After parting ways with the old man, Ashwat made his way to the city quarters, urgency driving every step. His mind was clouded with exhaustion, but the memory of what he had seen outside the mine left no room for rest. He headed straight for the artisan's quarter, knowing Uvaan often frequented the scribes and traders there. By chance—or fate—they crossed paths in a narrow street just beyond the square. Uvaan was visibly surprised by Ashwat's sudden appearance. The two had not spoken in weeks, and it wasn't like Ashwat to travel without cause, much less show up unannounced. Without pressing him in public, Uvaan guided him toward a nearby inn. They settled into a secluded booth, the air heavy with the scent of roasted meat and old parchment. Over a shared meal—the first proper one Ashwat had had in days—he finally began to speak. His voice was hushed, almost reverent, as he recounted the events outside the mine. He spoke of the monstrous rider, cloaked in flame, and the s...
A week had passed since Ashwat's harrowing experience near the mine, and he had spent nearly all of it secluded in the dim silence of his basement. The once-proud swordsmith, whose steady hands had crafted blades for the town's finest guards, had withdrawn into himself, vanishing from the streets where his presence had once been a reassuring constant. Ashwat had no family in the town—no wife or siblings, no aging parents to keep him tethered to the world above. His solitude, once a matter of preference, had become a prison. The townsfolk, fond of him as they were, grew increasingly uneasy. Whispers filled the market stalls and tavern corners. Concerned citizens knocked at his door, but none received a response. Curtains remained drawn, the forge cold and silent. Meanwhile, the deadline for the massive weapons order loomed ever closer. Yet the forge remained untouched, and Ashwat hadn't so much as lifted a hammer since the day he stumbled upon that infernal vision outside ...