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6: The Village, part 1

Darkness wrapped around Henry like a living shroud, cold and suffocating. He stood alone in the familiar fog of the mists, its eerie silence pressing down on him.

But then, a faint sound—a whisper, barely audible—cut through the void. His heart sank as he recognized it, that soft, lilting hum that belonged to his little sister. Her voice echoed out of the darkness, trembling and childlike.

“Henry… where are you?”

He turned, desperation flaring in his chest.

“I’m here! I’m right here!” he shouted, straining to see through the thick fog. But the mists swirled around him, shifting and blocking his view, like they were alive, like they were hiding something from him. He pushed forward, heart pounding, each step feeling heavier, weighed down by something more than the dark mist.

Then he saw her.

She stood just ahead, her small form barely visible through the shroud. Her face was turned down, her shoulders slumped, her hands hanging limply at her sides. Relief flooded him, and he stumbled toward her, reaching out.

“Hey, it’s okay! I’m here now,” he whispered, forcing his voice to stay steady. But as he drew closer, the hairs on the back of his neck stood up. There was something… wrong. Her skin was pale, too pale, with veins dark as ink spidering out from her neck and creeping across her cheeks. Her hands twitched, fingers extending, curling into sharp, skeletal claws.

She looked up, and Henry’s heart lurched. Her eyes—empty, dark, filled with a hollow void—met his, and her lips twisted into a grotesque grin, sharp teeth jutting out at impossible angles. A soft, deranged laughter bubbled up from her throat, shattering the silence.

“Henry,” she crooned, her voice fractured, echoing like multiple voices layered on top of each other. “Why did you leave me?”

“No, no… this isn’t real. This can’t be real!” He backed away, his breath coming in shallow gasps as his hands trembled. But her laughter grew, rising in pitch, filling the air until it felt like it was piercing his skull.

“You let me die, Henry,” she whispered, her voice turning cold. “You left me all alone.”

The mists thickened around her, swirling faster, and her form twisted, morphing into a hideous figure, her limbs stretching and cracking, bones jutting out at unnatural angles. She lunged forward, clawed hands reaching, a ravenous hunger in her hollow eyes. He stumbled back, tripping over his own feet as she closed in, her laughter turning into a shriek that rattled his bones.

“Stay back!” he shouted, but his voice was swallowed by the mist. She was on him in an instant, skeletal fingers digging into his arms, her grip like iron. Her face, now inches from his, contorted into a mask of rage and agony. The twisted grin never left her lips.

“Don’t you love me, Henry?” she whispered, her words dripping with venom, her face splitting open, dark mist pouring from the gaping maw beneath her skin. He tried to scream, but no sound came out. Her claws sank deeper, icy and sharp, piercing his flesh, tearing him open.

In that final, horrifying instant, he saw the mists wrapping around him, consuming him, his own face reflected in her hollow, endless gaze.

“Henry wake up! I don’t like this!” Elara said in a sing-song voice.

He woke with a start, breath ragged, the cold sweat clinging to him like a second skin. The room was still, the dark walls pressing in close around him. He tried to steady his breathing, but his heart hammered on, his mind replaying the nightmare in jagged fragments.

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“You… you’re really great at timing,” he muttered, his voice still a little shaky.

She giggled, her wings flickering with iridescent light. “Oh, you looked like you needed a wake-up call. Besides, nightmares are overrated. Reality is just as scary.”

Henry sighed, glancing at her with a mix of exasperation and something closer to resignation. Rest had eased the ache in his bones, but it hadn’t dulled the raw memory of what the villagers had done to him. They had beaten him within an inch of his life, leaving him bruised, bloodied, and barely able to stand—all because they saw him as some kind of curse.

He shifted, hugging the surprisingly comfortable pillow and burrowing deeper, as if he could hide from the world a little longer. The bruises throbbed with every movement, a grim reminder that the villagers wouldn’t hesitate to take out their frustrations on him. Maybe he should just give up on trying to save people, his hero career over before it began.

He glanced over at Elara, who hovered near the dim light, casting odd, flickering shadows across his face. Her wings shimmered with each beat, a mesmerizing sight that almost made him forget the hostility outside this room. The villagers had told him stories about fairies—wise, ancient beings who once held the mists at bay with grace and dignity.

There had been an almost holy reverence in their words, as if the fairies had been sacred protectors. But here was Elara, embodying none of those ideals, like she’d forgotten or simply never cared.

“Elara,” he started slowly, “What happened to the other fairies? Where are the others? You're not alone are you?”

Elara’s eyes widened as if the concept had just hit her. “Last? Goodness, that sounds so lonely!” She hugged herself dramatically, casting her gaze skyward. “All by my lonesome, a little glowing beacon in this vast and foggy world—like a firefly at a funeral! Oh, it’s so dreary, isn’t it?”

She sighed, twirling until she spun herself dizzy, then let her wings go slack, just enough to drift in lazy circles. “People thought we could keep monsters away,” she admitted, her voice dropping an octave, as if she were delivering some grand revelation. “They’d leave little toadstool pies and sing songs about our shimmering light. They wanted us to be… guardians.” She leaned closer, whispering, “But me? I’m like the discount guardian who showed up at closing time.”

Henry raised an eyebrow. “So… they didn’t worship you specifically?”

“Oh no,” she said, a cheeky grin spreading across her face. “I mean, can you imagine? Me, sitting on some throne, handing out blessings like some wish-granting tulip? How drab! But they liked the idea of us, you know?” She fluffed her hair, which instantly fell back into disarray. “These poor souls just wanted to believe in something to keep the mists away. And here I am—last of the little glimmers, barely enough fairy dust to light a corner.”

Henry watched her float around, captivated by her randomness. “But why help me?”

“Why?” She spun upside down, her grin turning coy. “Because you’re special! You’re like one of those wide-eyed kittens who hasn’t learned to dodge the rain yet. Besides,” she added, her voice softening as she landed on his shoulder, “just because I’m not some grand guardian doesn’t mean I don’t care.” She poked him on the forehead with a feather-light touch. “And don’t get too mopey, Henry. You’ve survived this long, haven’t you? That’s worth something in my book!”

As he chuckled, still caught off-guard by her answer, she clapped her hands, her brightness returning. “Now! Enough about me! There’s a whole village to uncover, curses to break, and perhaps even a splendidly shiny fairy relic lying around. You’ll have to worship me properly if we find it!”

Henry rolled his eyes but couldn’t help grinning as he got to his feet. She flashed him a mock-solemn look, wings fluttering as if she were a queen bestowing knighthood. With a playful smirk, she flitted in front of him, eyes dancing with mischief.

“Oh, don’t thank me just yet. After all, maybe I’m just here to keep you guessing!” She winked and gave him a flamboyant salute, vanishing in a glimmer, only to reappear above his head, as if she’d never left.

He dressed quickly, pulling on the heavy, scratchy layers of medieval clothing that hung loosely on him, still feeling as if the remnants of the dream clung to his skin. He moved to the door, hesitating as he reached for the handle, his thoughts racing. But the distant murmur of voices pulled him from his thoughts, his curiosity sparking at the sound of two villagers speaking just outside.

Henry pressed himself against the doorframe, listening intently as the two villagers continued in hushed, conspiratorial tones.