The elder stood in the doorway, faint red lines marking his face like veins of dusk under his weathered skin. Two guards flanked him, their expressions hard and watchful.
“Seize him,” the elder ordered, his tone leaving no room for argument.
Henry’s stomach dropped as the guards moved forward, gripping his arms.
“Wait—what’s going on?” he stammered, his voice edged with confusion.
“You’re under suspicion,” the elder replied, his gaze cold and assessing. “Since you arrived, the mist’s curse has only grown. We can’t ignore the possibility that you brought this upon us.”
Henry opened his mouth to protest, but Elara flew forward, placing herself between him and the elder with wild, furious energy.
“Oh, no, no, no! Are you out of your foggy mind?” she screeched, her wings vibrating furiously. “Henry is as innocent as a rainbow at dawn! As blameless as a squirrel in a daisy field! As pure as… as pure as a potato!”
The elder’s expression barely softened.
“We can’t take chances,” he insisted.
Elara raised a finger, a mischievous smile creeping across her face.
“What if we strike a deal?” Her eyes glinted with a spark of madness, as though she were concocting a plan only she could see.
The elder’s brow arched. “A deal?”
“Yes!” Elara announced dramatically, as though revealing the answer to all the world’s problems. “Let us do something useful—dangerous even. If we succeed, you let Henry go.”
The elder looked at her with reluctant curiosity.
“And why should I trust you?”
She put her hands on her hips, nodding with utmost seriousness.
“Because I am a fairy, wise elder, and fairies are bound by the ancient, unbreakable law of…” she paused, staring up at the ceiling with a puzzled frown. “Um… snacks? No, no, promises! Yes! Bound by the ancient, unbreakable law of promises!”
Henry shot her a look, but the elder seemed to weigh her words. At last, he gestured to the guards, who released Henry with reluctant sighs.
“A boy went missing after the last attack,” the elder said, his voice softening. “If you can bring him back, I may reconsider.”
Once outside, Henry took a steadying breath, the weight of his freedom settling over him. Elara bobbed around him like a hummingbird on a sugar high, her wings catching the last rays of sunset in tiny, rainbow-colored prisms.
“Well, that was easy! See? Just a little fairy finesse, and everything’s fine! Now, my spoon-wielding knight, are you ready to rescue a child from the misty clutches of doom?”
Henry left the inn, feeling the crisp evening air settle around him, with Elara bobbing and whirling beside him like a chaotic, brightly colored hummingbird. Her wings caught the last rays of sunset, flickering like tiny prisms as she spun in lazy circles, a reminder of how far he was from his old life.
“Oh, the stars are going to be cranky tonight!” she announced, raising her hands to the sky as if scolding the clouds. “They were just complaining about the clouds stealing all the good views. Stars can be awfully petty, you know?”
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Henry let out a low chuckle. He hadn’t quite figured out how to respond to her off-the-wall remarks, but he didn’t mind. For the first time in what felt like forever, he wasn’t in a sterile hospital room or tethered to a bed by tubes and wires, or beaten to a pulp. He wasn’t just lying down, waiting for bad news, waiting to feel worse.
The inn and the elder’s house sat at the heart of the village, oddly untouched by the destruction. Villagers moved cautiously around the area, some whispering their thanks when he passed. Only now did he notice a broken-down house nearby and realize most of the town had taken a serious hit.
“Isn’t it funny?” Elara mused, eyeing a passing chicken like it held the secrets of the universe. “The mist must have whispered to these houses, ‘No, no, not you. I’ve decided you’re too… quaint.’”
Shaking his head, he kept walking, his eyes scanning the path ahead. But even as he moved forward, his mind was somewhere else, bouncing between the present and the past. Compared to everything he’d gone through in that hospital—constant tests, sterile smells, cold beeping monitors—this felt… easier.
As he turned to leave the village, Elara flitted close behind. Storm clouds that had gathered at the edge of town unleashed a torrential downpour, soaking him to the bone.
Henry glanced back at the inn and thought of the warm fire crackling inside. For the first time, he missed the sterile quiet of his hospital room—the steady beeps, the pale fluorescent lights, the certainty of a world confined by four walls.
An hour later, they’d made little progress. The forest paths seemed to twist back on themselves, and strange shadows flickered in his peripheral vision, yet nothing materialized. Frustration gnawed at him, but before he could voice it, Elara zipped in front, eyes wide and grin unrestrained.
“Oho! Onward we go, Sir Henry of Completely Drenched and Totally Lost!” she crowed, throwing her arms wide as though she were leading a royal procession. Her wings flared with each word, casting sharp, quick rainbow glints across his muddy path. “I’ll take point—I always know where I’m going! Lost or not, doesn’t matter!” She shot off like a comet, all energy, her enthusiasm completely undampened by the rain.
Henry sighed, trudging forward as rain pattered down, drenching the world in murky grays and cold shadows. The path was little more than a stream of mud now, winding through dark trees that seemed to lean closer with every step.
“So, Elara, there’s gotta be more to this wand than just consuming mists,” he said, holding it up as if it might answer him itself. “I mean, it summoned that monster rat. What else can it do?”
Elara flitted around him in a blur, her grin sharp as the edge of a blade. Her voice dropped to a near whisper, a haunting melody in the rain.
“More than you can ask,” she murmured, eyes gleaming with something almost feral. “The wand’s secrets aren’t for mortal minds to know so easily. It does what shadows dream, and it dreams in silence.”
Henry squinted at her, more confused than ever. “Right… So how does that help me get stronger?”
She gave him a sly smile, darting close and tapping the wand lightly.
“Ah, strength—an old word for a new hunger,” she said, her voice lilting like a strange lullaby. “To fill it, you’ll need what the night hides, what daylight fears. Feed it whispers, feed it glimpses of the unseen. The wand only grows when you grow too hungry to look away.”
He frowned, trying to decipher her words.
“So… I’m supposed to feed it the mists and gems?”
Elara laughed, a sound that sent chills through him.
“Oh, the mists, the gems, shadows of things long lost, and pieces of those not yet found. You’ll feed it, but don’t think it will fill itself quietly.” She floated backward, her wings casting fleeting rainbow glints over the damp ground. “The wand is an open mouth, and it won’t close for your comfort.”
Henry shivered, clutching the wand tighter. Something about her words lingered, unsettling and dark, like a promise he didn’t remember making. If he fed it, if he grew stronger… but what would he be sacrificing? The thought that this might all be a fever dream, just a bizarre hallucination, tempted him, but each drop of rain felt too real, each shadow too sharp.
Elara’s gaze didn’t waver. She flipped in midair, her grin growing wider.
“Oh, Sir Henry of Doubts and Dread! The wand will drink, as all thirsts must. But listen close, for the path you’re on winds darker than you know.” She held his gaze, her voice dropping to a murmur like a secret. “And with each gift you claim, another will ask for you.”
She spun off into the shadows, laughter trailing behind her, leaving Henry alone in the rain, her riddles tangled in his thoughts like vines tightening around him.
“Oh Henrikins. I think you’ll enjoy this.”
As he followed her through the trees they emerged into a wide open clearing in the middle of the forest.
A red cloud of mists and thunder descended into the forest clearing, crimson tendrils swirling as the storm darkened overhead. Henry tightened his grip on the wand, feeling its worn wood pulse under his fingers. This was it—his chance to take charge of his own destiny.