Morning painted the quarry walls in pale gold, but the pit still smelled of coal-smoke and fear. Rowan oversaw the last of the freed caravaneers as they lashed crates of reclaimed goods onto handcarts.
Brass Mask lay bound to a wagon tongue, glaring through the split visor where Rowanâs pommel had caved the brass. The captives kept a safe distance from him gratitude for rescue, yes, yet edged with the worry that villains sometimes sprout second heads.
Orrik finished tightening the axle nut on Castor Haleâs supply cart and wiped his brow. âReady to roll. You decide which way, hero?â
âWest,â Rowan said. âQuickest road to Valehartâs border keep at Redfenn Tower. Theyâve got surgeons, stables, and a gaol stout enough for him.â He nodded at Brass Mask.
Archivist Castor tucked away his onyx ledger. âAgreed. Redfenn is also where my next dispatch rider waits. History insists on fresh ink while itâs still wet.â
Feylinâthe mage Rowan had freedâapproached, her wrists still striped from rope burn. âIâll travel with you,â she announced. âBlack Banner has bounties on any Flow-skilled prisoners who escape. Alone, Iâm a walking ransom notice.â
Marra Wind-Mane flicked her tail. âStrength in numbers, then. And songs sound better with a chorus.â
On the Road to Redfenn
The caravan stretched into three lines: captives and carts at center, fighters flanking, Castor riding the ridge with Tessan, who sketched turned-over wagons and broken kilns for posterity. Early haze gave way to blue sky, yet Rowanâs thoughts stayed overcastâevery clop of hooves felt like drumbeats leading a parade he hadnât rehearsed for.
Villagers along the track waved and shouted blessings when they learned of the rescue. Some pressed dried flowers into Rowanâs hands; one elderly woman insisted on pinning a scrap of green ribbon beside his Quill feather. He thanked them, cheeks hot.
After the third impromptu tribute Orrik murmured, âSmileâs cracking, Rowan.â
âCanât help thinking theyâre cheering a thumbnail sketch. They donât know the ink smudges.â
Orrik shrugged, but his eyes softened. âLet âem be grateful. World wonât spare many bright moments.â
Night at FoxâHollow Inn
They reached the halfway stop, Fox-Hollow Inn, just as dusk kindled the horizon. The innkeeper balked at the rag-tag procession until Castor produced an Iron Quill seal; rooms and barn-lofts opened, stew cauldrons doubled, ale casks flowed.
Rowan took first watch in the courtyard. Feylin joined him, palms tucked in sleeves against chill.
âYou spared Brass Mask,â she said. âMercy is not the raiderâs creed.â
This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
âExecution felt too easy,â Rowan replied, gaze on the prisonerâs shadow under the barn eaves. âHe knows who funds them, where theyâll strike next. Dead men donât talkâexcept in ballads, and ballads rarely warn the living.â
Feylin tilted her head. âYou speak like someone reading ahead in the story.â
âTrying not to be surprised by the last page.â Rowan forced a smile.
A door slammed inside; merriment spilled out, then muffled again. Feylinâs voice dropped. âYour sword vibrates whenever emotion spikes. Does it feel different now?â
Rowan touched the hilt. A low, steady humâneither hunger nor warning. âLike a kettle just before boil. Somethingâs close, but Iâm not sure what.â
Ash in the Hearth
Deep in the night a muffled shout roused Rowan. He dashed into the kitchen where flames roared unnaturally high in the hearth. Brass Mask, still bound but somehow freed from his guard, lay half-conscious nearby; a black-hooded figure stood over him, brandishing a hooked obsidian dagger.
Rowanâs katana cleared its sheath with a hiss. The hooded assassin wheeled, eyes like coals under the cowl, and flicked the dagger in a tight arc. Steel met obsidianâclang! Shards of pitch-black glass scattered, glowing at the edges. The assassin hissed a word Rowan didnât know; the hearth fire flared green and belched smoke thick as fog.
Rowan slashed crosswise, wind guiding his wrists. The blade passed through empty hazeâthe assassin already flipping through the vegetable hatch, landing cat-silent in the orchard beyond.
Rowan vaulted after, but the dark figure vanished among apple shadows. Only a scrap of silk snagged on a branch remainedâstitched with the same spiral-in-flame sigil as Brass Maskâs charcoal token. Rowanâs pulse tripped.
Behind him, Orrik and Marra burst out with lanterns. âStatus?â
âAssassin,â Rowan panted. âSame sigil.â
They searched, found nothing but trampled clover. Brass Mask was returned to iron shacklesâfurious, bruised, alive.
Castor arrived last, robe flapping. âWhatâs burning?â
âQuestions,â Rowan muttered, tucking the silk into his pouch.
Morning Revelations
At breakfast Castor announced slight change of plans: âRedfenn still, but direct road through Bracken Glade. Faster, though rumors say the glade houses smugglers.â
The deserters balkedâglades were ambush country. Brother Joss merely chuckled, tapping his cudgel: âSin loves coverts; shepherdâs crook loves sinners.â
Rowan studied Brass Mask while the raider devoured porridge. âThat assassin came for you,â he said.
Or for me, Rowanâs mind whispered.
The captain smirked, lips split. âNot assassinâAuditor. We steal coin, she steals silence. Keep me talking and the next blade sings for you instead, Kestrel.â
Rowan leaned closer. âThen talk fast: Who funds the Banner? Why the quarry?â
Brass Maskâs eyes gleamed cruelly. âFeathers arenât the only emblems that buy fame. Some men write history in ash. Ask your quill-keeper if ink can smother a wildfire.â
Castorâs pen paused half-way across the ledger marginâbut he said nothing.
Glint of Resolve
They broke camp. Wagons rolled out, wheels groaning. Rowan walked rear-guard this time, katana at the ready, sigiled silk heavy in his pouch. Sunlight through orchard leaves dappled his cloak, illuminating both the Quill feather and the green ribbon from the grateful villager. Laurel and ashâpraise and ruinâthreads already tangling around his name.
Orrik fell in beside him. âYou decide if this swordâs curse, blessing, or just sharp metal?â
âAsk me after Redfenn,â Rowan said. But as they entered the shadowed tunnel of Bracken Glade, the blade thrummedânot warning, not blood-lustâsomething more like anticipation, a chord waiting for the conductorâs downbeat.
Ahead, birds fell silent. Somewhere, leaves rustled with more intent than wind.
Rowan squared his shoulders, feather glinting, and stepped into the gloom where stories sharpened themselves against bone and resolve.