Amenne hated it here. The grass was red. The trees were red. Everything looked like blood. The feelings of the void were palpable, an oppressive weight that pressed down on her very soul. She took solace in the blessed mask on her face, and in the aged figure she stood beside.
Arden wasn’t wearing his mask, though. It worried her, but also invigorated her. Her idol stood exposed and strong. Even in his old age, even though she had long since grown taller, he was still imposing and his mind as sharp as ever. He used to play games with her when she was a child, and he was why she’d joined the wailers. When she’d heard that Arden Wood was coming out of retirement, she jumped on the chance to be in his escort.
If she’d known he was going here, she’d have been a little more hesitant.
The village was lost. No survivors. Void magic had corrupted everything with blood, there were piles of ash and bone, and tainted plants had overgrown the buildings.
“You should be thanking me,†Jeremiah said smugly. He was the other escort that had chosen to watch over Arden. He’d delayed their trip by two suns, and it turns out he’d put in a leve to issue for adventurers to contact the village. It made Arden furious, but Amenne quietly was thankful. “If we’d come here when you wanted to, this would be us.â€
“Boy, don’t try to lecture me.â€
“These piles of ash are clearly the remains of people. There are still some bones in them. Some sort of void fire no doubt. Killing the villagers as they ran. You can see them on the road out of town. You can see the burns on the warehouse door. The problem undoubtedly began there.â€
Arden listened to Jeremiah with a restrained glower, and when he finished Arden looked to Amenne. She flinched back half a step, and he raised a brow.
“The boy knows where to look,†Arden started. Jeremiah grinned smugly. “But he’s also an idiot who thinks he’s smart.â€
Amenne stared at Arden.
“Girl. If you can’t do better I’ll be very disappointed.â€
“R-right!†She stood up and looked over at Jeremiah. “I think I know what he means, just from looking at the site. One, it has rained since we lost contact with the village. Whatever event cut us off was not what caused the fire, or the ashes would have washed away by now, or at least be wet. The ground around each pile is scorched individually, which suggests someone came by after the fact and burned them. Jeremiah, since it was your leve you should know: were there any thaumaturges signed up?â€
“Well, yes…â€
“Then you should be smart enough to know that a thaumaturge, when faced with corrupt corpses, will forego the preservation of evidence in favor of preventing the bodies from reanimating from void magics.â€
Amenne started to walk through the village, picking her way carefully to avoid the piles of ash.
“Some of the bodies are on the road, but most of them seem clustered around the gate. However, there’s a patch that’s empty. That’s probably where the adventurers you hired stood and fought. The bodies are arrayed in a semi-circle, tightly packed in two places. The other is the warehouse door, which as you say is charred. The fire comes from the outside, though, which means someone was attacking the warehouse, not the other way around. Considering how large the scorch mark is here, I’d say there was something big here that the adventurers had to fight.â€
Amenne looked at Jeremiah. Out of the corner of her eye, though, she saw Arden smiling proudly. It reminded her of the games he’d used to play with her, when she was just a child. The old man was already retired by then, and a friend of her mother’s. After her father died, the retired couple agreed to babysit her so that mother could work. Arden created mysteries, crime scenes as a game and challenged Amenne to solve them.
Only this time the crime was real, and the void would kill her for getting it wrong.
“Too much evidence is gone. We should check in the warehouse, but we might be better served pulling up the list from the adventurer’s guild and questioning them.â€
Arden wasn’t wearing his mask, though. It worried her, but also invigorated her. Her idol stood exposed and strong. Even in his old age, even though she had long since grown taller, he was still imposing and his mind as sharp as ever. He used to play games with her when she was a child, and he was why she’d joined the wailers. When she’d heard that Arden Wood was coming out of retirement, she jumped on the chance to be in his escort.
If she’d known he was going here, she’d have been a little more hesitant.
The village was lost. No survivors. Void magic had corrupted everything with blood, there were piles of ash and bone, and tainted plants had overgrown the buildings.
“You should be thanking me,†Jeremiah said smugly. He was the other escort that had chosen to watch over Arden. He’d delayed their trip by two suns, and it turns out he’d put in a leve to issue for adventurers to contact the village. It made Arden furious, but Amenne quietly was thankful. “If we’d come here when you wanted to, this would be us.â€
“Boy, don’t try to lecture me.â€
“These piles of ash are clearly the remains of people. There are still some bones in them. Some sort of void fire no doubt. Killing the villagers as they ran. You can see them on the road out of town. You can see the burns on the warehouse door. The problem undoubtedly began there.â€
Arden listened to Jeremiah with a restrained glower, and when he finished Arden looked to Amenne. She flinched back half a step, and he raised a brow.
“The boy knows where to look,†Arden started. Jeremiah grinned smugly. “But he’s also an idiot who thinks he’s smart.â€
Amenne stared at Arden.
“Girl. If you can’t do better I’ll be very disappointed.â€
“R-right!†She stood up and looked over at Jeremiah. “I think I know what he means, just from looking at the site. One, it has rained since we lost contact with the village. Whatever event cut us off was not what caused the fire, or the ashes would have washed away by now, or at least be wet. The ground around each pile is scorched individually, which suggests someone came by after the fact and burned them. Jeremiah, since it was your leve you should know: were there any thaumaturges signed up?â€
“Well, yes…â€
“Then you should be smart enough to know that a thaumaturge, when faced with corrupt corpses, will forego the preservation of evidence in favor of preventing the bodies from reanimating from void magics.â€
Amenne started to walk through the village, picking her way carefully to avoid the piles of ash.
“Some of the bodies are on the road, but most of them seem clustered around the gate. However, there’s a patch that’s empty. That’s probably where the adventurers you hired stood and fought. The bodies are arrayed in a semi-circle, tightly packed in two places. The other is the warehouse door, which as you say is charred. The fire comes from the outside, though, which means someone was attacking the warehouse, not the other way around. Considering how large the scorch mark is here, I’d say there was something big here that the adventurers had to fight.â€
Amenne looked at Jeremiah. Out of the corner of her eye, though, she saw Arden smiling proudly. It reminded her of the games he’d used to play with her, when she was just a child. The old man was already retired by then, and a friend of her mother’s. After her father died, the retired couple agreed to babysit her so that mother could work. Arden created mysteries, crime scenes as a game and challenged Amenne to solve them.
Only this time the crime was real, and the void would kill her for getting it wrong.
“Too much evidence is gone. We should check in the warehouse, but we might be better served pulling up the list from the adventurer’s guild and questioning them.â€