The wind picked up, carrying a sharp chill that bit at their exposed skin and made Towan instinctively pull his scarf higher, tucking it snugly around his neck. Elliot glanced around, his usual casual demeanor replaced with quiet alertness, his sharp eyes scanning the shadows that seemed to stretch longer in the fading light. The air felt heavier now, charged with an unspoken tension that neither of the brothers could quite place.
"We should head back," Towan said, breaking the silence, his voice low but firm. The unease in his chest was growing, and the thought of the warm, familiar glow of their home was suddenly more appealing than ever.
Leon gave a small nod, his gaze lingering on the mine for a second longer before turning away. His expression was unreadable, but there was a flicker of something in his eyes—caution, perhaps, or calculation. "Agreed. There's nothing more to see here."
As they made their way down the narrow path leading back to the village, the night deepened around them. The familiar houses of Heartwood, always warm and welcoming, were now shrouded in darkness, their windows dark and their doors closed tight. Only a few lanterns flickered in the distance, their feeble glow barely pushing back against the thickening gloom. The village, usually alive with the hum of life, felt eerily still.
Despite the quiet, something felt… off.
The usual sounds of the village—distant chatter, the occasional bark of a dog, the creak of wooden doors—were absent. Instead, there was only the whisper of the wind through the trees and the crunch of their own footsteps against the frost-covered dirt. The silence was unnerving, a stark contrast to the vibrant energy that usually filled Heartwood's streets.
Elliot shifted uneasily, his breath visible in the cold air as he glanced over his shoulder. "Feels kinda… empty, doesn't it?"
Towan frowned, his hands buried deep in his coat pockets. "Yeah. Everyone's probably inside because of the cold."
"Or maybe," Leon said, his voice lower than before, carrying a weight that made the brothers pause, "it's something else."
He stopped walking.
Towan and Elliot did the same, their boots crunching against the frozen ground as they came to a halt. Leon's expression had changed. He no longer looked like the polite, composed merchant they had spent the day with. His posture was different—tense, controlled, like a predator poised to strike. His eyes scanned the darkened village with the precision of someone who had seen trouble before, someone who knew how to recognize danger even when it hid in the shadows.
Then they heard it.
Not the wind. Not their own footsteps.
But something else.
A rustling in the distance, faint but unmistakable. The soft clink of metal, like the sound of a blade brushing against armor. It was subtle, almost imperceptible, but it was there, and it sent a shiver down Towan's spine.
Leon exhaled through his nose, his breath visible in the cold air as his sharp eyes narrowed. His hand twitched slightly, as if instinctively reaching for something at his side, though it remained empty.
"Stay close," he muttered, his voice barely above a whisper, yet carrying an authority that brooked no argument. "And don't make a sound."
The brothers exchanged a glance, their earlier unease now replaced by a growing sense of dread. The village they had known their entire lives, the place that had always felt safe and familiar, now felt like a stranger to them. The shadows seemed deeper, the silence heavier, and the air itself seemed to hum with a tension they couldn't quite understand.
As they stood there, the faint rustling grew louder, accompanied by the occasional snap of a twig underfoot. Whatever was out there, it was getting closer.
And it was coming fast.
Towan and Elliot exchanged glances, the carefree mood from earlier completely shattered. Their quiet, peaceful home—once a sanctuary of warmth and familiarity—now felt like a place where something sinister lurked just beyond the shadows, waiting to pounce. The air was thick with tension, every sound amplified, every shadow stretching longer and darker than before.
And as they took another step forward, the first distant scream cut through the night.
It was a sound that froze them in their tracks, a raw, guttural cry of pain and terror that echoed through the stillness. Towan's heart skipped a beat, his breath catching in his throat as his eyes darted toward the source of the noise. The center of the village was on fire. Not just the buildings—no, the fuel was the bodies of villagers. The smell was horrendous, a nauseating mix of burning wood and charred flesh that clawed at the back of Towan's throat and made his stomach churn.
The heart of the village was ablaze. Fire crackled hungrily, its orange tongues licking at the remains of homes and turning familiar streets into a battlefield of flickering shadows. The flames danced wildly, casting grotesque shapes on the ground, their light illuminating the chaos in stark, horrifying detail. The air was thick with smoke, the acrid stench of destruction making it hard to breathe.
Towan staggered forward, his legs moving almost of their own accord, his eyes wide and unblinking as he tried to process the carnage before him. "What th—"
A firm hand clamped over his mouth, cutting off his words. It was Leon. His grip was strong, steady, and his voice was barely more than a breath, low and urgent. "Bandits from the Corrupted Zone… I didn't expect them to make it this far."
Towan's pulse thundered in his ears, his heart pounding so hard it felt like it might burst from his chest. Elliot, standing beside him, was rigid, his hands clenched into trembling fists. His brother's breath came in shallow, uneven gasps—shock, disbelief, the kind of fear that gnaws at the edges of reason and leaves you paralyzed.
But Leon remained still. Not unaffected, but focused. His sharp eyes tracked the dark figures moving through the flames, their movements calculated, predatory. The chief's house was already torn apart, bandits rifling through whatever remained, like rats picking a carcass clean. Their laughter carried on the wind, a cruel, mocking sound that sent a chill down Towan's spine.
Towan swallowed hard, his body screaming at him to move, to do something—but what? He and Elliot had no weapons. No training. Just the sickening weight of helplessness pressing down on them, crushing any hope of action.
Leon, however, was different. His gaze flickered, lingering on the way the fire twisted and curved unnaturally around some of the figures, their presence distorting the air with something wrong, something unnatural. His jaw tightened, a flicker of something dark passing across his face.
"They're not many," he murmured, his tone unreadable, almost detached. Then, almost as an afterthought, "But they use Essentia."
The words sent a shiver down Towan's spine. He barely understood what it meant, but the certainty in Leon's voice told him enough—this wasn't just a raid. It was a massacre. A calculated, brutal assault by those who wielded power far beyond anything he had ever seen.