasted scorpions impaled on a stick. “Look, don’t you love eating those? I’ll buy you some.”
Andrea followed his finger and her stomach gurgled when she saw the poor scorpions. “I want twenty,” she said and weaved through the crowd of people while pulling Palan along. Moments later, the duo left the stand with Andrea gnawing on a scorpion.
“I just need to trade in these animal skins for some clothes and we’ll go home,” Palan said as the siblings walked to another stall with leather garments on display. Palan engaged the shopkeeper while Andrea’s eyes wandered throughout the square.
“Pst, little girl,” a voice said from next to the stall. A man was squatting with a plant stem in his mouth. “Have you ever heard about the angel’s world? They live up there.” He pointed towards the blue and green moon.
Andrea shook her head. The man grinned and a line of saliva leaked out the corner of his mouth. He asked, “Do you want to hear about it? Just one scorpion and I can tell you all about it.”
Andrea glanced at Palan who was preoccupied with his bag. She shook her head. The man’s stomach gurgled as he frowned. He said, “Hey, don’t be like that. I’ve been there before. I even have a stone from their lands. See?” He pulled out a rock and covered it with his hands. A faint pale glow shone through the gaps in his fingers.
Andrea’s eyes widened and she nodded. “One scorpion, but you have to tell me first,” she said.
Palan glanced downwards at the man after handing his animal hides to the vendor. “Oh, this story,” he said and pulled Andrea away. “I can tell it to you better than he can. You can’t believe everything you hear; he’s a well-known liar in this town.”
The man clicked his tongue and chomped down on the plant in his mouth. He mumbled, “Just wanted one…”
The vendor handed Palan a bundle of clothes and peered over the side of her stall. “When did you get here?” she asked the squatting man. “Trying to scam children again? Do it somewhere else; it’s bad for my business.”
The man grumbled as he stood up and walked down an alley. “The angels were much nicer,” he said and spat out the chewed up stem on the floor. “Damn brats, think they know everything.”
Andrea watched the man leave before looking up at the moon. The blue surface almost looked like it was moving.
***
Palan and Andrea walked along the uneven road with a trail of sticks left behind them. There were only three scorpion kebabs left in the younger sibling’s hands. She nibbled off a scorpion claw while speaking, “Tell me the story.”Palan grunted. “That man’s name is Bogar. According to him, he was running through the desert, being chased by a herd of wildebeests when he saw a portal appear in the air next to him. He jumped inside the portal, figuring that it would be better than being trampled to death.”“The portals you throw things in to get stones?”“Yes,” Palan said and nodded, “those. He’s the only person I know who claims to have returned after falling inside one of them that actually has some sort of proof, the glowing stone. Of course, he could be lying and found it somewhere else. He said he was teleported to another world where the people he met were like children. They didn’t have any sins and they didn’t kill each other. Everyone worked together to help each other, even per
A group of three men sat around a campfire with an antelope roasting over it. The two suns shone overhead, causing the three men to sweat. One of the men tore off a chunk of slightly raw flesh and grinned.“Hey! Quit eating the bait,” one of the men said and snarled.“Ah, stop whining,” the man with the meat said. “‘Tis just a small morsel.”“If we can’t make quota, you’ll be the one finding shelter tonight,” the last man said and narrowed his eyes.“It’s fine,” the man with the meat said as he licked his lips. He pointed behind the two men. “Look, there’s already some coming this way.”The two men turned around and saw a sand cloud in the horizon. A tiny figure, that seemed to have two heads, could be seen approaching them. “That’s a person, you nitwit.”“So what? We can still rob ‘im.” The man threw the remaining meat to the side and drew his dagger.“Eh,” the other men grumbled as they unsheathed their daggers as well. All three of them may prone against the ground and waited.“Som
The golden light faded from Palan’s view. He squinted his eyes and his nictitating membranes flickered. A yellow moon hung in the sky, illuminating the surrounding trees. His eyebrows furrowed as he walked next to a tree and sniffed its trunk. He tilted his head and squatted, observing the grass that was growing out of the ground.“So this is the angel’s world,” he said and raised his head, inhaling deeply through his nose. His nose twitched and his stomach growled. He smiled. “I guess angels bleed too.”Palan weaved through the forest; twigs snapped and leaves crunched underneath his feet. He followed his nose and ended up at the edge of the trees, revealing an open plain. A road extended through the grass with a carriage parked in the middle. Four men stood in a square around the carriage, pointing spears outwards. They wore metal armor that reflected the moonlight. One man was leaning against the back of the carriage, clutching his bleeding arm.A pack of twenty wolves surrounded t
“Interesting,” Palan said as he spun a silver orb in his palm. A bloody skeleton lay on the ground beside him next to a torn white dress. He glanced at a half-eaten wolf skeleton next to him. “It’s no wonder why this fellow didn’t run away.” A single line of lightning snaked up Palan’s arm from the metal orb. He tucked the orb away in the leather sack by his waist and stood up. Bloody metal armor jangled as his body moved. Palan flexed his bicep while opening and closing his hand. He raised his leg and rotated his foot around his ankle before stomping down on the road. The stones split and fractured in a web-like manner. “I feel stronger, but only the female angel improved my strength; I wonder why.” Palan sighed and glanced up at the yellow moon. “So the rumors were true after all,” he said. “That’s where Andrea is.” He shook his head and glanced around the field. Palan stepped over corpses—wolf and angel alike—as he headed towards the forest. His forehead tingled and he narrowed
Raea stopped the carriage in front of a metal gate with stone walls on either side. She stood up and exited the carriage as her guards approached from behind. A man dressed in blue armor squinted at the group of people below from the top of the wall. “Lady Raea? I was expecting you.”“Yes,” Raea said and nodded. “On the way here, we encountered Lady Menyel’s carriage and I took the liberty to bring it here.”“Just her carriage?”“She is no longer with us.”“I see,” the man said and nodded. “That is unfortunate.” He signaled behind him with his arm and the metal gate creaked as it rose. He turned around and walked down a set of stairs. Raea and her group entered the city with their carriages in tow.“This way,” the man dressed in blue armor said and gestured with his arm. “You can tell me all the details over tea.”“I appreciate the hospitality, Captain Ishim,” Raea said and smiled as she walked next to the captain. Her guards glanced at each other before following behind the two. The
Raea stood in the center of a square with her eyes closed and hands clasped together in front of her chest. Her four guards stood in a square formation around her. A few angels gave the group odd looks before continuing on their way. The first sun had already risen and the second one was beginning to rise.“Lady Raea!” a voice called out, accompanied by the sound of hooves clattering against stone. Raea’s eyes shot open and she saw her head guard walking towards her with six horses in tow. Behind him were twenty people on horses, the majority of them being men. They all wore undecorated white armor with lances by their sides. “We are ready to depart at any time.”“Thank you, Owen,” Raea said and nodded towards the head guard.The head guard saluted and gestured behind him. “These soldiers are all willing to aid you in the hunt for the forest king. They volunteered when they heard about the circumstances regarding L
Palan’s vision focused on the brown ceiling above him. His eyes flickered, and he saw an armored figure in the corner of his eye, standing with its back to him in front of a door. He tried to turn his head, but found that he couldn’t. His forehead, neck, chest, arms, and legs were restrained by metal chains.“He is still unconscious?” a feminine voice asked.“It seems like it.” The armored figure’s back rustled. “It can be hard to tell because his eyes are always open.”“You can take a break,” the feminine voice said. “I will watch over him.”Palan refocused his eyes on the ceiling and steadied his breathing. The armored figure stepped out of the room and an angel with short white hair sat on a seat next to the bed he was strapped to. A wolf barked from somewhere at the foot of his bed and chains rattled. The angel extended her hand and waved it over Palan’s face.The angel sighed and sat back against her chair when she got no reaction. She pulled out a silver orb from a sack undernea
“My sister’s a glutton. When she was born, I fed her five full pouches of goat milk before she went to sleep, only to have her wake up an hour later begging for more food,” Palan sighed and shook his head. “Do you know how difficult it is to get enough goat milk to support a glutton when you’re only ten years old?”“Your parents did not help?” Raea asked and tilted her head.“My mom died during childbirth and my dad was too scared of his own shadow to leave the house,” Palan said. “I raised her by myself, fed her at least ten beasts a day until I was able to hunt the larger ones.”“I see. My condolences,” Raea said. “I—”“No need. They deserved what they got,” Palan said. “It’s quite normal for people to be raised as orphans or slaves where I’m from.”Raea frowned. “That sounds terrible,” she said.Palan tried to shrug, but the chains on his body prevented him from doing so. “You get used to it,” he said. “It’s every man for himself.”“But you took care of your sister,” Raea said and