The following morning, Mud hustled through his morning baking routine
with Chedda acting as his hectic, over-eager assistant. The little
Imp had picked up the rhythm with surprising speed, attacking every
task Mud gave him, from greasing pans to stoking coals, with a manic
level of gusto.
Once the biscuits
were out of the oven and cooling, Mud packed his gear. He had one
stop to make before meeting Layhla, the market. He needed to find out
what he could craft with the Black Owl Feathers, any ounce of extra
defense he could eke out would help in his rematch against the Great
Boar.
The Market District
was drowning in a tidal wave of energy and activity. At this hour,
the streets were a cacophony of banging shutters and competing shouts
as shopkeepers hawked their wares to the early morning crowds.
Villagers bumped shoulders with Travelers who were busy checking and
preparing their gear for a day outside the city’s walls.
It was a chaotic,
sensory overloaded mess, exactly the kind of thing Mud usually tried
to avoid. Today it was unavoidable. An hour stuck in a crowded area
was far better than being impaled mercilessly on the tusk of an angry
pig.
Mud made his way to
Sheala’s stall. He arrived just in time to see the attractive
auburn-haired smith finishing a sale, confidently presenting a
sparkling, polished buckler to the Traveler. The man nodded eagerly,
transferred his gold, and walked away with a grin, satisfied with his
new purchase.
Sheala noticed him
approaching her counter, and her eyes brightened. “Hey, big fella!
You back for a rematch with my leatherwork?”
Mud looked
sheepishly at the cobblestones, feeling heat rising in his cheeks.
“No, not today. I’m actually here about something else.” He
pulled up his menu and showed her the bundle of black feathers. “I
got these from a rare monster yesterday. I was told they could be
used for crafting, but I’m trying to figure out what I can make,
and how much damage it’s going to do to my pouch.”
Sheala’s playful
expression morphed into one of professional interest. She took
another look at the Black Owl Feathers. “Well now,” she hummed,
looking impressed. “These are rare, especially around here. Not
many of those Giant Owls nesting on this island. They’re mostly
migrants, as far as I’m aware.”
Mud felt a spark of
pride. “Excellent. So, what can I use them for?”
“Nothing,”
Sheala said flatly.
Mud’s shoulders
slumped, his face drooping as his momentary high died.
Sheala let out a
boisterous laugh and smacked him on the back. “At least, nothing
from me. I’m a smith; I don’t mess around too much with feathers.
You need to see my sister, Oona. She runs the tailor shop about two
blocks that way.” She pointed toward a colorful awning barely
visible in the distance. “Tell her Sheala sent you. She’ll take
good care of you. I swear it.”
A small brass bell
jingled as Mud stepped into the tailor shop. The air here was
different, heavy with the scent of cedar, dry wool, and the faint,
sweet smell of the dyes. A hulking brute of a woman sat hunched over
a timber loom, her frame nearly as broad as the machine she worked.
Behind her, the walls were a vibrant mosaic of hanging silks, sturdy
linens, and spools of thread in every imaginable hue. Near the
windows, mannequins stood draped expertly in tailored tunics and
heavy traveling cloaks.
“Hello, dear,”
the woman said without looking up. Her voice was soft and soothing,
making her seem much older than her face suggested. “Give me a
moment to finish this row, and I’ll be right with you. Please feel
free to have a look around.”
Mud stood,
transfixed. Her thick, sausage-like appendages danced along her loom
with the grace and skill of a veteran pianist. There was no wasted
motion. He marveled at the contrast, seeing so much dexterity in
someone so large.
He looked down at
his own pudgy fingers, clenching and unclenching them. He wondered if
he could ever reach that level of self-mastery. This was so much more
than a high Agility stat; this was years of discipline put to
practice.
Finishing the row
with a final snap of the loom, she turned to face him. Her features
were large, but toned with a soft and radiating kindness that caught
him off guard. A painful twinge pulled at his chest; for a fleeting
moment, her expression, and the way she held herself, reminded him of
his own mother, a memory he usually kept locked away in the darkest
corners of his mind.
“Your sister,
Sheala, sent me,” he said, his voice thicker than intended. “I’m
looking to have some gear crafted. I have the materials, but I need
to know the cost.” He opened his menu, and showed her the bundle of
iridescent black feathers.
This story has been stolen from Royal Road. If you read it on Amazon, please report it
Oona leaned in, her
eyes widening as she gazed at the plumage. “Oh, my. You were able
to best one of the majestic owls from the northern forests?” She
looked up at him, a warm, proud smile spreading across her face as
she gave his shoulder a firm, maternal pat. “What a brave boy you
must be.”
Mud felt his ears
burn. He wasn’t used to being called brave, or honestly, receiving
any form of praise.
“Well, you’re
in luck, dear,” she continued, running a thumb along one of the
feathers. “These feathers are versatile. They hold a natural
affinity for wind. It really depends on what you need. A Cloak?
Robes?” She paused, her gaze taking in his current attire, or lack
thereof, with a practiced eye.
“Well…” Mud
considered his options. “I’m planning to head out today to hunt
boars. It’s an experience that has been… rough… so far. I was
hoping to dig up every advantage I could before I step back outside
of the walls. Is there anything you could craft in just a few hours?”
“A few hours? You
fiend!” Oona let out a dramatic gasp, waggling a thick, pudgy
finger in front of his nose. “You’re trying to work a woman’s
hands to the bone, and before she has even had noon tea?”
She saw the flicker
of disappointment in his eyes and her expression softened. With a
heavy sigh, she leaned against her loom. “Fine. I could probably
put together a cloak in that time, far fewer measurements and seams
to worry about. But you have to make me a deal, and I won’t hear a
word of argument!”
“Okay?” Mud
asked, his voice slow and hesitant.
“First, if I’m
making you a custom cloak, that grungy leather chest-piece has to go.
It’s an insult to my shop, and the way you’re busting out of it
isn’t doing you any favors.” She gestured to a row of sturdy,
comfortable looking robes folded neatly on a cedar shelf. “Looking
at that staff you’re carrying, I assume you’re a caster. I have a
multitude of sizes available, and I’m certain we can find one to
fit. They are twelve hundred gold.”
Mud took a quick
mental tally of his finances. Between Layhla’s gift and his
successful biscuit business his pouch was loaded with twenty-five
hundred gold pieces. And it would be nice to part with the ill
fitting leather jerkin.
“Deal, and how
much for the cloak?” he asked, hoping he had the funds left over.
“The cloak I will
make for free,” Oona said, a twinkle in her eyes speaking of
mischief. “On the condition that you do me a small favor, something
you can accomplish while I work.”
Free. It was a
beautiful word. A strong word. Possibly the best word Mud had heard
since arriving in Horizon City.
“Alright.” He
leaned in. “What do you need?”
“I have a bit of
a rat infestation in my warehouse. The little devils are chewing
through my stock of silks and linens.” Her voice dropped to a
whisper. Looking Mud in the eye, she hesitated. “I need them gone.
But… I’d prefer if you didn’t kill them, if at all possible.”
***
This was the place.
Mud double-checked the hastily scrawled map Oona had given him, then
reached into the pocket of his new, new robes. The fabric was heavy
and high-quality, a stark contrast to the rough, ill-fitting leather
he’d tossed in the trash. He pulled out a small bronze key and slid
it into the lock.
The door swung open
and he was hit by a wave of stale air. In the spilled light from the
street, he could see high shelves packed with bolts of silk, spools
of yarn, and crates of thread.
He raised the Staff
of Embers, letting the warmth tenderly spread through him, with a
calm, collected focus. He visualized the heat coiling around the
grains of wood until the tip sparked, a small, controlled flame
blooming to life. He used the fire to carefully light the two torches
mounted on either side of the entrance.
As the amber light
filled the warehouse, the silence was broken. He heard the panicked
skitter of dozens of tiny feet against the floorboards as dark, furry
shapes bolted for the safety of the shadows.
He extended his
hand and summoned his very first companion.
With a soft flash
of light, Ricky materialized on the floor beside him. The rat let out
a happy, high-pitched chitter and immediately nipped playfully at the
hem of Mud’s new velvet robes, clearly excited to be back at his
master’s side.
“Hey, little
buddy. I’ve got a quest, and I need your help.” Mud scratched the
soft tuft of fur beneath Ricky’s chin. “A bunch of your cousins
are in here causing chaos, and we need to convince them to find a new
home.”
Ricky tilted his
head, his black, beady eyes reflecting the torchlight as he processed
Mud’s request. His pink nose twitched rhythmically, sampling the
scents of cedar and musk, before his ears perked at a sound only he
could hear.
With a squeak, the
rat bolted into the labyrinth of crates and fabric.
Mud settled back
against a shelf, waiting in the heavy shadows of the warehouse. While
most people feared the dark and the things found in it, he had always
found a strange sanctuary in the gloom. To him, the darkness felt
like hiding under a comfy blanket; it provided a sense of security
that made the rest of the world, and its problems, simply disappear.
His quiet reverie
was shattered by a sudden wail. Then came the sound: the urgent
drumming of multiple sets of tiny clawed feet on the wooden
floorboards.
Reacting on
instinct, Mud flicked his fingers through the air and cast [Eagle
Eyes]
The world torpedoed
forward. His vision fractured and refocused with dizzying speed,
making the warehouse feel both impossibly immense and minute at the
same time.
Through the shifted
perspective, Mud wasn’t watching the battle; he was in it. He saw
the world from Ricky’s height; the towering shelves and imposing
crates loomed like jagged mountain peaks. Standing before him was a
nightmare, a monstrous, scarred bruiser of a rat, his fur matted with
filth and a garish, empty socket where one of his eyes had been torn
away.
Ricky let out a
piercing, defiant shriek and launched himself forward.
The Alpha rat
swiped with a heavy, hooked claw, but he was far too sluggish to keep
up with Ricky’s speed and agility. Ricky dove under the strike,
scrambling up the Alpha’s matted side, and sank his teeth into the
base of the larger rat’s ear. He thrashed, his small body jerking
as he tore into the cartilage with grim determination.
The Alpha roared,
guttural and deep, whipping his head roughly. Ricky held on like a
leech, until the violent thrashing finally threw him clear, half of
the rat’s ear still clamped in his jaws. Ricky hit the floorboards
hard, sliding in a bloody streak across the wood.
With a shake of his
head, he tossed the bloody cartilage onto the floorboards. Ricky
glared, baring his crimson-coated teeth at his opponent.
Around them, a
dozen rodents of varying sizes and colors formed a living, twitching
arena. Their beady eyes reflected the flickering torchlight as they
watched the gladiatorial display in heavy, expectant silence. Stuck
behind Ricky’s eyes, Mud felt every ragged breath and throb of
pain, helpless as he watched the health bar in the corner of his
vision flicker and dip dangerously close to the red.
Ricky huffed, his
tiny chest heaving as he struggled to draw in air, but he didn’t
retreat. He was a warrior among his kind, standing his ground in the
tiny circle.
Exhaustion finally
started to claim the Alpha. His movements grew heavier and his head
began to droop from blood loss. Seeing an opening, Ricky surged
forward in one final, desperate burst, using every last ounce of
energy. He bypassed flailing claws and locked his jaws on the Alpha’s
throbbing jugular.
There was a violent
thrash, a sickening spray of red, and then… stillness. Surprise and
fear faded from the Alpha’s remaining eye as he slumped to the
floor dead at Ricky’s feet.
The silence of the
spectators shattered. The warehouse erupted in a cacophony of
chitters and frantic squeals. The rats clattered their feet against
the wood in a deafening uproar.
They had a new
king.

