Ruein: Fires of Haraden: Action/Adventure Necromancy Series (Books of Ruein Book 2) G.O. Turner (top 20 books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: G.O. Turner
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Taking his cue, Leafar disrobed. He scratched at his chest tuft, while his dangly bits greeted for all Haraden.
Liv winced, averting her eyes.
Leafar cracked his towel against Twigs backside, then turned and bolted for the nearest grotto. Twigs glared at Ceer, a query if his friend would allow this to stand.
Tugging off his jerkin and trousers, Ceer tossed them upon their svirfneblin page. âLeafar hear Ceerâs tale of the wyvern and the fist?â The half-orc sauntered to Leafarâs bath and waded in.
Twigs cleared his throat and shrugged off his clothes. He regarded the Lightbringer. âYou know, it is a natural thing. The more you holies deny yourselves, the less in tune with the world you are. I mean, how good could it be to resist what comes naturally?â
As if heâd flicked her forehead, Liv cocked an eye at the gnome. Her retort riled up too late for Twigs, seeing as heâd already lunged for the same hot tub. The svirfneblin stooped to gather his articles as well.
âWould seem theyâve found what makes them comfortable.â Stifling a grin, Evets leaned back. âLadies, shall we?â
With Liv now flummoxed, Ruein contented herself with the easy exit. She strode forward as Liv grumbled behind. Trailing them, Evets waved to several women of the house. A gesture to the two gnomes and the half-orc got their understanding. A slender, pixie-haired oneâs eyes seemed to linger on Liv as the brunette and a fair-haired drowess passed. The women descended upon the bath, proffered smiles proceeding them.
With the night overhead, the warmth from the baths faded. In its place, the overcast spiral crowded in over the open sky. The more immediate clouds rolled darker than before. The shimmer of the volcano reflected a warmth against the enclosing blanket above. Looking over the city lights and the walls beyond, Ruein scanned what she could of the distant farmlands. The false suns which previously dotted the landscape had been extinguished for the evening.
Councilman Evets paused some steps behind. âHaraden makes a point of not apologizing for acts within. We prize that which we have achieved here, and are very protective not to have just any outsiders inserting themselves.â
âI can understand why. The underdark can beâŠunforgiving.â Rueinâs hundred-yard stare feathered out to the nothingness ahead, neither paying heed to the drow nor to anything else.
Evets half smirked. âNow, that might be an understatement. I understand life in the dark engrains habits that are difficult to break.â
Livâs arms crossed to their usual place. âGuess thatâs about as close as we get to an apology. This the part where you âmake amendsâ?â
The drowâs smile tightened as he gathered his fair hair into a tail. Evets moved past them to rest upon the balcony rail. He turned in favor of the climbing citadel exterior. âNo doubt you find our realm impressive by your surface standards. Yet, Iâve little doubt that youâll find our storms even more so.â
Following his gaze, Ruein moved away from the building to gain a vantage of the spireâs rise. The brass-and-bronze plating artfully turned, cantilevered, and shunted at right angles. A flicker snatched at Rueinâs attention, a blue rip arced between plates. It seemed a lick of lightning had found a place of play in that span, then was gone.
Evets leaned in. âLooks as if we are brewing for a good one soon. Quite the marvel our kind would never see in the down below. The mixture of minerals and steam, suffused through arctic air and combined with the heat⊠When driven by a storm against the Apex citadel, I am confident you will see quite the show.â
With a crick, Rueinâs head snapped to Evets. âYou have a need to resolve some deaths.â
âYes.â Evets regarded his polished boots, then Ruein. âThese disappearances in the farmlands⊠Iâm afraid have been quite brutal. We of the council have been able to keep the citizenry unafraid. However, our farmers provide for the vast majority of us. Those humans the council considers to be irreplaceable. None of our underkind have experience with surface dirt. Far better to leave it to yours. While our Guard Elite has been endeavoring to uncover the culprit, we were content to leave it outside our city walls.â
Livâs eyes tightened on the drow. âYou were what?â
âWorried over your kin? Yes.â Evets shrugged and leaned back. âWeâd little doubt that eventually our forces would somehow umber-hulk it from wherever it hid. We even took to seeing if our healers could uncover something of use. Brought back a fresh kill for the tenders. That invited the slayer into carrying its thirst inside our Apex walls. After that, wellâŠinterest in becoming involved waned.â
âThe victim that you sent,â said Ruein.
Evets nodded. âWas hoping Vrimon would get some sense of what transpired. Were you able to find himâŠuseful?â
Ruein tilted her head. âWeâll get to that. Tell me more.â
âThe Council was confident, with Vrimonâs history, that discretion would be maintained. The last thing Haraden could afford is an abandonment of the farmlands. Do we have your understanding, necromancer?â Evets stepped forward, inspecting her. âWould you have the arcanity to wade through to our solution?â
Liv stepped between them. âThis thing has been out there killing for how long now? And youâre just leaving them all ignorant?â
âWeâve posted warnings. Providing those of your race are reading abled, they will be safe so long as they heed. Take heart, cleric. Since our Tenderâs demise, thereâve been no additional bodies found. Here we thought gossip of Vrimonâs pending arrival may have scared the thing. Knowing you have come, I wonder how it will react now?â Evets looked over to Ruein.
His judgment had its sway.
Theyâd traveled so far with little to show. What Ruein had gleaned from the boxed head wasnât nothing, yet it didnât seem to lead anywhere.
Her illusory blue eyes drifted out over the railing. So many moving pieces in an
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