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Chapter 7 by TheMasterCalling TheMasterCalling

What's next?

A Rest in the Shadows

The hallway they chose was narrow and dark, a servant's passage branching off from the monumental kennel chamber. It offered a semblance of shelter, its walls close enough to feel secure, its ceiling low enough to be defensible. They huddled together on the cold stone floor, the only light coming from a faint, phosphorescent moss clinging to the cracks in the mortar.

The silence was heavy, broken only by the rustle of cloth and the soft sounds of chewing. Inch was the first to break it, pulling a strip of dried meat from her pack and tearing into it with her teeth. "So," she said around a mouthful, "the big bad Overseer's got a thing for cursed mirrors. Classy."

Aika sat with her back perfectly straight, her new longsword across her lap. She ate her rations—a simple rice ball—with small, precise bites, her eyes never leaving Gabriel. "It is a coward's weapon," she stated, her voice like cut glass. "To wound a man not with blade or spell, but with a sickness of fate. It lacks honor."

"Honor didn't save my knives from the rust-beast," Inch retorted, but there was no real heat in it. She glanced at Gabriel's hand, then quickly looked away.

Lumen had not taken any food. She sat with her staff across her knees, her eyes closed, her lips moving in silent prayer. After a moment, she opened her violet eyes and looked at Gabriel with profound sadness. "The curse feeds on attempts to mend it. It is a spiritual parasite, child. It thrives on the energy of healing, turning medicine into poison."

Gabriel had been quiet, methodically eating a piece of hardtack. Now, he set the remainder down and began to unwrap the soiled cloth from his right hand. Inch stopped chewing. Aika's hands stilled. Lumen's prayer fell silent.

The bandage was a mess of dark red and yellow. As he peeled the final layer away, the wound was revealed. The tiny cut on his fingertip was no longer just a cut. The skin around it was inflamed, an angry red spreading up to his first knuckle. The cut itself seemed deeper, as if the flesh was slowly being eaten away from within. A thin, clear fluid mixed with the steady drip of blood. A faint, sickly-sweet odor of decay wafted from it.

Gabriel stared at it, his face a mask of stoic calm, but his blue eyes were stormy. He prodded the area gently with his thumb and winced, a sharp hiss escaping his clenched teeth. The background throb had graduated to a persistent, burning ache that pulsed with his heartbeat.

"Damn," Inch whispered, her bravado utterly gone.

Aika was on her knees beside him in an instant. "Let me see." She took his hand in hers, her touch surprisingly gentle. Her samurai's discipline faltered as she examined the festering wound. "This is… this is beyond my skill. We have no poultice strong enough."

"We've tried everything," Gabriel said, his voice rough. He tried to pull his hand back, but Aika held it fast.

"Not everything," she insisted, her red eyes blazing with a fierce, protective light. "We kill the Overseer. His power sustains this fortress, his will fuels its magic. Slay him, and all his works will unravel. This curse will break with his last breath."

It was the logical conclusion. The heroic conclusion. But in the close, dank darkness of the hallway, it felt hollow.

"And how do we find him, Aika?" Inch asked, her voice uncharacteristically small. She hugged her knees to her chest. "This place is a maze. We got lucky with the kobolds, but that's it. Gabe's… Gabe's luck is on the fritz." She couldn't bring herself to look at him as she said it.

Lumen spoke, her deep voice a balm and a burden. "The Dark Form teaches that the greatest darkness often resides at the highest point. The Overseer will be above us. But the path is not clear; he seeks to hinder our way. He will throw everything in our path." She looked at Gabriel's hand, then into his eyes. "The curse is a distraction. A weight to slow our steps, to cloud our judgment. We must not let it become the center of our journey."

Gabriel finally pulled his hand from Aika's grasp. He took a clean-ish strip of cloth from his pack—the last one—and began rewrapping the wound with deliberate, controlled movements. The act was one of futile defiance.

"You're both right," he said, not looking at any of them. "Killing him is the only cure. And finding him is the problem." He tied off the bandage, the fresh white cloth already threatening to bloom red. "My luck… has been off. Since the mirror. It's not gone. It's just… wrong. It brought us to drunk kobolds instead of an ambush. It cleared a path by making me the monster in the room."

He finally lifted his gaze, looking at each of them in turn: the worried samurai, the frightened rogue, the solemn priestess. "I've always counted on it. You've all counted on it. Now it's a liability. So we can't count on it anymore. We rely on what we have. Inch's eyes. Aika's blade. Lumen's faith. And my… my stubbornness."

Aika's jaw tightened. "It is not stubbornness. It is will. And your will has always been your greatest strength, Gabriel. Luck was merely its instrument."

Inch managed a weak smile. "Yeah, what she said. Besides, you're still way prettier than any of us. That's gotta count for something, right?"

A faint, pained smile touched Gabriel's lips. "Not against the Overseer, Inch."

Lumen reached out and placed her cool hand over his newly bandaged one. "The body is but a vessel, child. The spirit within is what matters. Your spirit is not infected. It is merely… burdened. We will help you carry it."

For a long moment, they sat in silence, the reality of their situation settling over them like the fortress dust. Gabriel was wounded in a way that magic and medicine couldn't touch. Their leader's legendary advantage had turned traitor. They were deep in the heart of their enemy's domain, with no map and a ticking clock spelled out in drops of blood.

Aika was the first to move, standing and sheathing her sword with a definitive click. "Then we rest no longer. Every moment we wait, the curse digs deeper. We move. We climb. We find him."

Gabriel nodded, pushing himself to his feet. The others followed. The brief respite was over. The fear, the loyalty, the grim determination, they were now folded back into their hearts, fuel for the climb ahead. The hallway stretched before them, dark and unknown, leading deeper into the labyrinth, and upward, always upward, towards a throne room that felt more distant than ever.

What's next?

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