The campfire crackled softly, casting flickering shadows across the small clearing.
The forest around them was quiet—save for the occasional rustle of leaves stirring in the wind.
Akiko leaned back against a log, her tail swishing lazily behind her. The flames danced in her eyes as she grinned, mischief already blooming.
“This is going to be a good one,” she said, voice brimming with anticipation. “I can feel it. Just think of the spoils once we’re back in town. Drinks for everyone! Maybe I’ll even buy myself some new boots this time.”
“Boots don’t pay for themselves,” Brom grumbled, tossing a small branch onto the fire. His plate armor glinted in the firelight—scratched, scorched, and heavy with memory. “Not if you keep missing traps like the one on the last job. Flame wards, Akiko. They’re not exactly subtle.”
Akiko rolled her eyes. “You’re never going to let that one go, are you?”
“Not when I had to stand between the lot of you and a wall of fire,” Brom retorted, lips twisting into a smirk. “I can still feel the heat on my beard.”
Valric chuckled. His voice was warm, steady. “That’s what we have you for, isn’t it? Shields up, charging into danger while the rest of us handle the finer details?”
“Finer details,” Brom muttered. “Sure. Let’s call it that.”
A soft sigh rose from Kaede, who sat slightly apart from the group, back straight, arms folded in her lap.
Her long black hair shimmered in the firelight. When she finally spoke, her tone was calm—but edged with skepticism.
“We’re rushing in with barely any information. We don’t even know what this relic does, let alone why someone would pay so handsomely for it.”
“That’s where trust comes in, Kaede,” Valric replied, his voice easy, almost reassuring. “I’ve worked for Sorren before. The man’s honest, if nothing else. He wouldn’t send us on a fool’s errand.”
“Honesty doesn’t mean competence,” Kaede said, folding her arms tighter. “If this relic is as valuable as he claims, we should assume the dangers surrounding it will match.”
Akiko waved a hand. “You worry too much. What’s the point of an adventure if it’s not a little risky? We’re good at what we do.”
Kaede’s gaze softened slightly. “Confidence is one thing. Recklessness is another.”
“Reckless?” Akiko gasped, pressing a hand to her heart. “You wound me, Kaede. I’ll have you know I’ve been nothing but careful since—”
“Since Brom almost lost his beard?” Valric cut in, grin wide.
“Since forever!” Akiko fired back.
Laughter rippled through the group. Even Kaede let a faint smile slip past her guard.
Around the fire, the camaraderie was real. Earned.
But beneath the glow of warmth and familiar banter, the weight of the mission lingered—unspoken, but understood.
The crypt loomed before them, ancient stone half-swallowed by moss and creeping vines.
Cold air leaked from the darkened archway, thick with the scent of decay and earth long undisturbed.
Akiko clapped her hands together. Her foxlike ears perked, tail swaying behind her with barely-contained excitement.
“There’s definitely a lich down there,” she said brightly, as if she’d just stumbled across a bakery, not a den of undeath.
Behind her, Kaede echoed the words in a tone stripped of all joy.
“There’s definitely a lich down there,” she murmured, eyes narrowing as she scanned the gloom.
Same words. Different universe.
Valric let out a short laugh, resting his weight on his sword.
“You two couldn’t sound more different if you tried,” he said. “And yet—perfectly in sync.”
Brom snorted as he adjusted his shield.
“It’s like the sun and moon decided to have a conversation. Optimism versus doom.”
He tilted his head toward the crypt. “Who's taking bets on which one’s right?”
“Oh, I’m right,” Akiko said cheerfully. She leaned forward to peer into the shadows. “Big lich, big treasure. Maybe even a crown. I could get used to a crown.”
Kaede cast her a sideways glance. “And if that lich decides it wants to wear your head as a crown?”
Akiko waved her hand. “That’s what Brom’s shield is for. Right?”
She shot the dwarf a grin. “Didn’t you say something about charging into danger earlier?”
Brom gave her a flat look, but a smile tugged at his mouth anyway. “You keep making me go in first, Akiko, and I’ll start charging hazard pay.”
Valric chuckled, stepping forward to place a steady hand on Akiko’s shoulder.
“Let’s stay focused. Lich or no lich, we’ve got a job to do. Eyes open. Watch each other’s backs.”
Kaede nodded, her stance easing slightly.
“And try not to touch anything you shouldn’t,” she added, pointedly.
Akiko pressed a hand to her chest, mock wounded.
“Me? Touch something I shouldn’t? I’m offended at the very suggestion.”
“I’m not,” Kaede muttered.
Brom barked a laugh, loud and real. “At least we’ll have entertainment on the way to an early grave.”
The acrid scent of smoke clung to the air as the group stumbled out of the narrow passage.
Brom emerged first, shield raised, the edges scorched black and his beard singed at the tips.
Kaede followed close behind, robes dusted with ash, her expression hovering somewhere between exhaustion and exasperation.
“Flames again!” Brom grumbled, turning the shield over with a critical eye. “I swear, Akiko, you’ve got a knack for finding every fire trap in existence.”
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Akiko, practically bouncing despite the smoke, flicked an ember off her sleeve.
“Hey, don’t look at me! Kaede’s the magic one. Shouldn’t she have sensed it or something?”
Kaede shot her sister a scathing glare.
“Oh yes. Let me just casually detect every magical ward while fending off spectral guardians and navigating ancient runes.”
She jabbed her staff into the ground. “Clearly, I haven’t been doing enough already.”
Akiko grinned, utterly unfazed. “See? You admit it. Your fault.”
Kaede’s fingers twitched near her staff.
Valric stepped between them with the ease of someone who’d done it a hundred times before.
“All right, enough, you two. We’re alive, aren’t we? Let’s not start fighting each other when we’re this close to the end.”
Brom snorted, leaning on his shield.
“You’d think they were siblings, the way they carry on.”
Kaede didn’t even look at him. “We are siblings.”
“And it shows,” Brom muttered.
Valric clapped him on the shoulder. “You’ll survive. Your shield’s held up this far, hasn’t it?”
“Aye,” Brom admitted, though the corners of his mouth twitched. “But at this rate, I’ll need a new one by the time we’re done.”
While they traded words, Akiko had already drifted toward the massive stone door ahead.
Its surface shimmered with runes, carved deep and glowing faintly—an ancient lock begging to be solved.
She crouched before it, eyes bright.
“This is it,” she said, practically vibrating. “The big prize. All those traps, all that running and fighting... it’s about to pay off.”
Kaede leaned on her staff, watching her sister like she was some strange and incurable illness.
“You’re unbelievable, you know that?”
Akiko flashed a grin. “I know. But you love me for it.”
Kaede sighed, pinching the bridge of her nose. “Some days, I wonder.”
“Focus,” Valric said gently, but firmly. “If this is the end of the line, we can’t afford to let our guard down.”
“Especially not you,” Kaede added, directing it toward Akiko like a warning label.
“Yeah, yeah,” Akiko said, waving them off as she knelt beside the door. “Trust me, I’ve got this.”
Kaede muttered something under her breath.
Something about how that was exactly what she was afraid of.
But Akiko was already lost in her own world—hands brushing the ancient lock, eyes scanning its secrets.
The others watched in silence, preparing themselves for whatever waited beyond the final door.
Akiko pulled out her lockpicking tools with a practiced flourish, grinning to herself as she examined the mechanism.
“This is going to be easy,” she muttered. “Just a little twist here, a little nudge there, and—”
Kaede’s hand shot out, grabbing Akiko’s wrist in a firm, steady grip.
“Flame ward,” she said, voice flat.
Her amber eyes locked onto Akiko’s, then pointed down—just a fraction of an inch from where Akiko’s tool had hovered—at a rune glowing faintly near the edge of the lock.
Akiko blinked. Then leaned closer. “Oh. Whoops. Good catch!”
She flashed her sister a sheepish grin and adjusted her grip, careful to steer her tools clear of the trap.
“You’re so good at this whole ‘magic’ thing.”
Kaede didn’t release her right away. “One of these days, your luck’s going to run out, Akiko.”
There was no bite to her tone. Just tired, honest concern.
Then she let go, stepping back to lean on her staff, her eyes never leaving her sister.
Akiko rolled her shoulders with a shrug. “That’s why I keep you around.”
She winked. Kaede sighed.
Behind them, the others fell into quiet readiness.
Brom stood with his shield at the ready, eyes scanning the room like a veteran waiting for something to go wrong.
Valric rested a hand on the hilt of his sword, calm but coiled, like he could spring into motion at a moment’s notice.
The seconds dragged out.
The only sounds were the faint scraping of Akiko’s tools and the low hum of the pulsing runes.
Then—
Click.
A deep rumble echoed through the stone.
The door began to descend with a slow, grinding slide, revealing the vault beyond.
Cool air spilled into the chamber, thick with the scent of dust, old incense, and something else.
Something older. Something alive.
Akiko was the first through the threshold.
Her steps slowed as she took in the room—shelves and chests brimming with gold, gemstones, and artifacts gleaming in the golden light.
But none of it mattered.
At the far end, on a pedestal of polished marble, bathed in a shaft of radiance, sat the relic.
A crystal, suspended in an intricately worked silver frame.
Its surface glowed with a gentle gold, etched with countless runes that shimmered and shifted like wind across water.
“Wow,” Akiko whispered. Her voice echoed faintly, reverently. “That’s… well, that’s something.”
Kaede’s grip on her staff tightened. “Don’t touch it.”
Akiko turned, all innocence.
“Who, me?” Her tail swished behind her. “I wouldn’t dream of it.”
“You absolutely would,” Brom muttered.
Akiko grinned but didn’t argue. Her eyes drifted back to the relic.
She could feel it humming—vibration deep in her bones, like it was aware of her.
It wasn’t just treasure. It was awake.
“Stay alert,” Valric said, stepping into the room behind her.
His tone was calm, but his posture was tense.
“If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that the prize is never unguarded.”
Kaede nodded slowly, gaze fixed on the crystal. “It’s not just the traps we need to worry about. That thing’s radiating power. Might be dangerous even without guardians.”
Akiko kept walking, drawn forward.
Behind her, Brom grumbled. “Why is it always you rushing in first? Thought we agreed I’m the point person.”
Akiko waved him off without even glancing back. “I’m just checking the relic for traps. You know—being responsible.”
She grinned over her shoulder. “Keep an eye out for that lich—I’m sure he’s lurking around here somewhere.”
“Responsible,” Brom muttered, gripping his shield a little tighter. “That’ll be the day.”
Valric chuckled, taking up position near the entrance with quiet ease.
Kaede stepped forward, staff glowing faintly as she swept her gaze across the chamber.
Akiko crouched by the pedestal. The marble was pristine, gleaming under the soft glow of the relic above it.
Her eyes narrowed as she inspected the stand, fingers twitching just shy of contact.
The relic hovered there—just close enough to reach.
She leaned in slightly, every instinct screaming at her to grab it. But she didn’t.
Instead, she pulled back, dusted off her hands, and stood.
“All clear, I think,” she said, turning toward the others. “Kaede, you’re up. Runes are all yours.”
Kaede approached with caution, her amber eyes locked on the relic.
The runes shimmered faintly—patterns shifting like ripples in still water.
She frowned, murmuring to herself as she traced them in the air with a slow, deliberate motion.
“Anything?” Valric asked, steady but alert.
Kaede shook her head. “I can’t decipher them. Too complex. Too old. Whatever this is, it’s far beyond me.”
“Great,” Brom muttered, scanning the chamber with renewed tension. “Exactly what I wanted to hear.”
Akiko tilted her head. “But… no traps, right?”
Kaede hesitated. Her grip on the staff tightened.
“It’s not a trap. At least… not in the traditional sense.” She drew in a breath. “But it’s powerful. Dangerous. We need to be careful.”
Akiko’s grin widened. “Careful is my middle name.”
“No, it’s not,” Kaede deadpanned. “Just don’t—”
“Relax,” Akiko interrupted, waving her hand. “Hands off, see?”
Brom muttered something under his breath, but Akiko had already turned back to the relic.
The glow pulsed slightly—subtle, but unmistakable.
Like it was responding to her.
“Valric,” Kaede said quietly, drawing closer to him. “Something doesn’t feel right. I can’t explain it, but—”
“We’ll stay alert,” Valric assured her. His hand rested lightly on the hilt of his blade.
“Just stay focused. If this thing’s as dangerous as it feels, we’ll need your eyes on it.”
Akiko’s fingers twitched again.
And then—
She reached out. Snatched the relic in a single, fluid motion.
The crystal was cool in her palm. Its glow flared brighter, golden light spilling across her face.
She held it up like a trophy, beaming.
“I got it!” she said, tail swishing with delight.
Click.
Akiko froze.
A low rumble filled the chamber as the pedestal began to sink into the ground.
Stone grated on stone, echoing like distant thunder.
“The door!” Valric shouted.
He bolted for the entrance.
The massive slab that had once welcomed them was now sliding shut—slow, inevitable.
Valric reached it just as it sealed with a final, resounding boom, cutting off their escape.
He struck the stone with a clenched fist, jaw tight.
All eyes fell on Akiko, still standing at the center of the chamber, clutching the glowing relic.
She smiled innocently. “What?”
Kaede exhaled slowly. “Akiko…”
Brom growled, shield rising again.
Akiko shrugged, sheepish. “We all decided it wasn’t trapped. You can’t pin this all on me.”
A deep grinding echoed through the vault. Stone walls trembled.
Hidden alcoves slid open with agonizing slowness—revealing towering guardians of solid rock.
Each one etched with glowing runes that pulsed in time with the relic’s light.
Massive weapons—blades, hammers, axes—rested in their hands, forged from the same ancient stone.
Valric’s sword was already in motion. “We’ve got company.”
Kaede’s grip tightened around her staff. “They’re bound to the vault. Their only purpose is to protect it.”
“Well, they’re doing a fine job so far,” Brom muttered.
He stepped in front of the others, shield raised. “Akiko, if you’ve got any bright ideas, now’s the time.”
Akiko clutched the relic closer. “Uh… does giving it back count?”
The first guardian stepped forward.
It raised its weapon with terrifying slowness. The others followed, their motions deliberate. Assessing.
Kaede’s eyes didn’t leave Akiko.
“I told you it was dangerous.”
“Okay, you were right!” Akiko yelped, backing away. “But in my defense—I didn’t think this would happen!”
“You never think this will happen!” Kaede snapped, already charging her next spell.
Valric’s voice cut clean through the chaos.
“Focus! We’re not dying in here. Brom—hold the line. Kaede—hit the runes if you can. Akiko—keep that thing safe. And don’t touch anything else.”
“I wasn’t planning on it!” Akiko shouted back, dodging around the nearest guardian as it advanced.
The clash began. Steel rang against stone as Valric’s blade met the closest guardian. His strikes were precise, controlled—
—but barely left a scratch. Chips of rock, no deeper than skin.
“Damn it,” he muttered, ducking under a heavy swing.
Brom held fast against another behemoth. A stone fist collided with his shield in a brutal impact, sending him staggering back.
He glanced down. The shield dented. His expression tightened.
“That’s going to cost me,” he growled. “Hits like a mountain.”
Kaede never stopped moving—her robes trailing, staff pulsing with arcane light.
She hurled bolt after bolt of searing magic. Each hit left glowing wounds in the guardians’ stone skin—but they weren’t slowing.
“Valric!” she called, breath catching. “I can slow them—but not like this! I need more time!”
“Then buy it!” he shouted, still locked in a two-on-one struggle.
Akiko danced between the guardians, nimble and untouchable.
The relic pulsed in her hands—taunting her with its calm glow.
A hammer swept toward her.
She twisted, barely avoiding the blow. The ground where she’d stood shattered.
“Come on!” she hissed. “I can beat them. Just let me—”
“You can’t!” Valric snapped, blade parrying a downward strike. “Your daggers won’t even scratch them. Keep that thing safe!”
Akiko gritted her teeth, ducking behind a broken ledge.
She looked down at the relic.
“What good is this thing if we’re going to get crushed?” she muttered, pulse thudding in her ears.
“Keep moving, Akiko!” Kaede shouted, firing another spell. “Just don’t let them get the relic!”
“I’m trying!”
Another blow shook the ground beneath her.
Across the vault, Brom roared—
—and was sent flying by a colossal strike.
His shield skidded across the marble floor, bent and broken.
“Brom!” Valric called—but he couldn’t move, still boxed in.
Kaede landed another killing blow, one guardian collapsing into rubble—
—but the next slammed a fist into her shoulder, sending her spinning.
She barely caught herself with her staff.
One arm hung limp. Her breath came ragged.
“I can’t keep this up,” she gasped.
Akiko bolted past two of the constructs, leaping across fractured ground.
“Stupid thing,” she muttered. “You’re supposed to do something.”
She shook it. Nothing happened.
“I wish—”
Her voice caught in her throat.
Kaede’s head snapped toward her. “Akiko, stop! Don’t—!”
Too late.
“I wish you’d get me out of this,” Akiko said.
The relic blazed.
Runes flared to life—golden, radiant, all-consuming. Light poured outward, erasing the battle, the guardians, the vault.
Akiko’s hands burned.
She floated. Weightless. Untethered.
The world fell away, unraveling into golden threads and silence.
“Kaede…” she whispered.
And then—
Nothing.