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Chapter 7: Desperate Measures

In the heart of the forest, where the sunlight now filtered through the dense canopy of leaves, Kass and I found a secluded spot by the babbling river. The gentle murmur of flowing water provided a soothing backdrop.

"Let me see your hand," Kass said softly, her voice a gentle reassurance in the tranquil surroundings.

I extended my trembling arm, the burn on my palm still throbbing with a dull ache. With practiced hands, Kass carefully unwrapped strips of fabric torn from the hem of her shirt, the soft material offering a makeshift bandage for my injured hand.

Kass knelt down at the water's edge, dipping the fabric into the clear, flowing stream. Gently, she began to wash away the dirt and grime from my burnt hand, the coolness of the water providing a welcome respite from the lingering heat of the burn.

As Kass began to wrap the cloth around my palm, her movements were slow and deliberate, her touch gentle yet sure. With each pass of the fabric, I felt the tension in my muscles begin to ease, the pain in my hand gradually subsiding under Kass' soothing ministrations.

Once the makeshift bandage was secure, Kass nodded in satisfaction, her gaze meeting mine with a silent understanding.

"There, that should do for now," she said, her voice filled with quiet reassurance.

Kass sat beside me by the riverbank, her gaze drifting thoughtfully across the rippling water as she began to speak.

"You know, this isn't the first time I've had to treat burns," she said softly, her voice carrying the weight of years of painful memories.

I turned to her, my brow furrowing with concern.

"The blacksmith had a temper like you wouldn't believe. Whenever I made a mistake, he'd fly into a rage and take it out on me."

A shiver ran down my spine, my heart heavy with empathy for my friend's suffering.

"I'm so sorry, Kass. That must have been awful."

Kass nodded, her expression clouded with a mixture of sadness and resignation. "It was. But I learned to treat my own wounds. I couldn't rely on anyone else to help me."

I reached out to grasp Kass' hand, my touch gentle yet reassuring.

"You don't have to do it alone anymore, Kass."

A faint smile tugged at the corners of Kass' lips as she met my gaze, her eyes shining with unspoken gratitude.

"I know," she said softly. "And I'm grateful for that."

For three long days, Kass and I sought refuge in the depths of the forest, our makeshift shelter offering little protection against the elements. Branches and leaves woven together formed a crude shelter, providing a fragile barrier between us and the unforgiving wilderness that surrounded us.

During those days, the forest echoed with the sounds of my despair. Memories of my father, his twinkling eyes and gentle smile, haunted every waking moment. Each creak of a branch, each rustle of leaves, sent shivers down my spine, a cruel reminder of the burning bookstore and the life stolen from us.

But through it all, Kass remained by my side, a silent pillar of strength, her touch a grounding force in the maelstrom of emotions threatening to consume me.

Slowly, with each passing day, the raw edges of my grief began to soften. The sobs subsided, replaced by a dull ache that throbbed deep within me.

Kass was there, a constant presence. She held me through every sob, every choked scream that ripped from my throat. She didn't try to talk, to offer empty platitudes. She understood. In the quiet comfort of her embrace, I allowed myself to unravel, the dam of my grief finally bursting.

The meager food we'd managed to snag from the overflowing satchel was long gone, devoured in the desperate scramble for survival. The coin purse, with our only hope of buying provisions, lay abandoned in the ransacked carriage.

Kass and I emerged from our hiding spot, stretching our stiff limbs after a restless night's sleep. The forest around us was alive with the sounds of birdsong and rustling leaves. Hunger gnawed at our bellies, a constant companion these past few days.

We were a sorry sight. The grime of the escape had caked onto our clothes, a stark contrast to the cool river water that had served as our only bath the previous afternoon. Though the chill still lingered in our bones, it was a small price to pay for a moment of fleeting cleanliness.

"Our stomachs are growling louder than a pack of wolves," Kass grumbled, her voice a low rumble that vibrated through the damp air. She gestured towards the sad, brown apple in my hand with a raised eyebrow. "That won't keep us going for long."

I scanned the forest floor, my mind racing through the jumble of plants I'd crammed into my head from dusty old books. "Right," I agreed, shoving aside some ferns with my foot. "Maybe we can find some berries or nuts around the edge of the clearing to hold us over."

"Just remember," I added, "not all plants are your friends. Some can be real nasty, so let me check things out before we start munching."

Kass, ever the realist, rolled her eyes but gave a short nod. We ventured into the dense foliage, Kass pushing aside branches with her usual ease while I kept my eyes peeled for anything familiar. The search started slow, the undergrowth thick and uncooperative. But just as frustration threatened to boil over, a flash of red caught my eye. Plump, juicy berries hung heavy from a nearby bush.

"Hold up," I said, stopping Kass before she could reach for them. Crouching low, I examined the leaves closely, comparing them to the mental pictures I'd stored away.

"Aha! Wild raspberries," I announced, a genuine grin breaking through the grime on my face. "Perfectly safe to eat, and pretty tasty too, if I remember right."

Kass' skepticism melted into a grin as I explained the difference between the safe, deep red raspberries and their lookalikes, the dull-colored baneberries, which could mess with your insides in a very bad way. We spent the next hour carefully picking, my book smarts proving surprisingly useful. We gathered a small bounty of raspberries, hazelnuts, and even a few dandelion greens, their bitterness a welcome contrast to the sweetness of the berries.

For a stolen moment, the weight of our situation seemed to melt away, replaced by the simple pleasure of the sweet fruit and the satisfaction of a successful forage. But the tranquility was shattered by a rustle in the undergrowth sending a shiver of fear down our spines.

"What was that?" I whispered, my eyes darting nervously around the clearing.

Kass frowned, her hand instinctively reaching for the knife strapped to her belt. "I'm not sure. But we should be ready for anything."

The tale has been illicitly lifted; should you spot it on Amazon, report the violation.

With our senses on high alert, we slowly backed away from the bush, our hearts pounding in our chests as we waited for whatever lurked in the shadows to reveal itself. But as the moments ticked by in tense silence, the forest remained eerily still, leaving us to wonder if it was just our imagination playing tricks on us.

"Let's get out of here," I said, my voice barely above a whisper as I took Kass' hand in mine.

Kass nodded in agreement, her grip tight on the knife at her side as we hurried back to the safety of our makeshift camp. As we disappeared into the depths of the forest, the rustling in the underbrush faded away, leaving nothing behind but the haunting echo of our own footsteps in the undergrowth.

Sitting around the flickering embers of our campfire, Kass and I huddled close together, our faces illuminated by the warm glow of the flames. The forest around us was cloaked in shadow, the rustling of leaves and distant calls of nocturnal creatures serving as a backdrop to our conversation.

Reaching deep into my pocket, I retrieved the tattered scrap of paper, the sole survivor of the inferno that had devoured my childhood home. Unfolding it carefully, I brought it closer to the firelight.

The fire cast dancing shadows across the ravaged parchment clutched in my hands. Across from me, Kass, her brow furrowed in concentration, sat mirroring my posture. Her vibrant eyes, usually sparkling with mischief, were narrowed in thought. Tonight, however, silence reigned, punctuated only by the rhythmic pop of burning logs.

"Still nothing?" Her voice finally broke the quiet, barely a whisper that seemed to struggle against the crackling symphony.

I shook my head, frustration burning in my throat. "It's like staring into a void," I muttered, tracing the grid of numbers with a trembling finger. "Random, meaningless..." My voice trailed off, lost in the symphony of the flames.

This cryptic message, my father's last act before the world went up in smoke, felt like an insurmountable wall. Was it a desperate plea for help, a location of some hidden refuge, or something more? The possibilities were endless, each one as frustrating as the last.

"There has to be a pattern, right?" Kass prodded, ever the optimist. "Maybe it's a substitution cipher? Like each number corresponds to a letter?"

I considered it for a moment. "Too obvious," I countered, "also, there are more than 26 numbers. That's more than the alphabet."

Maybe it was connected to the ancient language of the Aethel people, with its elegant script boasting a mere 29 characters. Or perhaps it was a code used by the resistance fighters in Xiphos, their language a harsh whisper of consonants and clicks. But none of the languages I knew, from the singsong dialect of the Zolan traders to the harsh sounds of the Rylan mountain folk, had more than 40 characters.

Silence descended again, heavy and suffocating. A pang of helplessness washed over me. My heart ached with the weight of my father's absence, and the weight of the responsibility he'd entrusted upon me.

Suddenly, a flicker of excitement lit up Kass' eyes. "Hey," she said, her voice tinged with hope. "What if it's not about letters at all? Maybe the numbers represent something else entirely. Coordinates perhaps?"

My heart jumped at the possibility.

"Coordinates? Like a map to..." My voice trailed off, the answer hanging heavy in the air.

"Like a location your father wanted you to find," Kass finished, a grim realization replacing the excitement in her eyes. "But where would the map be? We can't exactly search his study for clues anymore."

The air hung heavy with the unspoken truth. The house, once a repository of memories and knowledge, was now nothing but a smoldering ruin. The map, if it existed, was likely reduced to ashes alongside my father's life's work. Disappointment settled in my stomach, a bitter counterpoint to the flickering flames before us.

Kass stared into the fire, her face a mask of grim determination. The firelight danced in her eyes, casting an unsettling orange glow on the set of her jaw.

"I want to kill him," she growled, her voice laced with a dangerous edge.

My heart ached for her. It wasn't just the King's cruelty that fueled her anger, it was the fear for her family back in Soothaven. Those… those people she called parents. The ones who never deserved that title. But then there was Leo, her little brother. The bright spot in Kass' often bleak world, the one she spoke of with a rare tenderness.

"Kill the King?" I echoed, my voice barely above a whisper. The very idea sent a shiver down my spine. "Kass, it's not that simple. We cannot just ‚kill him'."

She scoffed, a harsh sound that echoed in the stillness of the night. "Why's that? You got a better plan to overthrow the entire royal guard with your dusty scrolls?"

"No, it's not that," I stammered, my mind racing. "It's... well, it’s said the King binds his soul to the young men he has captured. If you kill him, they die too."

"How so?" Kass sneered.

In the books my father kept hidden, there were rumors of a twisted soul bonding ritual. Once, it was a sacred bond, a testament to love's enduring power. Two souls, intertwined through intricate ceremonies and whispered blessings, achieved a connection that transcended the physical. Joy and sorrow, laughter and tears, all became a shared experience, forging a bond as profound as it was awe-inspiring.

King Alaric was said to have ascended the throne through a perverse manipulation of the arcane art. Consumed by an insatiable hunger for power and a desperate fear of mortality, he saw in it a dark potential – a perversion of its sacred origins. He delved into forbidden rituals, conducted in the dead of night and fueled by dark magic.

"Well, I read somewhere," I said, my voice low, "that in battle, when a searing blade would have cleaved flesh or a brutal blow threatened to shatter bone, the pain wouldn't be his to bear."

Kass eyed me skeptically.

"Instead, one of the prisoners, chosen at random, would experience the blow in its entirety, and it would leave the King virtually unharmed. You would only stop him for a moment. He constantly seeks out new targets to bind himself to, replenishing his... shield, I suppose."

The weight of this knowledge settled on us both, a heavy silence descending upon the campsite. The flames seemed to crackle with a new urgency, casting grotesque shadows that danced on the surrounding trees.

Kass' jaw clenched even tighter, the muscles working beneath the grime on her face.

"A life for a life? Sounds like a fair trade to me."

"It's just a legend, Kass," I pressed, my voice cracking a little. The truth was, the story gnawed at me. It offered a horrifying explanation for the King’s invincibility, one that reeked of dark magic and stolen souls. But there was another, more palatable explanation that I desperately clung to.

"Maybe it's not magic," I offered, more to myself than to her. "Maybe he's just... incredibly good at manipulating people. He's built a massive army, loyal to a fault, who take blows meant for him."

A flicker of hope ignited in my chest, fragile and uncertain. It was a flimsy theory, built on shaky ground, but it was the only one that allowed me to sleep at night, the only one that didn't paint the King as a monster fueled by stolen lives.

Kass didn't reply, just stared into the fire, her face illuminated by the dancing flames. I couldn't read her expression, but a knot of unease tightened in my stomach. Maybe, deep down, I was in denial. The legend was too horrifying to contemplate, and the alternative, a ruthless, manipulative warlord, was a bitter pill to swallow.

"Maybe," Kass conceded finally, the fire in her eyes dimming slightly. "But if that's true, the prisoners are also his puppets."

We sat in silence for a tense moment, the only sound the crackling fire and the occasional snap of a twig in the distance. The weight of Kass' words hung heavy in the air.

"So, killing him is pointless," Kass finally said, her voice devoid of its earlier fire. "Just buys him a bit more time to find new victims."

"There has to be another way," I repeated, a newfound determination filling my voice. We may not be able to strike him down directly, but perhaps there was a way to sever the bonds, to break the magic that kept him in power. "The scrolls, maybe they're the key to bringing him down. Not with violence, but with something... smarter."

Kass raised an eyebrow, a hint of skepticism lingering in her gaze.

"Smarter, huh? Like what? A strongly worded letter?"

"I don't know yet," I admitted, frustration creeping into my voice. "But there has to be a way to use what we have, what my father entrusted us with, to bring about change without resorting to bloodshed."

Kass sighed, the tension slowly draining from her body.

"Fine," she conceded, leaning back against the rough bark of the tree behind her. "But if your fancy book learnin' doesn't pan out, I'm holding you to finding another target."

As the crackling flames of the campfire began to wane, Kass and I settled down for the night, our bodies weary from the day's trials. The soothing sounds of the forest enveloped us like a comforting blanket, lulling us into a state of drowsy contentment.

But just as sleep began to claim us, another faint rustling in the bushes nearby caught our attention. For a moment, we exchanged a wary glance, our senses on high alert as we strained to catch any sign of movement in the darkness beyond.

"It's probably just a rabbit or a squirrel," I whispered, my voice tinged with uncertainty as I tried to reassure myself as much as my companion.

Kass nodded in agreement, though the tension in her muscles betrayed her unease. With a resigned sigh, we settled back against the soft earth, our eyelids heavy with exhaustion as we drifted off into an uneasy sleep, our dreams haunted by the specter of unseen dangers lurking in the shadows.