After hours of hacking through dense underbrush and fighting off the occasional woodland beast, Ray and the company finally reached the Immortal Cave. Its entrance loomed before them like the mouth of some ancient beast, the surrounding air thick with an unsettling stillness that sent shivers down even the most hardened warriors' spines. Ray glanced around at his fellow mercenaries and noticed the same unease in their eyes. The legends surrounding this place weren't easily dismissed.
As they halted to establish their campsite, the knights and mages sprang into action, setting up with disciplined precision. Fires were lit, tents pitched, and defensive positions planned out near the cave entrance. Even the seasoned soldiers moved with extra care, casting wary glances at the darkness beyond.
Ray joined the other mercenaries in gathering firewood, and soon the campfire crackled to life, casting warm, flickering light across the faces of those gathered around it. The tense mood gradually softened as they passed around flasks of ale and shared tales of past battles. Laughter broke out as the ale took effect, and for a brief while, the weight of their mission lifted. Ray settled onto a fallen log by the fire, feeling the warmth seep into his bones.
Just as he was beginning to relax, a boisterous mercenary with a round, ruddy face clapped him on the back. “Did anyone see Ray today? Took down those beasts like it was nothing! I’d swear he’s part beast himself!”
Ray’s face warmed, but he shrugged it off, trying to brush away the praise. “Just doing my job,” he mumbled, hoping they'd move on. But his friend Nio had other plans, grinning from ear to ear.
“Oh, ‘just doing his job,’ he says!” Nio smirked, elbowing him. “If you’d seen him out there, you’d think he was born with a sword in hand. I’ve known him for years, and believe me, he didn’t start out like this. I could tell you stories that’d make you think he’s better suited to wield a mop!”
Ray shot Nio a warning look, but it was too late. Nio launched into an embellished tale from Ray’s early days with the guild, recounting a job that involved a runaway cart, a flock of chickens, and a very flustered Ray trying to "exterminate" them, much to his humiliation.
The camp erupted in laughter, and Ray covered his face, groaning as Nio piled on more exaggerated details. As the mercenaries laughed, each embellishment drawing louder roars, Ray finally stood, shaking his head and mumbling about taking a break from the fire. Nio and the others called out after him, teasingly urging him not to be “so shy.”
With a smirk, Ray glanced back over his shoulder, “Laugh it up, Nio. Tomorrow, we’ll see who has the last laugh.”
Nio chuckled, raising a tankard in a mock salute. “Can’t wait, friend!”
Smiling to himself, Ray walked toward the edge of camp. Despite the mockery, there was a comfort in the camaraderie, a reminder that he didn’t face this journey alone. Yet as he moved further into the shadows, leaving the warmth of the fire behind, his smile faded. The laughter of his companions grew distant, replaced by an eerie quietness. He felt a heaviness in the air, a sense of foreboding that gnawed at his thoughts. Something about this mission didn’t sit right, a tension that seemed to cling to him like a shadow.
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As he walked, he noticed a faint, otherworldly glow near the entrance of the Immortal Cave. Squinting, he saw a group gathered there: Alicia Roman, her silver armor gleaming in the moonlight, flanked by two imperial knights and a small group of clerics from the Church of Altia. Among the clerics, he recognized two older ones whose robes were trimmed in gold, marking them as senior members of the order. The others were younger and looked visibly anxious.
In the knights’ hands, they held a large glass sphere, almost as big as a barrel. It hung suspended between them, casting refracted beams of moonlight that danced across the ground in strange, shifting patterns. Ray felt his curiosity spark. He took a step forward, hiding in the shadows, carefully creeping closer to catch a better glimpse of what they were doing.
As he neared, Alicia suddenly turned, her gaze slicing through the darkness like a blade. Before he could react, she closed the distance, drawing her sword and pressing its tip to his throat. Her face was fierce, her expression devoid of the warmth she'd shown earlier.
“What are you doing here?” she demanded, her voice sharp and unyielding.
Ray swallowed, keeping his voice calm. “Just a mercenary, taking a walk to clear my head after the meal.”
She studied him with piercing intensity, her gaze assessing him for any hint of deception. After a moment, she finally withdrew her sword, but her stance remained tense. “Return to the camp. This isn’t a place for wandering.”
Ray nodded and began to turn back, but something strange caught his eye. The glass sphere pulsed faintly, casting long, ominous shadows over the assembled group. The light within flickered with a dark purple hue that made the surrounding clerics clutch their prayer beads in fearful anticipation. One of the younger clerics gasped, trembling as she muttered under her breath.
“It’s here,” she whispered, her voice barely audible but filled with dread. “The demon… it’s real.”
Ray’s pulse quickened as the words echoed in his mind. The Immortal Cave was said to be cursed, its depths filled with something ancient and malevolent. Stories of twisted creatures and forgotten evils had circulated among mercenaries for years. But hearing that whisper of “darkness” filled him with an unsettling feeling that went beyond the usual campfire tales. He took another cautious step backward, intending to slip away, when he felt a hard shove from behind. One of the knights had kicked him, sending him stumbling.
“Did you hear anything?” the knight demanded, his tone icy and laced with warning.
Ray steadied himself, forcing an indifferent expression. “Hear what?” he replied casually. “I was minding my own business.”
The knight’s eyes narrowed in suspicion. “Good. Remember this—anything you might have seen or heard tonight, you speak of it to no one. Understood?”
Ray met the knight’s steely gaze and gave a curt nod. “Understood.”
With one last glare, the knight turned back to the group, and Ray took the opportunity to slip quietly away, heading back to camp. His mind raced, questions swirling about the sphere, the clerics, and what they were preparing to face inside the cave. He knew better than to breathe a word of it, but the pulsing glow of that glass sphere and the cleric’s fearful words lingered in his thoughts like a shadow.
When he returned to the fire, Nio and a few of the other mercenaries were still laughing, enjoying the temporary peace before morning came. Ray considered sharing what he’d seen, but quickly dismissed the thought. Nio had joked earlier about demons and darkness, but Ray couldn’t bring himself to laugh anymore. He didn’t want to dampen the mood with something he didn’t fully understand yet.
“Not tonight,” Ray muttered to himself, deciding he’d save his thoughts for morning. For now, he’d try to find rest before whatever awaited them in the Immortal Cave.
Settling into his tent, Ray lay down, but sleep was elusive. Each time he closed his eyes, images of the pulsing sphere and the frightened faces of the clerics drifted into his mind, refusing to fade. He drifted in and out of uneasy dreams, haunted by the unknown dangers lurking just beyond the campfire's light.