He knocked on a thick oak door and entered when instructed
to by a familiar vocie. Inside were the three village elders and
Lysander sharing a glass of wine around a a rectangular table
made of wood.
‘Oh, it is Theseus! Come sit with us!’ Lysander smiled and
pointed to an empty chair besides him.
‘You are late,’ said a grumpy village elder named Hesperos,
he wasn’t really liked by anyone though his advice was highly
respected.
‘Cut him some slack, he visited the family of the deceased,’
Lysander said.
‘A friend that he himself had killed by his own foolishness,’
Hesperos snorted with mockery.
‘Yes, that same fool that had rebuilt this village, thereby
granting you your title and status. Know your place,’ Lysander
responded.
‘Relax, we are not here to discuss the culprit behind Aris-
taeus’s death, nor do I blame you for it, Theseus,’ said Xenophon
grinning, the youngest of the three, today he was wearing a
simple white Himation, ‘Anyway, Theseus, our idea is that I
would personally meet with the oracle of Larissa while you and
Lysander would do the same with the oracle of Alexandria in
Egypt.’
‘Wait, is that it? I thought we would be discussing much
more than just who goes where,’ Theseus asked
‘No, we just wanted to know whether you’d be okay with an-
other journey. Without a positive response from you the remain-
ing decisions would be meaningless. This task would include at
least two weeks of travelling,’ Xenophon laughed.
‘I am okay with it but I would need to buy a ship.’
‘Or borrow a ship Aristaeus’s family,’ Lysander cut him off,
‘For the purpose of investigating his death I am sure the family
wouldn’t mind...’
‘Theseus, I will be in charge of convincing Lyria to give you
the ship. You just need to take it upon yourself to travel to Alexan-
dria. I need a final answer,’ Xenophon said.
‘Yes, I will go.’
‘Splendid, we will arrange everything. Also, there should
be a lot of scholars and priests in Alexandria, hopefully one of
them could help you remove the necklace.’
‘Alright then. Thank you all for helping me.’
It was decided that Lysander and Theseus would depart the first
morning after the funeral of Aristaeus; they all shook hands and
went back home.
‘How did it go?’ Shiraz asked.
‘Fine, I was a bit late,’ he chuckled, ‘But they decided that
Lysander and I must travel to Alexandria of Egypt after Aris-
taeus’s funeral. They said it should take at least two weeks, one
whole week at sea per direction and then the time we would actually spend in Alexandria itself. The purpose of the trip is to
ask Alexandria’s oracle for their opinion about Aristaeus’s death
and maybe also about this necklace. I hope it wouldn’t prove to
be too difficult... I am sorry to leave you again, my love.’
‘Oh...’ Shiraz gazed downwards for a split second, ‘I un-
derstand. This is important, just... Just promise me that you’ll
come back to me, okay? And I expect to get a nice souvenir!’ She
winked.
‘Thank you for understanding. I promise to do both. Don’t
worry, I will be okay. I love you,’ he smiled.
‘Me too,’ Shiraz hugged him tightly.
‘This will be my final adventure. I have already had my fair
share of them and now I wish to rest. You deserve that, both of
us do.’
‘And finally start a family,’ she chuckled.
‘And start a family,’ he chuckled in response.
Aristaeus’s funeral had finally taken place engulfed by songs of
sorrow and weeping of women, children and believe it or not,
men as well. As nothing but the skull was found the villagers
had prepared a tiny coffin, big enough to store it, and buried it
underground. The funeral ended with a commemorative feast.
Xenophon succeeded in convincing Lyria to donate the boat to
the cause.
Our protagonists set sail for Alexandria on first light, paus-
ing from time to time in opportune ports for supplies or simply
to to wait out bad weather. Honorable mention ports would be
Piraeus, Rhodes or the port of Byblos, the grand Phoenician port-
city. As they had finally approached Alexandria they witnessed
one of the seven wonders of the world, the grand ‘Lighthouse
of Alexandria’. Made of white stone it rose majestically and re-
flected the sun; every ship looked like a toy in comparison. They
docked their ship at the eastern side of the port and in front of
them laid a magnificent variety of ships. Ships of different sizes
and designs, unloading goods and passengers from all around
the world.
‘Theseus, could we grab a bite to eat before we start looking
for oracles? I am fucking starving.’
‘Sure, why not? I would love some lunch.’
They entered the market and with that were immediately im-
mersed in its smells and noise. Smells of fresh and exotic fruits,
vegetables, spices, meat and fish, sweets and snacks. Vendors
were shouting in many different languages trying to sell their
wares like grain, ivory and African gemstones; spices and in-
cense from the Middle East; wine and oil from Greece; silk and
jade from the Far East. Their noses were quickly engulfed by a
full mix of aromas, and their mouths? Watering. Lysander was
the one affected the most by this spectacle, gazing (and staring)
at a stall of roasted and skewered meat, the smell of which was
nothing but incredible; that of lamb meat and fat sizzling above
hot coals. This amazing aroma was ultimately enhanced by its
mix with the smell of local dates and apricots being sold in an-
other stall two meters away. The sweet smell mingling with that
of the smoke, what a day to be alive! If only they could manage
to avoid the mass of beggars asking them for coin. That, or the
incredible noise of vendors yelling out in an attempt to convince
them to buy something. The secret was to ignore, politely or not,
you ask? That would depend entirely on you, my friend.
‘So much variety I don’t even know where to begin!’
‘If you are looking for something to eat I know just the spot!’
a stranger’s voice suddenly caught their attention, radiating
confidence, ‘I actually planned to go there right now if you’d
care to join me! Do you like good Egyptian Hummus? Oh, who
am I kidding, who in their right mind doesn’t?! Come on, I’ll
show you,’ a friendly smile appeared on his face.
‘Oh, okay! What’s your name? Nice to meet you, I am
Lysander, and this is my friend Theseus,’ he extended his hand
in greeting and smiled brightly.
‘I am Nethanel, it is a pleasure to meet you,’ he said, shaking
both of their hands, ‘Interesting. Those are Hellenic names,
you’re tourists aren’t you? It would be my pleasure to introduce
my country to both of you,’ he smiled.
Nethanel led them to the restaurant.
‘Yes, we came here to seek out a scholar or an oracle. We
believe they could help us with a couple of issues we have at
home.’
‘Oh, sounds like an incredible adventure! I hope you man-
age to find someone appropriate.’ He said encouragingly, ‘Oh,
we are here!’ He stopped in front of the entrance, inviting them
in.
‘Herete, Nati, how are you doing today?’ The owner shook
Nethanel’s hand, ‘And who are these fine gentlemen you have
brought here with you?’
‘Two travelers I met a few minutes ago. They were hungry
so I invited them to join me,’ a light grin appeared on his face.
‘Nice to meet you,’ he extended his arm and shook their
hands, ‘Please, take a seat and decide what you’d like to eat,’ he
said, gesturing towards an empty table and then departed with
a respectful nod.
They took their seats and looked at the menu, overwhelmed by
the quantity of fine choices.
‘Say, Nethane—,’ Theseus began asking.
‘Please, call me Nati. We are friends already, aren’t we?
There is no need for such formality,’ he said with a smile.
‘Okay then. Nati, what do you recommend? There are too
many options,’ he said with a slight laugh.
‘Honestly? You can’t go wrong with a Pita and a dish of
‘Hummus’ and lamb meat.’
Theseus and Lysander nodded excitedly in agreement.
‘Khufu, we are ready to order,’ Nethanel called.
The owner handed them flatbread accompanied by a dish of
Hummus adorned with an island of lamb meat cooked to per-
fection, surrounded by an ocean of olive oil. Music of many
different genres was playing while they dipped the flatbread in
the Hummus. They shared a few laughs and chatted about their
lives. Nethanel worked as a security guard and also volunteered
with terminally-ill people in his spare time. They finished their
meals entirely, demonstrated by their fully empty plates, and
went looking for the owner alongside their new friend. They
paid, thanked him and left the restaurant, though not before
asking him for the recipe of course. Nethanel extended his harm
with a smile, showing his gratitude for their time together.
‘It’s been a pleasure getting to know you both. Who knows?
Maybe we’ll cross paths again!’ He said
They shook hands firmly before parting ways.
‘He is a great guy, isn’t he? Also I really enjoyed that Hum-
mus,’ Lysander said, ‘Oh, wait,’ he said and signalled Theseus to
move to the right side of the street, to open the way for a woman
carrying a basket of apples, ‘And the juicy meat really added a lot
to the flavor. Though it was really frustrating sometimes when
I couldn’t for the life of me manage to grab both Hummus and
meat at the same time. It kept fucking slipping off!’ He laughed.
‘Absolutely,’ Theseus grinned and laughed, ‘It was really
good. I can’t wait give Shiraz the recipe and eat more at home.’
‘Definitely a warm welcome to such a majestic city. This city
appears to have literally anything one could ever want! And the
ladies... Don’t even let me start! I might end up taking one of
them with me on our way back,’ Lysander laughed.
Theseus laughed in response. Suddenly, they heard the shouting
of an unfamiliar voice. It was an elderly woman vendor.
‘Jewelry from all four corners of the world! Sparkling dia-
monds, radiant rubies, and royal Lapis Lazuli. Buy them for
your wives, your mothers, your sisters, hell, buy some for your-
selves! The perfect gift to embellish beauty!’
Theseus’s attention was caught by the sight of glistening stones
resting on her stall.
‘Give me a minute, I want to buy Shiraz a gift,’ Theseus
approached the stall and was immediately greeted by an array
of jewelry ranging from emerald necklaces to diamond rings.
‘What would you have?’ The vendor welcomed him, ‘We have
this ring with sapphires as blue as the Mediterranean Sea or this
bracelet with lush green emeralds. Or what about this ring with
a beautiful diamond? It looks like a star in a cage!’
She handed him the ring. The surface of the diamond was ex-
ceptionally smooth, polished to a mirror-like sheen.
‘I am not sure,’ Theseus began playing with the ring with
his fingers, admiring its beauty, ‘This diamond is beautiful but I
seek something beyond just beauty, something with a deeper
meaning... Something that could showcase my love.’
‘I think I have just the thing for you. Give me a second, dear,’
the vendor turned around, picked up a beautifully decorated
wooden box from which she took out two necklaces and then
gently put it back in place, ‘I have these two necklaces, adorned
with ‘Prostasia‘ stones. Have you ever heard of them?’
‘Prostasia stones? Ah, yes! I heard of a legend that when
one of them is harme—,’ he began saying but was quickly cut
off by the merchant.
‘It is a Greek stone that is quite unique, when you break it
it emits light as strong as a torch! But also there is a beautiful legend that says that it is possible to connect two of these stones
in a unique bond. Cracking one of them causes the one it is
bonded with to glow as well. It is basically a symbol of unity,
protection and care. All you would need is an oracle to bless
them for this work,’ she said.
‘Interesting, I like that. I’ll take them, how much do they
cost?’
‘Let me check in my book. Ah, about 300 Drachmas, but
because you’re a handsome lad I’ll give them to you for 500 in
total. What do you say?’
‘Oh, sure, thank you!’ He laughed and paid.
He returned to Lysander.
‘Look at this,’ he said, showing Lysander one of the neck-
laces, ‘What do you think?’ An excited and childish smile ap-
peared on his face.
‘Is that... A Prostasia stone?’ Lysander asked while examin-
ing it.
‘Oh, good, at least you can recognize it, phew! I liked the
idea behind it and Shiraz loves special jewelry. Could you hold
on to this one until we come back home? It could come in handy
if we get lost in dark place somewhere.’
‘You made a fine choice. Yes, sure,’ Lysander smiled.
‘Thank you,’ he said and smiled back.
They ultimately decided to stay in the market for a little while,
leisurely strolling around the bustling market, (not so quietly)
admiring the colorful fabrics and enticing perfumes. Each and
every stall that was selling clothes was very eagerly browsed
through by the pair, as they tried out everything that looked
exotic enough. After around two and a half hours they had
finally decided to finish their tour and look for an oracle or a
scholar.
‘This city is so magnificent and intoxicating! Honestly, I
don’t want to leave!’ Lysander said, laughing.
‘Neither do I. I thin-’ Theseus laughed in response but stopped
mid-sentence.
‘Please let us go!’ They heard the plea of an elderly peasant
woman from across the street, ‘We have done nothing wrong.
They were the ones who attacked us!’
‘Quit your blabbering, woman,’ a soldier bitch-slapped her
with the back of his hand.
While nine fully-armored soldiers were staring and laughing at
her, another soldier was poking his sword at the bloodied back of
a young man. He was forcing him into a caged wagon occupied
by eight other peasants with nothing but despair in their empty
eyes, gazing at each other. One of them was Nethanel, our pair’s
new friend from before, who appeared to have been thoroughly
beaten up. The soldier ultimately slammed the metal door shut
with a ‘bang’ of corrupt authority.
‘What is Nati doing there?! He doesn’t look like the type
who would do what these soldiers were claiming... Something
just doesn’t feel right... They were acting like goons rather than
soldiers, look at how they were laughing at the woman. It’s
disgusting!’ Lysander clenched his fists and grinded his teeth
in anger.
‘And what do you think we should do? We are completely
unarmed in enemy territory, do you suggest we follow them or
something?’ He noticed a smile appeared on Lysander’s face,
like a light bulb was suddenly lit above his head, ‘Oh Malaka,
seriously?!’
Lysander saw two soldiers get on the wagon while the rest went
their separate ways.
‘Quick, make a decision. They are leaving,’ he said, urg-
ing Theseus to rush his thinking process while the wagon went
further away, jolting and swaying along the stone street, the
prisoners’ cries fading, ‘We don’t have much time!’ Lysander
urged him harder, ‘It’s almost out of view!’
‘Alright! Fine, fine! I hope he is okay...’
They started walking fast toward the wagon, trying not to lose
track of it but also not attract its driver’s attention. As the pris-
oners’ pleas grew fainter they had ultimately decided to run
until they were close enough and then controlled their pace to
match that of the wagon, staying just about three meters be-
hind. Theseus and Lysander followed as silently as possible, the
road’s limestone gave way to hot sand roads; the housing density
around them decreased every few meters and the sounds of civi-
lization had been fading alongside it. Turn after turn the wagon
entered isolation, with only a few people passing by; most of
what they could see was sand, occasional trees and yet more
sand stretching toward the hazed horizon.
After an hour the bleak landscape had finally changed, ob-
structed by the sight of a lone fortress; made from the same pale
limestone used all around the city, it stood proud in the mid-
dle of absolutely nothing. Its size was close enough to that of
the aforementioned lighthouse, enough to render it remarkably
formidable. Reinforced by towers, barred by heavy iron gates
and guarded by countless archers who were positioned atop
stone platforms, it looked impenetrable. Two guards, armed
with spears, were standing next to the main gate and approached
the wagon. When it passed its security check the gate was
opened ever-so-slightly, allowing it to enter before immediately
closing shut. Lysander’s face was filled with uneasiness.
‘What could warrant such defenses? Getting anywhere near
these walls would reward us with an arrow straight to the face!’
He muttered.
‘Let’s circle around it, maybe we could find a breach or a
spot that is not guarded well enough. We have to do this quickly.’
Theseus replied.
Crouching low, Theseus and Lysander began trudge around the
fortress hoping to find a weakness. The sun’s slow descent to-
ward the dunes shortened their window of opportunity. With
nothing but the light of dusk they were tracing their fingers across the smooth stone walls and finally, Lysander had man-
aged to find a crevice.
‘Hey, Theseus, I found something,’ Lysander whispered.
‘Let’s go,’ Theseus replied with a spark of hope in his heart.
They started widening the fissure with a small knife until it was
large enough for them to enter. Slipping inside they were struck
by the sight of an incredible number of people who were acting
strangely normal. Why ‘strangely’, you ask? Because the inside
was engulfed by utter darkness, with a hint of light from the
fading sun, and none of them was using any torch or a light
source. On the left were the two metal doors from which the
wagon had entered, its current location unknown. Theseus,
opening his eyes broadly in an attempt to gather as many rays of
light as possible, managed to identify the entrance to the main
building of the fort. It was protected by four heavily armored
guards, ready to slash down any who would dare trespass.
‘What do you think is behind? This place is so weird. We have
to take these guys out somehow. Hmm...’ Lysander pondered.
‘Aye. Hey, over there, I see a weapon rack. Let’s borrow
something,’ he pointed and led his friend there, both crouching.
They both took a dagger, ideal for a stealth mission.
‘How do you reckon they see anything? It is so fucking dark
over here...’ Lysander asked.
‘Honestly I have no idea but we could use this for our advan-
tage. Do you still have that necklace I gave you?’
‘Yes, why?’
‘I have a plan. We’ll sneak a bit closer to them and when I
tell you, crack the stone with your dagger and throw it in front
of those four. Their pupils should be dilated enough to get tem-
porarily blinded by the sudden light. Got it?’
‘Ingenius! Alright, let’s do it!’ Lysander took of the necklace
and held it in the palm of his left hand, the dagger on the ready
with his right hand.
They took their time, not because of of laziness but because they
must stay completely quiet. After a few minutes of sneaking further and futher in the middle of the fort, they were close
enough to execute their plan. They hid behind a big wooden box
that was hugging the wall about three meters away from the
left-most guard. Then, Theseus signalled him to stop.
‘Copy me,’ he said.
Lysander nodded. Theseus ripped off a piece of fiber from his
sleeve and wore it around his eyes like a headband.
‘This should prevent us from getting blinded. It isn’t perfect
but we don’t really have a better choice.’
Lysander nodded again and did the same. When they were both
done trying out a new fashion trend Theseus signalled his friend
to be ready by raising his hand in the air. Suddenly, he swiftly
dropped it in a way to say ‘Go!’. Lysander obliged, pierced the
stone with the tip of the dagger and quickly threw it toward the
guards.
‘Now, we wait,’ Theseus whispered.
‘Oh, what is this noise? I think something fell next to us,’ a
guard said.
‘I can’t see a fucking thing. I swear what is the fucking point
of putting us here on guard duty without giving us a torch?! We
are fucking useless in this darkness!’ Another guard said.
‘Beats me! Eh, forget it. If it were something important
one of the masters would have told us to pick it up already,’ the
left-most guard shouted.
‘Yes, I agree. It makes no sen-. Oh, fuck! My eyes! My eyes!’
Another guard started saying and then shouted in pain.
‘What the fuck is this?!’ The right-most guard shouted, cov-
ering his eyes.
But it was too late for them as they had already been blinded by
our Lysander’s DIY flash-bang grenade. The pair counted four
seconds, allowing their semi-covered eyes to slowly get the hang
of things; then charged in with their daggers drawn. They knew
they didn’t have enough time for a fully fleshed out battle, their only choice was to slit their throats from behind and then quietly
get inside the building. Hot blood welled up around the blades;
they pulled the guards from their coats and rested their bodies
behind the box. They stripped down two guards and put on
their armor, just in case. And then, with one final final nod, they
rushed toward the metal doors and opened them with a slow
and silent motion. They had hoped to finally be met with a shed
of light, but it was to no avail as the inside was even darker still;
they turned back, picked up the broken necklace and stepped
inside, accompanied by only the sounds of their footsteps and
the ominous aura that was engulfing their worried minds. They
sauntered through seemingly endless halls, hoping to locate
their friend and hopefully free the other prisoners too.
Suddenly, they came across an enormous empty room, its
metal doors fully open, creepily silent. There was a crest they
couldn’t recognize engraved onto the wall in the middle, an in-
verted ‘V‘ colored in silver cut by a symbol reminiscent of a goat’s
head. Lysander grasped his friend’s arm, afraid of what this
could entail. They approached it and Theseus used the broken
necklace as a torch, trying to find any secrets hidden around the
crest. Having found nothing, they lowered their guard. Theseus
put the ‘torch‘ in the middle of the room, as a light source, and
they began exploring it.
‘Look at this,’ Lysander pointed at something.
He found something that resembled a hatch or a small cellar
door, colored in the same color as the floor, probably for the
purpose of obscuring it. Theseus picked up the necklace and
held it close to the hatch in an attempt to find its handle. They
traced their fingers across it, trying to locate any budge or some-
thing they could pull, until finally they had found some sort of
latch. They grabbed it together, synced their breaths and pulled
in one powerful motion. It was fully opened but unfortunately
made a metallic creaking sound. The nervous gaze of Theseus
to his comrade had a very clear message, ‘We must get inside
before someone comes to investigate the noise’. Lysander nodded and they stepped inside, closing the hatch silently behind
them; they turned around to see what had been hiding inside.
Apparently, it was an exhaustingly-long staircase descending
into what seemed like the void. Theseus looked at his compan-
ion, seeking approval to delve deeper in. Lysander nodded and
let him go first, with him following from behind for protection
(and probably many other excuses). With every second’s passing
the temperature had felt lower alongside the strength of the
stone’s effect. They were not certain whether it was because of
the sheer absence of light or because of a certain limit that its
light had possessed. They grew anxious, clenching their daggers
slightly harder with each and every step forward. All they had
was themselves, daggers, silence and a diminishing sole source
of light.
‘I have a bad feeling about this place,’ Lysander mumbled
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worriedly.
‘Fuck!’ Theseus yelled.
‘What happened? Are you okay?’ Lysander jumped in his
place and grabbed his dagger firmly.
‘I am okay but this annoying amulet started biting me out
of the blue. It used to be weak but now I really felt it.’
‘Oh,’ Lysander laughed, ‘Oh, phew, I thought you got hurt
by something.’
‘Let’s continue.’
They began hearing strange noises coming from the end of the
staircase and picked up their pace to investigate. Singing, blar-
ing horns, drums thumping and occasional laughter. The neck-
lace’s light faded completely. Having reached the last step their
path had ended by a semi-cliff in front of an enormous cave;
the lower floor was filled with human corpses and long rivers
of blood; an ominous aura and metallic smell in the air. They
heard chilling screams of women, men and children who were
chained in the center of the cave, being raped and slashed vi-
ciously. Lysander and Theseus froze in place from utter shock.
Their attention was suddenly caught by the screams of a woman in the far-left corner. Two vampires were raping her, one from
the front and one from the back. Being annoyed by the noise
she was making one of them opened his mouth, revealing his
sharp teeth, and then bit off her vocal cords; she died almost
instantly, gurgling up blood that oozed out of her neck.
A muscular bare-chested vampire grabbed a pregnant woman
from her hair and then threw her onto the wall of a large caul-
dron in the center, filled with blazing-hot fluid that had been
one of the only sources of light. He smiled, took out a knife and
then viciously cut her from the abdomen down to her uterus.
Her fading screams had died alongside her, with blood painting
the ground in crimson red. He pulled out the fetus from her
womb and threw it into the cauldron. Suddenly, a loud bang
was heard from a table in the center.
‘Silence!’ A vampire of large build stood up.
Next to him were two handcuffed men. One of them was Nethanel,
the other one, a muscular man, neither Lysander nor Theseus
could recognize.
‘Before we proceed with the celebration we must welcome
our new guests! Nothing is more important than tradition, right
boys?!’ The vampire leader laughed gnarly from his chest.
The cave was filled with shouts of agreement and eagerness. He
opened a door behind him, letting out new prisoners whose
necks were chained like a leash. They were of varying ages and
the reactions of the audience changed accordingly. Older pris-
oners were greeted with very loud boos whilst the younger ones
were celebrated with excited cheers. Lysander grabbed The-
seus’s hand and stared into the vile ceremony with empty, dead
eyes.
‘We are in hell. Th-this... This must be hell...’ His grip
tightened, ‘We have to get out of here and call for help, fast!’
‘Wait! It seems we have a pleasant surprise!’ The vampire
leader shouted and grinned, ‘We have two new guests. Oh,
where are my manners?! Welcome!’ He slowly tilted his head
toward the entrance, his glowing crimson eyes staring right at Lysander’s, ‘Come closer and introduce yourselves! Let’s have
some fun,’ he said and chuckled menacingly.
Their hearts stopped and they froze in place, unable to react.
Nethanel’s eyes widened the moment he recognized his friends.
The abrupt stop of the music gave way to bone-chilling silence,
the eerie music of death.
‘I don’t appreciate being ignored,’ the leader said and then
immediately vanished.
Without enough time to react they were shoved violently onto
the lower platform of the room, crashing into the hard-stone
floor. They managed to stand back up, facing their bloodthirsty
foes. Theseus reached for his dagger and Lysander observed the
situation, his eyes darting around.
‘I don’t think we’ll survive this, Theseus,’ Lysander whispered
into his friend’s ear.
The leader reappeared, back in his throne. He was clapping and
smiling broadly.
‘Get them!’ He commanded and raised his right hand, his
fist clenched.
A horde of vampires yelled in excitement and ran toward Lysander
and Theseus, their claws ready to slash. They were grinning and
licking their lips, revealing the blood that had already painted
their teeth. It pushed them backward, surrounding them with
a menacing stare. It was apparent that playing with the food
had been rather popular amongst them. Our protagonists were
made to fall-back, their backs almost entirely glued to the wall
of the cliff they had fallen down from. More and more vam-
pires appeared, their saliva drooling from their blooded mouths.
Lysander stared into Theseus’s eyes hoping to seek an answer,
or a bit of comfort. Unfortunately, Theseus’s eyes were just as
desperate as those of his friend. He understood these were their
final moments.
‘Theseus! On your left!’ Lysander shouted and pulled his
friend toward him, saving him from the claws of a vampire and
swiftly stabbed it right in its forehead.
It fell to its feet, made a loud screeching sound and took its last
breath. They were underestimating them. After all, what could
two humans do to an entire horde of vampires?!
‘Kill them already! What are you waiting for?’ The leader
shouted.
Lysander and Theseus were fighting valiantly, dodging and coun-
terattacking as much as they could. Claws vs daggers. Ani-
malistic brutality vs human technique. More and more vam-
pires joined in the assault, refusing to share the meat with their
brethren. They managed to kill a few of them, refusing to give up
just yet. After a few minutes of impressive combat the seemingly
endless flurry of attacks had finally taken its toll on their weary
bodies; their breaths were shortening, their muscles aching and
their responses getting more and more sluggish by the second.
‘Theseus, we’ll never beat them! We have to climb up and
run!’ Lysander shouted with urgency.
A plan suddenly appeared in his mind.
‘Use your necklace!’
Theseus hesitated but eventually nodded, it was worth a try. He
took off the necklace and placed it in his left hand, the stone
facing upwards.
‘Get ready!’ Theseus shouted, ‘Three, two, one!’ He stabbed
the stone with the tip of his dagger, unleashing the strong light
that was sealed inside.
They immediately covered their eyes. An explosion of blinding
light suddenly erupted from the stone, fracturing the shadows
in its vicinity and blinding the vampires that had been surround-
ing them. Such a technique could only work temporarily on a
mere human. But on a vampire, capable of seeing in the dark
anyway due to its enhanced pupils, it should take away its ability
to see altogether. The vampires screamed in high tone, hissed
and shielded their eyes as the light was slowly taking over the
darkness in the enormous lair. The leader proved himself to be
much more than just an hungry animal by saving his sight with
his plate, holding it in front of his face. He, alongside Theseus and Lysander, were gradually reopening their eyes.
‘Now!’ Lysander shouted and stood next to the cliff wall,
‘Jump on my shoulder and climb up, I’ll give you a boost!’ He
leaned over and crouched a bit.
Theseus obliged and managed to find cracks in the wall, his
muscles straining as he pulled himself up until the end. He
held his hand down, calling his friend to grab it. Nethanel was
slowly regaining his vision and saw an opportunity to resist his
captors. He convinced the man next to him to join, one final
stand. They grabbed two swords that were laid on the table next
to the recovering clan chief.
‘Lysander, start climbing! We will try to stall them for a bit!’
He shouted.
With his hands still cuffed he yelled out an old and ancient prayer
that was echoing across the cave as he swung his sword, hacking
down as many vampires as he could. Lysander started climbing
with a rush, his time was limited. The vampires began recov-
ering their senses, they couldn’t see anything but that did not
mean they couldn’t smell the stench of sweat and blood in the
air. They were animals after all, intelligent animals. They fol-
lowed their thirst for blood to regain their idea of Lysander’s
whereabouts. While he was climbing up his forearms had begun
hurting, his back muscles burning with each pull. When he was
already halfway up he looked back to assess his situation and the
vampires’ distance from him. Unfortunately, by doing so he had
also witnessed the gruesome sight of Nethanel’s body getting
ripped in half by a horde of vampires. They decided to change
their target to a much frailer one. The rest began climbing up the
wall to follow Lysander. Theseus’s hand peeked over as he urged
him to climb faster, throwing rocks at the heads of the vampires
to try and slow them down. Finally, their hands connected and
Lysander mustered up his strength for one strong pull. Shivers
suddenly shot down his spine alongside a feeling of dread as his
foot had slipped. He felt as though time had slowed down as he
was desperately trying to find a foothold, tightening his grasp around his friend’s palm.
‘Pull me up, Theseus!’ Lysander cried out, panicking.
The vampires were advancing below him, piercing the wall with
their claws and climbing up with frightening speed.
‘I am trying to but my back is already burned out!’ Theseus
responded with desperation, grinding his teeth as he was trying
to pull Lysander up even harder using both hands.
The vampires were advancing even faster from excitement. De-
spite Theseus’s attempt to pull with all of his might, completely
ignoring his muscles screaming for him to stop, Lysander was
just too heavy. Lysander was struck with a sudden chilling real-
ization; his voice, eerily monotone, slicing through the chaos.
‘Theseus, let me go. Leave me, save yourself! Run! I will try
to hold them off as much as I can!’ Despite his authoritative
tone his eyes radiated nothing but utter fear.
‘No! I will not leave you here!’ Theseus screamed with agony,
‘You are coming back with me! I will not leave you behind!’ With
tears dripping down his cheeks he mustered all of his strength
into one strong pull, his muscles feeling as though they were
about to tear.
‘Theseus, this is our only hope. Please, this is as hard for
you as it is for me! Respect my decision, I beg of you!’ His words
were firm and unwavering, signaling a painful acceptance of
the inevitable.
Lysander released his grasp but did not fall, Theseus was holding
his hand too tightly.
‘Please don’t make me do this. Please! I can’t do this to you,
Lysander,’ his face wet from tears.
Lysander gazed into Theseus’s eyes who were filled with desper-
ation and smiled.
‘Forgive me.’
‘What? For what?’
Lysander used his free arm to pull out his dagger.
‘I am sorry, my friend,’ with a swift motion he cut off the
palm of his hand and fell straight into the horde, staring into his friend’s eyes.
The vampires grabbed his body and started biting him all across,
sucking him dry of blood. Before fully losing his consciousness
he parted his lips to say his final words.
‘I love you, my friend. Run!’ He shouted, ‘I want you to...
Surv-vive, this...’ His eyes were slowly closing
Theseus slapped himself out of his shock and began sprinting
with sheer determination, he must not let his friend’s sacri-
fice go in vain. With blurry vision and unsteady steps he shot
up the stairs, his heart thundering as he attempted to escape
the horrors that he had left behind him. Each second felt like
an eternity, the sense of time distorted by adrenaline coursing
through his veins. With only a few steps to go his legs had begun
failing him; each step had become a battle of its own and he had
barely managed to reach the top before collapsing to the floor.
The battle-hardened warrior that he was, he forced himself to
keep going fueled by a desperate desire to survive. He sprinted
outside and reached the large metal doors that were left wide
open. Cold wind was blowing onto his sweaty face as he rushed
to the weapon racks that were stationed nearby, running back
and forth with spears to barricade the gates behind him by in-
serting them between the handles and the doors themselves. He
had trapped the vampires inside, though he was aware it was
just temporary.
With the doors secured he leaned against them to catch
his breath. After a few minutes of rest he stumbled toward
the stables, his legs shaky and feeling heavy from exertion. He
wondered where were the remaining guards, surely the four they
had killed weren’t the only ones. The stables were only slightly
lit, filled with the smell of hay and feces. He spotted several
horses, took a deep breath and limped toward the nearest one.
He summoned his last ounce of strength and went on top of it.
With trembling limbs and one last breath of fresh air he kicked
the horse into a gallop and rode off into the darkened horizon,
leading the horse to the harbour. He suddenly noticed that the bite of the strange amulet was surprisingly weak. He had won...
But at what cost?
About nine months later the moon was hanging high in
the sky; the night air carrying whispers of anticipation. The
ambience resonated with familiar sounds of labor, screams and
heavy breaths of a woman. Shiraz’s contractions were growing
stronger as she laid on her bed, her husband Theseus standing
beside her and holding her hand gently. He wiped away the
sweat from her forehead and caressed her hair. Lyria lifted up
Shiraz’s dress to let an elder examine the bulging belly that was
holding new life within it.
‘Oh, wow,’ the town’s elder smiled, ‘Judging by the sheer size
of her belly, I can easily conclude that she is holding more than
one baby inside her.’
‘Did you hear that, Shiraz? You are going to have twins!’
Lyria smiled.
‘I wouldn’t say twins, maybe triplets. Her stomach is unbe-
lievably big, I have never quite seen something like this before.’
‘By the gods, those are marvelous news!’ Lyria cheered.
Shiraz looked up at Theseus with a frightened look.
‘Usually newly-weds have to deal with only one kid, twins
at most. H-how are we going to handle three? We don’t have
enough experience for that...’
‘I will gladly help you and your parents surely will too! Don’t
fret, these are truly wonderful news!’ Lyria responded.
‘Well, let’s get right to it, shall we? Lyria, could you go bring
some clean clothes, water, and some herbs, please? Theseus,
stay right here with me. Shiraz, this is going to take a while
considering this is your first time giving birth. Stay calm, just
focus on pushing and listen to your body whenever it urges you
to push, alright?’
Shiraz replied, panting and struggling to catch her breath before
managing a response.
‘O-okay, I un-nderstand.’
Lyria rushed out of the room, her heart racing as she grabbed
towels, herbs and a small basin filled with water. Shiraz’s screams
echoed through the air, growing louder and louder with each
minute. Lyria came back, her hands shaking, yet holding all of
the required supplies. She was set on helping as much as she
could; Shiraz deserved it. Shiraz’s screams reached different
decibels as she pushed harder and harder. Finally, the first baby
came out. Lyria’s eyes widened in shock as she looked upon the
newborn baby.
‘What... is this?!’
The doctor’s trembling hands were holding an abomination. A
‘creature’ with a long bushy tail, pointed cat ears, piercing cat
eyes that glinted in the dim light alongside human-like body
covered with thick fur. He handed the creature to Theseus so
he could pull the other two babies. And so another one came
out. The doctor held another creature that had been just slightly
different from the first. It had similar pointed ears, a long tail
and a human-like body full of fur. However, it resembled a wolf
more than a cat. Finally, the last one came out. Unlike its first
brothers, it had no fur; it looked completely human, aside from
its butterfly wings, sharp and long ears and golden eyes. The
elder’s jaw dropped to the floor from confusion.
‘In all my years I have never witnessed anything quite like
this,’ he said in disbelief.
Shiraz started twirling in her bed again, her screams grow-
ing louder and more desperate. The sheets twisted around
her body as she struggled to contain the pain. This time, the
baby burst out of the womb. Its size was abnormally huge for
a baby, towering over boys at the age of four. Just when things
seemed like they were about to calm down and let her catch
her breath, another scream shattered the room and with those
screams emerged another baby. A tiny furry baby with a long
monkey-like tail and monkey-like ears; its feet resembled hands.
And then another with bat-like hand-wings and a bat’s ears;
its mouth equipped with with bat-like fangs. Its next brother had large, majestic dragon-like wings with sharp claws and its
body covered in scales. The next one had a ball-shaped tail, bear
ears, fangs and claws. The next had six eyes, six hands and two
hand-shaped legs like a spider. Another had feathered wings,
bird eyes and a beak; its body was filled with feathers. And yet
another had sleek and pointed ears and hooves for feet. The last
baby had small gills behind its ears and a mouth filled with rows
of sharp, pointed teeth. Each new arrival added to the chaos and
confusion in the already crowded room. Lyria’s eyes widened in
horror as she stood next to the elder; both of them froze in shock.
Before them stood twelve freaks of nature, screaming and occa-
sionally switching their screams into howls and high-pitched
whistles. The elder’s face turned pale.
‘I must call for a council meeting about this,’ he managed
to mumble with fear and concern for the village’s safety in his
voice.
Shiraz let out one final, piercing scream before succumbing to
unconsciousness.
‘Shiraz? Shiraz! Snap out of it! Wake up! Please!’ Theseus
shouted trying to restore Shiraz’s consciousness.
The elder gently grabbed Shiraz’s wrist, checking her pulse with
determination.
‘Her pulse is very weak but she is alive. Let’s give her some
time to rest,’ the elder said with relief and wiped the sweat off
his forehead.
‘Oh, thank the gods!’ Lyria and Theseus responded.
Meanwhile, some of the villagers woke up from the loud screams
gathering around Theseus’s house. One of the villagers barged
in, either out of curiosity or out of worry, and witnessed the
horrifying sight.
‘What is the meaning of this?’ One of the villagers demanded
an answer.
‘Relax,’ the elder said in response, ‘These odd things are
Theseus’s and Shiraz’s babies and currently they pose no threat
to this village. Tomorrow the elders will discuss this matter.’
‘How are we supposed to believe that they are harmless?
They are monsters!’
‘Theseus and I will take full responsibility if they do anything
to harm this village.’
‘If something happens, I demand that you and this family
will be immediately banished from the village,’ he looked at
Theseus, ‘You were the one who brought this village to life, please
don’t bring it to its death.’
‘Agreed. Now go outside and tell everyone to go back to
sleep. This family needs some time and quiet,’ the elder said.
At first light the elders had a meeting, having finally come to a
decision regarding the future. They told everyone to gather in
the town’s square and hear the verdict.
‘Good afternoon. We have decided that the babies will stay
here,’ an elder started saying but was cut off by sounds of an
angry mob.
The elders jumped in to aid him, raising their hands and de-
manding silence. The village obliged.
‘Please don’t interrupt me and hear what I have to say. Ten
families will adopt one kid from the twelve. In return for this,
the grown babies will be in charge of the village’s protection.
After all, they surely possess superhuman strength. Theseus
has chosen to keep the baby with the butterfly wings and the
one resembling a shark. The rest of you can pick one from the
remaining ten.’
‘Before we continue I would like to name them. For this one
I have decided on the na-’ Theseus shouted but was abruptly cut
off by an unfamiliar voice.
Before Theseus was able to utter his ideas the babies’ eyes and
mouths glowed in bright red and their lips parted. One by one
they announced their names. The fairy was ‘Rui’. The cat was
named ‘Ji’, the wolf ‘Ave’, the giant ‘Yaruv’, the monkey ‘Luya’,
the bat ‘Narui’, the dragon ‘Sakui’, the bear ‘Sever’, the spider
‘Madur’, the bird ‘Kabui’, the horse ‘Ino’ and the shark ‘Mitori’.
The ten were given to the ones who picked them from the crowd.
Theseus returned back to his wife, who was still unconscious;
neither water, noise, smell nor touch was able to wake her up.
Only eleven days later was she finally able to regain her con-
sciousness; she was weak, starving and thirsty. While preparing
her food he explained the situation to her. Healers from Alexan-
dria of Egypt concluded that the births were so intense that her
uterus had been harmed so badly that she would never be able
to give birth again. They were amazed she even managed to
survive such a birth. The children grew up rather quickly, with
the giant reaching the size of Theseus at the age of six for exam-
ple. They all spoke an odd and foreign language that Rui had
named ‘Omnitongue‘, the most intelligent of the bunch. He was
able to use magic and taught the village’s elders how to utilize
it. The news of the irregular and magical humanoids quickly
spread throughout Hellas and everyone wanted to witness their
feats with their own eyes. Rui led an entire campaign teaching
humans magic while his less magically capable siblings helped
with battles, building, exploration, trade and science. He also
developed a spell called the ‘All-Seeing Eye’ with which they man-
aged to discover other populated planets.
After witnessing the incredible powers of Rui and his sib-
lings, also known as ‘The Ancestors’, the village elders approached
him with a request for the sake of humankind. It was decided
that each ancestor would oversee a celestial body of their own in
the solar system. Rui was tasked with teleporting each to their
designated planet. Mitori, for example, was given Enceladus -
one of Saturn’s moons which was already inhabited by humans
and was tasked with protecting them and improving their lives.
It eventually became known as the home planet of the Kathet-
icans. Some people found the children of Theseus just unique
and impressive whilst others found them incredibly attractive.
Eventually, the twelve children got married and bore children,
some with their corresponding beast-races and some with hu-
mans. That is how the Elven race, whose ancestor was Rui, and
the Kathetican race, whose ancestor was Mitori, were created.
Rui’s campaign was later turned into an organization called ‘The
Order’ which aimed to understand the ways of magic in discre-
tion while protecting mortals from supernatural dangers. It
was later repurposed after the tragic ‘Mortal Demon War’. Its
newest goal was to both research magic and establish academies
for training mortals in the arts of magic. While initially only
existing on Rui’s planet Syluetta, The Order had since spread
throughout the solar system and built Interstellar Travel portals
fueled by magic in many places around each and every planet in
the galaxy, allowing people to travel between them.
Magic was explained like so: When using magic one pays
away with Olons and changes their nature and Activations ac-
cording to the spell itself. Each person has their own Olon recov-
ery rate for each specific body part which varies by race, genet-
ics, etc. When one uses more Olons than they were originally
able to regenerate, that specific body part slowly decays forever.
Meaning, one might lose their finger if they use more ‘Finger-
Activated Blast’ spells than they were able to, forever. Equivalent
exchange, in essence. Magic can be performed using chants
and writings of runes in Omnitongue. Written magic does not
require the use of Olons, and as such, it is much easier to handle
in combat. But once activated, if only one mistake is made in
the runes, the user would immediately lose as many Olons as
the spell itself should require.
The only beings capable of using magic were descendants of
the magical races, gifted humans, and Olon-awakened humans.
Humans were only able to access three sub-schools of magic:
two that were assigned at birth (one according to one’s genetics
and the other according to their personality) and one that they
would personally pick. Magical races, on the other hand, had
natural access to the entirety of them. In addition to planets
the Interstellar Travel portals were also configured to allow the
user to travel to the main headquarters of The Order in Syluetta; there lied the altars of magic awakening, meant for humans
exclusively. These altars were used for two purposes: granting
one’s brain the capability to use the excess Olons and awakening
one’s assigned schools of magic in the body itself. In order to
gain entry to the altar one must participate in a ceremony, and
should they fail, it would mean that their body was incapable of
using magic at that point in time. In order to redo the ceremony
one would have to wait at least fifteen additional years.
And what about the ‘All-Mother’ of magic, you ask? Shi-
raz decided to dedicate her life to spreading the message and
philosophy of The Order until her passing of old age.
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Author's note - I hope to get reviews and feedback. Thank you :)