Adamâs crimson eyes swept the streets as they walked, taking in the faces that peered from doorways and alleys, the way people pressed themselves against walls as they passed. His voice was low, thoughtful.
"I didnât pay much attention yesterday, but... there are hardly any non-humans here. Mostly humans."
Isolde walked at his side, her hood pulled low, her pale eyes scanning the crowded thoroughfare. Her voice was quiet, matter-of-fact.
"Even though Kaelthar is lawless, humans still dominate. Conflicts over the years have made it difficult for non-humans to integrate. They stick to their own territories, or stay hidden."
Adam nodded slowly, his gaze drifting to a group of rough-looking men who quickly looked away when his eyes met theirs.
"That explains why everyoneâs so afraid. They see us and donât want any trouble."
They turned onto a narrower street, the buildings pressing closer, the shadows deepening. The crowds thinned, then disappeared entirely. The signs of Kaeltharâs desperation were more visible here. Empty eyes stared from doorways. Children with hollow cheeks watched them pass.
"This is the district," Isolde murmured. "The blacksmith should be near here."
A commotion ahead drew Adamâs attention. Voices raised, jostling bodies, a small crowd gathered around a cart bearing the symbol of a coiled dragon clutching a scale.
Adamâs eyes narrowed. "Croftâs symbol."
Ignis bounced on her heels, craning her neck to see over the crowd. "Whatâs going on? Are they fighting?"
Adam watched as hands reached toward the cart, receiving small bundles wrapped in cloth. Food, he realized. Bread, dried meat, a few pieces of fruit. The man distributing them wore Croftâs colors, his movements efficient, impersonal.
"Theyâre handing out food," Adam said, his voice thoughtful. "Maybe Croft isnât as bad as I thought."
Lilithâs lips curved into a small smile. "Donât be too quick to judge, Adam. Kindness can be a weapon too."
Isoldeâs voice drifted from beneath her hood. "Croft has a reputation for generosity. But he never does anything that doesnât benefit him in the long run." She paused, watching the distribution. "A well-fed crowd is a loyal crowd. And loyalty in Kaelthar is worth its weight in gold."
Adamâs gaze lingered on the cart, then swept the surrounding buildings. The windows were dark, the rooftops empty. But something prickled at the back of his neck.
He stopped walking.
"Someoneâs watching us."
Isolde tensed beside him. Lilithâs smile didnât waver, but her fingers twitched, threads stirring around her wrists. Ignisâs flames flickered brighter, her golden eyes sharpening.
"Where?" Ignis asked, her voice dropping to a whisper.
Adamâs Hunterâs Tri-Sense extended outward, feeling for heartbeats, breathing, the faint shift of air that betrayed a hidden presence.
"There," he said quietly, not pointing, but tilting his head slightly toward a window on the third floor of a building across the street. "Behind the shutters. Theyâve been following us since we left the inn."
Lilithâs crimson eyes drifted toward the window, her expression serene. "Shall I retrieve them?"
"Not yet." Adamâs voice was calm. "Let them watch. For now."
He resumed walking, his pace unhurried, as if he hadnât noticed. The others fell into step beside him.
âTheyâre professionals. Not like the thugs in the clearing.â His lips curved into a faint, dangerous smile. âInteresting.â
The crowd around the food cart thinned as they passed, people scattering back to their shadows. The building with the watchful window loomed behind them, and Adam didnât look back.
Isoldeâs voice was barely audible. "Do you think theyâre from the guild?"
"Probably." Adam glanced at her. "Or maybe Croft has his own people watching us." He shrugged. "Doesnât matter. Theyâre not making a move. Yet."
Ignis bounced beside him, her flames flaring with barely contained excitement. "If they attack, Iâll burn them all!"
Adamâs lips twitched. "Letâs hope it doesnât come to that."
They reached the end of the street, and there, tucked between a crumbling tenement and what might once have been a tannery, stood the Sable Forge.
The sign above the door was simple, a broken anvil, cracked down the middle, hanging from an iron bracket. The door itself was scarred wood, reinforced with iron bands, and a single lamp burned beside it.
Adam pushed the door open.
Heat washed over them, thick and suffocating, carrying the scent of coal smoke and hot metal. A forge blazed at the back of the room, its flames casting dancing shadows across walls lined with tools and weapons in various states of completion.
A figure stood before the anvil, her back to them, her hammer rising and falling in a steady, rhythmic beat. Sparks flew with each strike, showering the stone floor in brief, bright bursts.
Her arms were bare, corded with muscle, and her hair, a deep auburn shot through with streaks of grey, was pulled back in a messy bun. An apron of thick leather covered her from neck to knees, scarred and blackened with soot. Her hands, wrapped around the hammerâs haft, were calloused and strong.
She didnât turn when they entered.
"State your business," she said, her voice rough, like stones grinding together. The hammer didnât pause.
Adam stepped forward, stopping at a respectful distance from the forge.
"We were told you might be able to repair an artifact. A compass."
The hammer stopped.
Hiltâs hammer paused mid-swing, hovering above the anvil like a question waiting to be answered. She didnât turn, but her voice carried clearly over the crackle of the forge.
"Thatâs a tall order. Artifacts like that donât break easy, and they donât fix easy either."
Adamâs expression didnât change. "The merchant seemed to think you could do it."
Hilt set her hammer down with a soft clink and turned to face them. Her face was weathered, lined by years of heat and labor, but her eyes, a pale, piercing grey, were sharp and clear. They swept over the group, assessing, cataloging.
"I can," she said slowly. "But itâll take time. And it wonât be cheap."
Adam was silent for a moment. His gaze drifted to the walls, to the weapons and tools that hung there. His system interface flickered in the corner of his vision, analyzing each piece in rapid succession.
[Iron Dagger â Common]
[Steel Shortsword â Common]
[Reinforced Hammer â Common]
âNothing special,â he thought, his internal voice flat. âThese are all ordinary pieces. A blacksmith who can repair a legendary artifact... yet all her work is average?â
Lilithâs mental voice brushed against his mind, soft and knowing.
âWell? What do you think?â
Adamâs mental response was cold. âThe blacksmith is strange. Iâve analyzed every weapon in this room. Theyâre all common quality. Nothing even close to legendary.â
Lilithâs tone sharpened with amusement. âIt seems weâve been deceived. Just as I suspected. A legendary artifact cannot be repaired by a common blacksmith in a rundown shop like this.â
Ignisâs mental voice chimed in, bright and eager. âAdam! I smell a fight! There are people gathering outside. Lots of them.â
Adamâs lips curved into a faint, dangerous smile. His mental voice was calm.
âI know.â
Hilt, still waiting for an answer, tilted her head. Her pale eyes narrowed.
"Well? Do we have a deal?"
Adamâs gaze shifted to the door. He could feel them now, the presences pressing against the edges of his perception. Heartbeats. Breathing. The soft rasp of weapons being drawn.
"Deal?" Adamâs voice was soft, almost amused. "I donât think so."
Hiltâs expression flickered. Her hand moved toward the hammer on her anvil.
Then the door exploded inward.
Shards of wood sprayed across the room, and dark figures poured through the openingâassassins, silent and deadly, their blades gleaming in the forgeâs firelight.
Isolde moved before anyone else could react.
Her hand shot up, and the blood that had been pooling in the shadows of the room rose, answering her call. It spiraled around her, forming a crimson barrier that caught the first wave of projectiles. Knives, needles, thin darts coated in something that shimmered green, all of them stuck in the wall of blood, suspended like flies in amber.
"Ambush!" Isoldeâs voice was sharp, urgent. "They were waiting for us!"
Ignisâs flames erupted, her golden eyes blazing with fierce delight.
"Finally! I was getting bored!"
Hiltâs hammer clanged against the anvil, a sharp, ringing sound that cut through the chaos. Her voice rose above the crackle of flames and the hiss of blood.
"This is my property! If youâre going to fight, take it outside! I wonât have you destroying years of work!"
Sean stepped through the shattered doorway, his dark eyes sweeping the room with calm efficiency. His clothes were unremarkable, dark and unadorned, the kind that blended into shadows. Behind him, more assassins filtered in, forming a loose semicircle around the group.
"Iâm not here to fight," Sean said, his voice light, almost conversational. "Iâm here to talk."
Isoldeâs crimson barrier pulsed, the blood still holding the projectiles suspended. Her voice was sharp, incredulous.
"You attacked us! And now you want to talk?!"
Lilithâs threads stirred around her fingers, silver and white, catching the forgeâs firelight. Her smile was serene, but her crimson eyes gleamed with predatory anticipation.
"Perhaps they need to be taught a lesson in manners."
Hilt slammed her hammer against the anvil again, the sound echoing through the room.
"Not in my forge! Take your lesson elsewhere!"
Sean held up his hands, palms out, a gesture of peace that didnât reach his eyes.
"Iâm being reasonable here. Iâm still being nice. You should accept before that changes."
Adamâs crimson eyes fixed on Sean, cold and unblinking. His voice was flat.
"Thatâs not how you treat someone you want to negotiate with."
Ignisâs flames flickered, her golden eyes narrowing as she sniffed the air. She leaned closer to Adam, her voice dropping to a whisper meant only for him.
"Adam... I recognize that smell. These are the same assassins who attacked us in the Solarian kingdom."
Lilithâs serene smile sharpened. She tilted her head, her crimson eyes gleaming.
"Oh? It seems the world is smaller than I thought."
Adamâs lips curved into a slow, dangerous smile. His voice, when it came, was cold and eager.
"So... theyâre the ones who hunted us before." He rolled his shoulders, dark energy already beginning to coil around his hands. "Change of plans. Weâre not just defending ourselves anymore."
"Weâre going to return the favor! Wipe them all out!"
Ignisâs flames flared brighter, her excitement palpable. She cracked her knuckles, grinning fiercely.
"Now thatâs a good plan!"
Seanâs dark eyes flickered between them, his earlier confidence faltering. His voice sharpened.
"What do you mean by that?"
Adam didnât answer. He simply raised his hand, dark energy gathering in his palm.
Seanâs eyes widened. His hand shot to his weapon.
The forge erupted into chaos.