LYDIA
Ulu stood in the foothills of the aridest mountains Lydia had ever seen. If they could even be called mountainsâsmall and unimposing as they looked.
The rest of the southern terrain was flat and barren. The sunâs constant barrage had no doubt beaten every inch of foliage into submission, allowing only the most resolute to remain.
It reminded her of the ghost towns she had read about in old storybooks. But those fairytales didnât do this desolate land justice.
âThis is it,â Redmond announced. âThe village of Ulu.â
The Slifer smiled slightly. Even though heâd never visited this part of Vallas before, he was still happy to return to the frontier of his home kingdom.
The othersâMarsie, Dorian, Lydia, and Luciusâsimply stared in confusion.
âWhere is everyone?â Marsie asked in awe. âIâve never seen a place so empty.â
They walked into the small town but saw no one. It looked as if it had been abandoned years ago. The yellow buildings were colored like the sands on which they stood. A large clock tower in the center of the tiny village seemed to tell the correct time.
But who was around to notice?
âThis ghost town is giving me the creeps,â Lucius hiccupped.
âNot to be that guy,â Dorian said, âbut you always seem to have a bad feeling.â
Lucius looked at the young wizard and frowned. âYou sound like my granddaughter.â
âAnd whatâs so wrong with that?â Lydia asked.
Lucius dismissed the question with a wave of his hand. He took out his flask and tipped it back.
Not even a drop was left to fall on his tongue.
âWell, it looks like Iâve got some business to attend to.â
The others watched him take off down the empty streets. His neck strained as he tried to find the nearest watering hole.
âShould we spread out?â Redmond asked. âMaybe one of us can find a villager who has some information about the Royals.â
âI donât know if thatâs such a good idea,â replied Lydia. âI feel a presence. Iâm not sure if itâs the Royals, but thereâs definitely something here.â
Lydia looked around at the desolate buildings, trying to pinpoint the presence. It was like a steady hum that rumbled deep in her bones. She had only ever really felt something similar when she was next to Gabriel.
It had to be a sign.
âI can feel it too,â Marsie said.
âWe all can,â Dorian observed. âItâs exactly what Gerard described.â
âWe need to stick together. If this is a trap, everyone needs to be prepared,â Marsie warned.
âTell that to him,â Dorian said, pointing down the road.
Lucius was jumping up and down, waving his hands. Lydiaâs cheeks flushed. Another day, another chance to be embarrassed by the old wizardâ¦
âHey!â he screamed breathlessly. âOver here. I found people thatâll talk!â
Lucius turned and disappeared inside a darkened doorway. Above the entrance hung a sign that read:
^DINOâS CANTINA^
~Great,~ thought Lydia. ~He wasnât worried about my safety. The drunk was just worried Iâd kill his buzzâ¦~
The group headed for the small, hole-in-the-wall cantina, keeping their eyes trained on the buildings they passed. A few curtains wavered as they approached.
There were still people left in the town.
But why didnât they want to come out and meet their new visitors?
***
LUCIUS
âDino, you son of aâ¦â Lucius burped, interrupting his own sentence. âThis is the strongest elderberry rum Iâve ever had! Whatâs the secret?â
Dino looked at the drunken wizard with equal parts contempt and admiration. Itâd been a long time since heâd had a patron worthy of taking his most potent drink down in one single gulp, and none of them still had the breath to discuss it afterward.
âIf I told you that,â Dino grumbled, âit wouldnât be a secret.â
âA man after my own heart.â Lucius raised a second glass and gulped it down. The warmth burned his throat like fire and sucked the breath from his lungs.
So far, this mission was turning out better than he could have imagined.
âPlease tell me that was just juice,â Marsie said drily.
She and the others had entered and were looking around the poorly lit bar with suspicion.
âDonât be daft,â quipped Lucius. âBut if you want me to lie to you, just say so.â
Marsie and the others found a spot at the bar. Luciusâs nose curled in annoyance. The damned place was nearly empty, save a few barflies in the corner. Couldn't they have sat anywhere else?
âThe chancellor will have my ass if you get drunk and something bad happens,â Marsie said, glaring at Lucius.
Lucius hiccupped and then took one extra shot for good measure. âThatâs assuming anything happens at all.â
âWhatâs that about the chancellor?â Dino asked in a gruff voice.
The group looked at one another, unsure how to answer his question.
Lucius noted that these youngsters probably werenât used to frequenting too many barsâespecially dingy, dirty ones filled with unsavory characters. But this was just the kind of dive that Lucius lived for.
âWeâre here on official business,â Lucius responded.
âThereâve been rumors that a mysterious power has been traced to this village,â Redmond added. âIâm originally from Vallas. Weâve been tasked with visiting the area to learn about anything out of the ordinary.â
Redmond looked at Marsie to see if he should continue. She nodded before turning her attention to the men in the corner. Lucius had noted them as well. Before the rest entered, they showed little interest in the wizard. Now they were beginning to stir.
âHave you seen anything extraordinary lately in Ulu?â Redmond asked the bartender.
Dino puffed his chest and shook his head. âNothing of the kind.â
âGood enough for me,â Lucius retorted. He reached out for his full glass of rum, but Dino slid it away.
âThatâs enough. I think itâs best your kind leaves.â
âOur kind?â Lucius gasped. How could he be lumped in with these others? It was an outrage! âYou listen hereâ¦â
Marsie grabbed Luciusâs arm with a firm grip. âNot now,â she warned.
âWe donât want any trouble,â Lydia responded. âWe only want to help.â
The barflies in the corner stood up. Their chairs scraped against the weathered wooden floor, drawing everyoneâs attention. It didnât look goodâ¦
âThere wonât be any trouble if you leave now,â Dino growled. âThatâs your last warning.â
Dorian grinned at the bartender. âYour hospitality will always be remembered.â
The group stood up in unison. It was never easy to walk away from a threat, but getting in a bar fight wasnât the mission theyâd been sent to accomplish. As they walked toward the entrance, Lucius shot one last wobbly look at the bartender.
âDamn it all to hell,â Lucius blurted. âLooks like I wonât get another taste of that piss you call a drink. Better that way! Save my coin for a reputable establishment worth my time.â
Dinoâs eyes lit up with fire at the insult. He reached across the bar to grab Luciusâs cloak, but the wizard anticipated his movement. He grabbed Dinoâs hand and looked into the stunned bartenderâs eyes. Even in his drunken state, he was still as quick as ever.
âThat was a bad choice,â Lucius slurred. He conjured a quick spell, breaking all the bones in Dinoâs hand.
The bartender screeched in pain and tumbled to the ground. In an instant, the barflies in the corner bounded toward the old wizard, but the others covered him.
Marsie stepped forward and kicked a stool hard, sending it flying across the room. It smashed into one of the bruteâs legs with unbelievable force. He flipped end over end, eventually landing onto a table with a thud, tipping it to the floor.
A second galoot plucked a liquor bottle from the bar and hurled it across the room. Lydia blasted it back toward the man with her flames, effectively turning it into a flaming projectile. It flew across the room and smashed into the wall, lighting it on fire.
The man squealed as he tried to escape the heat. He collapsed over the bar, ending up on top of the still-reeling Dino.
Redmondâs arms turned into vines and shot out toward a toad-like man holding a knife. The vines wrapped around his body, and the manâs eyes bulged in fright as he became bound where he stood, unable to move.
One last man remained. A scar down his cheek showed he was used to these rough-and-tumble encounters. He broke a glass bottle and held it out like a shiv.
âWho wants some,â slurred the brute. âIâll take you all on.â
Dorian smiled and stepped forward. A dark purple glow filled the room as he lifted his hands from his side. Out of the ground rose the figure of a massive celestial wolf.
The scarred man dropped the glass bottle, trying to cover up his trousers with his hands.
Heâd pissed himself right on the spot. Without another word, the man sprinted toward an open window and jumped through it.
Lucius clapped his hands gleefully.
âNow, thatâs what I call a show!â he squealed in drunken delight.
âIdiot!â Marsie screamed. âNot only did we fight a bunch of nobodiesâwe managed to get zero information in the process!â
She slammed her fist on a tabletop. The wood splintered and cracked from one side to the other. Lucius immediately shut his mouth.
âChancellor Alastair will have our asses for this. Mine most of all!â Marsie added, enraged.
âDamnit, Lucius!â Lydia shouted in anger, but her grievance was cut short.
Screams from outside the cantina drew everyoneâs attention away from the mess theyâd made. One by one, they rushed outside into the burning midday sun. What they witnessed made them all stop in their tracks.
The clock tower in the middle of the square wavered under some unseen pressure. It lurched too far to one side and began to topple over. With a massive bang, it crashed to the ground like a fallen giant, demolishing everything in the immediate vicinity.
Locals hiding in the buildings nearby scattered in all directions.
âBy the Gods!â Lydia yelled. âWhatâs going on?â
As if in response, from the sky floated a majestic figure awash in a dull green glow. The figure landed on the ground only a few strides from the groupâ¦
âQueen Adria!â Redmond gasped. âWe found youâ¦â