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Chapter 38 - The Hunter Was Hunted

  The village woke to birdsong and the soft chiming of flowers.

  For a few blessed heartbeats, James lay still on his pallet inside the second longhouse, letting the sounds wash over him. No distant rumbles, no grinding stone, no screams echoing off tunnel walls. Just the crackle of the longhouse hearth, someone snoring gently three pallets down, and the faint, musical clink of petals touching light somewhere outside.

  His bones no longer felt hollow. That alone felt like a miracle.

  He sat up slowly and his muscles protested in a familiar, mortal way. The good kind of ache. The kind that said he had a body again and not a mana-scorched husk. When he swung his legs over the edge of the pallet, Lumen drifted up from where he had been hovering above James’s chest, a dim golden spark in the cool air.

  “Morning,” James murmured.

  Lumen flickered once, warmer than before. “You survived,” the familiar said, voice quieter than usual but less frayed. “I approve.”

  “High praise,” James said, rubbing a hand over his face. “How’s your… everything?”

  “I am not some enchanted trinket, James Wright. I do not have ‘parts.’” Lumen hovered closer and brightened, just a little. “But I am no longer considering reincarnating as a rock, if that is what you mean.”

  “Good,” James muttered, pushing himself to his feet. “Because there’s a lot to do today and I really need my sarcastic lightbulb.”

  He stepped out of the longhouse and into morning.

  The Heartroot tree dominated the clearing now. Where once there had been only a knee-high sapling, there was now a young tree as tall as the longhouse, its trunk smooth and pale with veins of faintly glowing gold running beneath the bark. Its crown spread wide in layered branches, leaves a deep, luminous red shot through with warm veins of light. Mana butterflies clung to the branches like oversized blossoms, their wings half-folded, trembling whenever a breeze passed. A cloud of soft aether fireflies drifted lazily around the trunk, their glow dimmer in full sunlight but still visible like tiny stars refusing to yield the sky.

  The flowers in front of the first longhouse had gone mad.

  James walked toward them as if approaching an exhibit, unable to help himself. When he had planted the bell-like flowers, he had only had a few bulbs, delicate things with pale stems and glassy petals that chimed softly whenever sunlight struck them just right. Now, an entire garden had sprung up in front of the longhouse steps. Dozens upon dozens of slender stalks waved gently in the morning air, each topped with a cluster of translucent bells. As the first rays of sun crested the trees and spilled into the clearing, they lit up and rang, each flower letting out a different note until the whole patch was singing.

  A slow, shifting melody, like a choir testing its voice.

  James stood there, arms loosely folded, and just listened. The sound slid under his skin and settled something that had been clenched since they climbed into those tunnels. The Heartroot’s mana pulsed faintly at the edge of his senses, a steady, calm rhythm. Not grabbing, not demanding, just… there. A heartbeat for the village.

  “The growth rate is accelerating,” Lumen murmured near his ear. “These blooms should not be this mature yet.”

  “Magic tree equals magic flower garden,” James said. “I can live with that.”

  He watched as Pebble waddled out from behind Marla’s legs, tiny bare feet pattering across the packed earth. The toddler stopped dead at the edge of the flowerbed, eyes huge and round. One small hand reached forward cautiously, then retreated in awe when the nearest cluster chimed a little louder as if greeting her. She giggled, a delighted squeak, and clapped, the petals answering with another cascade of music.

  It was a scene straight out of one of those fantasy shows he used to binge. Only this time it was his responsibility if the magic singing flowers suddenly tried to eat anyone.

  “Looks like the Heartroot’s taken a liking to us,” James said under his breath. “Let’s hope it’s the harmless kind of liking.”

  “Trees are rarely harmless,” Lumen said. “But this one appears… content.”

  “That’s… not terrifying at all.”

  He tore his attention away from the flowers and scanned the rest of the clearing. The peaceful morning hummed with the low-level bustle of a village that had almost lost people and now treasured the calm.

  And near the edge of the clearing, like the beginning of a very strange painting, stood Finni and his herd.

  The pasture fence had gone up the previous evening, rough wooden posts driven into the earth, woven with branches and rope, forming a wide half-circle hugging the treeline. Alder and Trell’s work was solid if not pretty, and it was more than enough to keep small animals in. Or so James hoped, given their new livestock.

  Inside the fence, more than a dozen small white deer moved with cautious grace. Aether fawns, as Lumen had called them. Their snowy fur glimmered faintly; their small spiral horns gleamed with a soft inner light. They nosed at the fresh grass, nibbled at moss-covered stones, and occasionally bounded a few steps for the sheer joy of it, leaving little motes of light in the air that faded slowly.

  Finni walked among them like he had done it his entire life.

  He moved unhurriedly, bare feet whispering over the grass, one hand trailing along the nearest fence post as if feeling something in the wood. Every time a fawn lifted its head, its luminous eyes tracked him with quiet trust. When he paused, they gathered around him in a loose cluster, horns almost touching his legs. The boy murmured something under his breath, words that sounded like nothing James recognized, soft and lilting. The fawns’ ears flicked toward him, and they all settled, lowering themselves to the ground like a white, glowing puddle.

  “They like him,” James said.

  “They obey him,” Lumen corrected quietly. “That is different.”

  James followed the familiar’s gaze to Finni’s eyes. The boy’s irises, once a similar hazel to his brother’s, now glowed green, a clear, deep shade that reflected the Heartroot’s light. When he turned his head, for a heartbeat James thought he saw something else in there. Leaves moving in a windless forest. The weight of branches older than any village.

  Then Finni smiled and waved at Pebble, and the moment broke.

  Pebble squeaked and toddled toward the fence, bouncing up and down, hands clinging to a low branch. One of the fawns lifted its head, sniffed the air, and trotted over. It lowered its head carefully, pressing its nose to the girl’s fingers. Light sparked gently, harmless, like static. Pebble squealed in joy and tried to hug the fawn’s face through the fence.

  “Pebble,” Marla warned from the fire, voice sharp but fond. “Gentle, girl.”

  Finni laughed softly and laid a calming hand on the fawn’s back. “She likes the little one,” he said. “They all do. Children carry the forest’s laughter.”

  James almost choked on nothing.

  “That is not how you used to talk,” he muttered.

  Finni looked over at him, and for a heartbeat that strange, serene expression returned. “Some things are easier to hear now,” he said. “The forest murmurs, and I listen.”

  Near the edge of the pasture, Tember stood with his arms folded and his jaw clenched so tight James could see the muscle jumping. His eyes flicked from his brother to the fawns and back again, his expression an ugly mix of resentment and confusion. His class had named him a Rider, a hero in the making, destined for some dramatic future on the back of a beast. Yet here he stood without a mount, while his brother gathered glowing deer like it was nothing.

  He caught James looking and quickly schooled his face into something more neutral. It did not hide the way his fist tightened.

  “You see it too,” Lumen murmured. “Their resonance is splitting. Two once-twined paths diverging.”

  “I see two teenagers who are going to give me a headache,” James said under his breath. “We can file mystical twin soul fragmentation under ‘things to worry about later.’”

  There was work to be done.

  He left the pasture behind with a last glance, Pebble now copying the fawns and trying to eat grass, Marla swooping in to rescue her, and crossed to the rough smithing setup near the central fire. Varn was already there, stoking the flames with a thin branch, his hair damp with morning sweat. The makeshift forge was little more than a contained pit with a carefully arranged bed of coals and some stones to concentrate heat, but it was a beginning.

  Chunks of ore sat in a neat pile beside it. Grey iron rock shot through with veins of dull blue and a faint glitter that caught the light. Pieces of the dead elemental, now reduced to raw material.

  “Morning,” James said, picking up one of the chunks. It was heavier than it looked. “How’s the fire?”

  “Hot enough,” Varn said. His voice carried a calm James had not heard from him before, something anchored and sure. “We will see if it is hot enough for this stubborn stone.”

  He took the ore from James’s hands and set it near the coals, then reached for another. His movements had changed too. More deliberate. There was a new firmness in the way he held the rocks, as if he understood something about them now he hadn’t before. The notification he had practically shouted yesterday still echoed in James’s memory.

  Profession gained: Smith.

  Skill gained: Metalworking – Lv. 1.

  It suited him. Metal Sense and Smith, a pair of traits that stitched together neatly, giving Varn a road to walk that wasn’t just “former wounded warrior trying to be useful.” Watching him now, face lit by the fire, eyes reflecting orange and blue, James felt a small, quiet satisfaction.

  He had done that. Not alone, circumstances, the Heartroot, the world, all had their hands in it, but he had nudged things. Blessed Varn at the right moment. Provided ore and the excuse to work it. Sometimes being chieftain meant pushing people out of burning tunnels. Other times it meant handing them a hammer and waiting.

  He turned as footsteps approached. Alder and Trell came over side by side, the familiar pair already mid-argument.

  “…if we lean the beams like that the roof will sag,” Alder was saying. “You don’t want sag, Trell.”

  “I do not know what sag is,” Trell grumbled, “but I know that if you make the wall too long, it will fall, and I will be under it.”

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  James smiled. “Perfect timing. We’re building your playground today.”

  Both men brightened, arguments forgotten. “The workshop?” Alder asked, eyes going wide with hope.

  James nodded. “Assuming it doesn’t explode when I draw it. Always a risk.”

  He tapped his interface with a mental nudge. The now-familiar translucent panel slid into his mind’s eye, hovering at the edge of his vision. The Workshop blueprint icon, which had been stubbornly red for days, now glowed a satisfying blue. A small note pulsed beside it, listing requirements in neat lines.

  Wooden frame — fulfilled.

  Stone foundation — fulfilled.

  Iron hinges — partially fulfilled.

  Iron tools — partially fulfilled.

  Designated stations — customizable.

  “Right,” he said. “You two, with me. Varn, keep coaxing that ore into something that doesn’t look like a rock. We’ll need hinges and nails sooner than you think.”

  “Yes, chieftain,” Varn said, with a half-smile that still looked strange and wonderful on his once-gloomy face.

  James led Alder and Trell toward the far edge of the clearing, where the trees thinned and the ground rose just enough to give a sense of separation from the living spaces. It was the best place for noise and smoke and the assorted chaos of making things.

  As he walked, he passed the training area Rogan had claimed.

  Rogan stood at one end of a roughly marked circle, feet planted, shield strapped to his arm. A pitiful thing made of rough planks that Alder had quickly made after Rogan’s insistence, and one his other hand, his trusted spear. The man still moved stiffly at times, old wounds not fully forgotten, but the light James had put in him with Hero’s Benediction lingered in more ways than glowing hair. There was a steadiness now, a certain way he squared his shoulders that felt… bigger.

  Across from him, Kerrin darted forward in a blur of movement. Verdant energy flared along the length of his wooden spear, not quite visible but tangible in the way the air seemed to ripple. He aimed for an opening at Rogan’s side, and Rogan’s shield slid into place a heartbeat before impact, absorbing the blow with a dull thump. The shield did not shine with golden shards now, but James could almost see where Sunshard Bastion had taught Rogan’s body how to move, how to let force flow through him instead of resisting it.

  “Again,” Rogan grunted.

  Kerrin grimaced and obliged.

  On the sidelines, Maude and Havlik watched with differing expressions. Maude's eyes burned with determination, her fingers flexing on the shaft of her practice staff as if itching to jump in. Havlik, broad-shouldered, younger than Rogan but older than Kerrin, with a perpetually startled look, seemed less certain. His grip on his own wooden weapon shifted between too tight and too loose, betraying nerves.

  “Switch,” Rogan called. “Maude and Havlik.”

  Maude shot a longing glance toward the treeline where Bren had disappeared earlier that morning, heading off to hunt. She had argued, briefly, for joining him, citing her new Warrior profession and skills with a bright, eager smile. Rogan had fixed her with a steady stare and pointed at the training circle.

  “You want to fight beside him,” he had said. “Then you learn to fight here first.”

  Now she rolled her shoulders back, stepped forward, and settled into a stance James recognized from watching Footwork quietly correct her center of gravity over and over during practice. Her feet planted a little wider, knees soft, staff held low and ready. Warrior’s Instinct flickered at the edge of her posture too, making her glance not just at Rogan but at the entire field, the positions of friends and imaginary foes.

  “Breathe,” Rogan said to her. Then he turned to Havlik. “And you stop thinking about your feet like they’re rocks and more like they’re part of you. Move them.”

  Havlik swallowed hard but nodded.

  James watched them begin to spar, awkward at first, then gradually finding a rhythm. Maude’s Guard Break skill appeared in the way she shifted her staff from a defensive block into a quick, surprising strike, testing Havlik’s reactions. He stumbled, recovered, and managed to land a glancing tap on her shoulder that had her grinning despite the bruise.

  They were not warriors yet. But they were becoming.

  He left them to it and reached the spot he had picked out days ago in his mind. Bare ground, no rocks, enough space for a large footprint and then some. The trees back here stood further apart, letting in mottled sunlight that painted the soil in gold and shadow.

  “This is where?” Trell asked, eyeing the empty space as if expecting the workshop to already be there.

  “This is where,” James confirmed. “Stand back a little. Last time I tried to draw a large blueprint while exhausted, I almost fell through it.”

  He inhaled and reached for the blueprint. Mana stirred inside him, no longer scraped raw but still cautious, like muscles after a hard workout. He coaxed it gently, guiding the flow into familiar patterns. Lines and angles unfolded in his mind, the Workshop design rising up from concept into structure.

  It was bigger than he had first imagined. The moment he had clicked on “Multi-station” in his interface, a whole new set of options had opened up, like a CAD program suddenly unlocking advanced features.

  The main body of the building took shape as a long rectangle, its foundation of stone blocks forming a raised platform to keep out moisture. Thick wooden pillars lined the outer edges, sunk deep into the ground, connected by crossbeams that would support a sloping roof of thatch and wooden shingles. At one end of the rectangle, another shorter wing extended out at a right angle, forming the L-shape, the future smithy and tanning area, where smoke and smell could be vented away from the main workspace.

  Along the longer arm, he laid out stations.

  On one side near the entrance, a carpentry bay for Alder: a long workbench with slots for tools, a sawhorse, and space to stack timber under the overhanging roof. Light from simple openings would fall onto the work surface, and there was room for Alder to spread out planks without tripping over his own feet.

  Next to it, the stonework area for Trell: a shorter, sturdier bench lower to the ground, with a recessed area for chiseling and hammering. Racks on the wall behind it would hold chisels and hammers once they existed. A trough nearby would be filled with water for dipping hot tools or washing dust away.

  The shorter wing, forming the top of the L, housed the bare-bones smithy. Here, he marked space for a proper stone forge someday, but for now the blueprint simply indicated a reinforced hearth, a chimney channel rising up through the roof, and a thick anvil block. Varn’s station hugged the open outer wall, allowing heat and smoke to escape easily. Hooks dangled from crossbeams above for hanging tools and metalwork.

  Opposite the smithing area, near the far corner where the wing bent back toward the main hall, he slotted in Harlon’s tanning station. A section of roof with more open slats for airflow, a series of pegs for stretching hides, a heavy table sloped ever so slightly to drain liquids away into a drainage ditch he marked outside. He wrinkled his nose even in the imagining; tanning would smell, but at least here it would not waft directly into the sleeping longhouses.

  In the inner angle of the L, protected from the worst of the wind, he carved out a quieter space for Mira’s cloth and leather work. A smooth worktable under a window. Shelves for folded hides and rolled fabric. Hooks for thread, bone needles, and whatever tools her growing skill would demand later. The area could be curtained off if needed, giving her light and privacy to work.

  Between all these, he left a shared open floor, wide enough for three people to move past one another carrying materials without elbowing anyone into a wall. There was a place for everything and room to grow when they inevitably invented more professions to clutter the space.

  The blueprint solidified. He pushed.

  Mana poured out of him and into the world, threads weaving, lines of light sketching themselves on the bare ground. It always gave him a sense of dizzy dislocation, watching something only he could see become something everyone could. Translucent walls sprang up, shimmering in pale blue-white, the skeleton of the workshop rising in the clearing. The L-shaped footprint glowed, edges precise, every beam and pillar drawn in light, hovering above the dirt.

  Alder let out a low whistle. “It is… big,” he said, almost reverent.

  “It is beautiful,” Trell said, eyes shining. “Also big.”

  James staggered a little as the last of the lines finished drawing. The blueprint hung there like a ghost of future work, faint enough that he could still see the trees through it but solid enough that when he reached out, his hand met a cool, tingling resistance.

  He exhaled slowly. “There,” he said. “Your playground.”

  Lumen pulsed with quiet approval above his shoulder. “Well done,” the familiar said. “You have made a proper bones for your village.”

  “High praise twice in one morning,” James said. “We must be doing something right.”

  The shimmering workshop drew attention like a campfire in darkness. One by one, villagers drifted over from their tasks. Mira came with her hair tied back, eyes bright as she spotted the corner that would be hers. Harlon followed, hands still smelling faintly of cured hide. Even Marla came, Pebble on her hip, both of them staring at the ghost building with wide eyes.

  “It will be noisy,” Marla said, squinting at the smithy wing. “And smoky.”

  “That’s why I put it over here,” James said. “Far from where you sleep. Far from where Pebble attempts to eat everything.”

  Pebble reached toward the glowing outline of a wall and patted it. Her hand slid through the light as if through water. She laughed and wriggled, demanding to be put down. When Marla obliged, Pebble toddled inside the invisible building, weaving between beams that were not yet there.

  Others followed, stepping through the ghost walls, reaching out, measuring imaginary tables with their hands. The air filled with the buzz of speculation, where to hang this, how to stack that, what else they might need.

  James watched it all with a feeling he had no single word for. Pride, certainly. Relief. And a thin thread of fear that ran through everything he did now. Every blueprint he drew, every skill he unlocked, every decision he made pushed the village another step forward. It also painted a brighter target on them.

  He shoved that last thought aside for now. There would be time enough to worry about targets.

  Afternoon drifted into evening in a blur of preparations. Alder and Trell argued amiably about which task they should start with. Varn returned to the hearth to coax metal into crude nails and bars. Rogan dismissed the morning’s training with orders to return after food for another set of drills. Maude groaned but smiled, the kind of smile that said she had found something she had not known she needed.

  Bren had not yet returned from hunting, but that was not unusual. The man could disappear into the trees for hours, followed only by the faint hum of his Evasive Momentum keeping him just out of claws’ reach. James checked his mana once, just to be sure he was not sensing anything like the elemental again, and found only the usual scatter of small beasts.

  The sun dipped slowly toward the horizon, turning the trunks of the trees into pillars of amber and shadow. The Heartroot caught the light and glowed, its leaves catching fire with gold that spread across the clearing, painting everyone in warm color. The mana firerflies woke fully near dusk, wings opening and closing, casting soft glimmers.

  James stood at the edge of the phantom workshop, tracing one last line in his mind, adjusting a window by half a handspan so that morning light would fall just right on Mira’s table. It was a small, fussy detail, and precisely the sort of thing that made him feel alive.

  “You are smiling,” Lumen observed.

  “I am thinking about how much I would have charged for this design back home,” James said. “Or how many annoying emails it would have taken to get this team to agree on anything.”

  “Yes,” Lumen said dryly. “You were very important in your world. Now you are important in this one in a way that actually matters.”

  James huffed a laugh, more breath than sound. “Don’t let it go to your head, lightbulb.”

  Someone shouted near the treeline.

  It was not the sharp cry of panic he associated with monsters, but something shorter, cut off quickly. A muttered curse followed, then the rustle of someone pushing through undergrowth.

  Every head turned toward the sound.

  Bren stepped out of the tree line, and at first glance it looked like any other evening returning from a hunt. He had a few rabbits hanging from his belt by their hind legs, fur matted with drying blood. His hair was mussed, cheeks flushed, breath a little quick from the walk. He took three steps into the clearing before the difference resolved.

  Blood was leaking down his left arm in a steady line, soaking the side of his tunic, dripping from his fingers. His shoulder was darker, a spreading patch where the fabric clung wetly. His jaw was set in a tight line, his eyes scanning the clearing until they found James.

  Maude saw him a heartbeat before anyone else. She had been helping Havlik stretch out a sore leg near the training circle and now froze, staff dropping from her hands to thud in the dirt. “Bren,” she breathed, and then she was running, crossing the distance between them with none of her earlier training stiffness.

  Rogan’s hand went automatically to where his spear would be if he were wearing it, eyes narrowing.

  Irla, who had been chatting softly with Varn near the fire, straightened like a string had been pulled along her spine. Her eyes, still rimmed in faint shadows from the mana she had burned in the tunnels, locked onto the blood.

  James did not move at first.

  He was not looking at Bren’s wound. He was looking at Bren’s other hand.

  The hunter’s right hand was clenched white-knuckled around something long and thin. As he walked, he kept his arm angled awkwardly so the object did not bump his leg. When he drew closer, James saw the shape clearly.

  An arrow.

  The shaft was smooth, straight, fletched with dark feathers. The head was made of polished black stone, wickedly clean even smeared with blood. It had been snapped in half, Bren must have broken it to pull it free, but even shattered, it looked like a deliberate, manufactured thing, not something carved hurriedly around a fire.

  Their eyes met.

  In that instant, there was no need for words. Bren’s face, usually so open and easy, had gone stiff, his mouth pressed into a thin line. Fear flickered there, and anger, and something like disbelief.

  James felt his stomach turn to ice.

  Someone had shot at his hunter. Someone with forged arrowheads and cut wood and enough distance not to be seen. Someone near enough to track Bren in the forest. Someone aware enough to aim.

  Someone had taken notice of their growing village.

  All at once, the Heartroot’s gentle pulse, the chiming flowers, the excited chatter about workshops and fawn pastures felt like a dream laid over something sharp.

  James stepped forward to meet Bren, the ghost of the workshop towering silently at his back.

  “Let’s get you patched up,” he said, voice steady, each word carefully laid, one after another, like stones in a wall. “And then you’re going to tell me exactly where you found that.”

  The arrow glinted dully in Bren’s hand, catching the last light of the setting sun.

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