
To bring back a burden is not the same as mending what was broken.
Ivan carried the Unicorn back into the Grove after we found her by the river. I can still see that more clearly than I’d like. Her blood had been taken. Her horn was gone. The Shadow Druid’s words were still fresh in us, and the mud of the riverbank had not yet dried from our boots. We brought her home because leaving her there was worse.
There was not much I could do. My throat was still wrapped from Kaltyra’s bite, and my strength came and went like a poor lantern in wind. I walked and stood because I still could. When Ivan lowered her near the place chosen for burial, between the great tree and the waterfall, the Grove seemed to go still around us.
That was right, if anything about it could be called right. The tree had watched over the heart of the Grove longer than most of us had known its paths. The water gave sound where words failed. I do not know what Ivan said over her. I know he offered what prayer he could. Mendel stood nearby, and Alyndra was there with us, having seen what waited by the river. Nai was in the Grove when we brought the Unicorn home. Her grief was its own creature after that, and I won’t pretend to measure it. The Unicorn had been more to her than a guardian. She had been friend, pack mate, and something almost older than either word.
Until then, the Unicorn had belonged more to the Grove than to any telling of mine. We did not make her safer by speaking of her where any curious ear could hear. She had simply been there, part of the place’s shape, old enough that I thought of her less as a guest than as one of its truths. Then there was a grave where that truth had stood.
Soon after the river, close enough that memory gives no clean edge between one hurt and the next, the Circle began trying to put its hands around what had happened. It was not a normal gathering. Normal things had little say after the mound was raised. People came because Ivan’s report could not be ignored, because the Shadow Druid had named the Purge, because the dream had been shared, and because no one wished to be the one who waited too long.
I was on my way toward that business when Kaltyra found me. Perhaps she had waited for me. Perhaps she only guessed my path. I have had enough years since then to wonder over small details that mattered little at the time. She came near enough to speak, and I had my sword in hand. Sora stood at my side. That was not ceremony. It was not bravado. It was sense.
Kaltyra saw the anger without my needing to spend words on it. She had lived too much of her life close to claw, fang, and blood to miss such a thing. I was standing still because movement would have chosen too much for me. My throat was not made for shouting then, and I was never much for outbursts.
That was when I noticed what she had brought.
The locket.
I had not known where it had gone after the bite. In the grass, in the mud, in Kaltyra’s hand, under someone’s boot while they tried to keep me alive. I had thought through all of those and liked none of them. The little flower had been missing from my chest, and with it had gone one of the few pieces of Flora I could still touch. When I saw it, the sword felt heavier. The chain was broken and muddied, and the little flower looked too small in Kaltyra’s hand.
Kaltyra tossed it to me. I caught it with my free hand, the sword still held in the other. My fingers closed too hard around the broken chain. Some of that was weakness and some was anger, but more than either was the old wound opening in a place I had not expected. Flora had been gone for years. A man can learn to live around such a loss, but he never owns all the doors it may use to enter him again.
Kaltyra knew what she had done to me. I will not dress it up into more tenderness than I felt. There was no clean forgiveness in that moment. There was barely room for speech. She stood before me as the woman who had returned my locket and the beast who had nearly torn the life out of my throat. Both were true. She knew Ivan’s magic had stood between me and death. She spoke of regret and blood-debt. Two prices, mine to name. One had already been named, for her to stay away from the lich bound up in her troubles. The other stood between us now.
The Circle needed answers. I could have asked Kaltyra for something meant only to hurt her. It had crossed my mind then, and I had enough cause. Instead I asked for what she knew of the Shadow Druids.
That frightened her. Not me alone. Not even Sora, though Sora made no effort to look harmless. Her fear went deeper than the moment. It had the look of old snares and old cages, of choices made badly and enemies that had not forgotten her. Kaltyra was dangerous. She was afraid all the same.
She gave what she could. Not a neat answer. Not a path laid clear from root to river. Her knowledge was partial, and much of it came from her own troubles rather than ours. Habits she had noticed. Materials she knew they favored. Days or signs that mattered to them. The sort of thing that might mean little alone, but could matter later beside a track, a wet stone, or a bit of ash. I listened more than I spoke. My throat made a poor tool, and I did not want to waste what little she was willing to give.
Even then, nothing about her came clean. She spoke often enough of the Balance, and she was Grumbar’s. I do not say that as insult. Earth has weight. Stone holds its shape. Oaths matter to the Earthlord, and change is not welcomed for its own sake. In many ways, she should have fit the Circle. She had been one of us once, and not by mistake. There was a strange thing in that. Kaltyra hated change as fiercely as any servant of Grumbar might, but she seemed to think striking first was the same as standing firm. Whatever tie Kaltyra had to the Balance came through the druid’s path and through her own judgment, and that was where the trouble had always lived. Her judgment had teeth. I had felt them.
The Circle’s way was not always clean. We had delayed when perhaps we should have moved. We had failed to mend every wound that later bled into worse. Still, our service was not meant to answer one temper. The Shadow Druids saw restraint and called it cowardice. Kaltyra had done much the same in her own way. Some of the accusation found meat. Some of it only wanted blood.
Before she left, Kaltyra asked one thing of me. She wanted Celduil told that she wished to meet him alone. That request sat poorly with me. Celduil was High Ranger. Sending him alone toward Kaltyra, after what she had done to me, was not a small favor carried between acquaintances. Yet I had asked her for knowledge under the shape of a debt, and she had given what she was willing to give. If I was going to refuse her request, it needed to be for a better reason than my anger.
I told her I would carry the message. No promise of safety. No promise of trust. Only that I would pass the words on. Anger was still there, close enough to my hand that I could feel it in the grip of the sword. I had given my word. Anger did not change that.
Others were drawing near by then. The day’s business had begun to gather around us, and Kaltyra noticed before I needed to warn her. Whatever courage had carried her to me began to fail. I saw her measure the shape of more than one Circle member approaching, and I saw what she thought it meant. She had not come to stand before the Circle. She had come to return what she had taken, speak what she dared, and leave before judgment learned her scent. She left quickly.
I stood a while later with the locket in hand and Sora at my side. It should have felt like relief. It did not. The locket was back. Flora was not. Kaltyra had returned what was mine, but she had not unmade the bite. The little flower lay in my palm, small and familiar, and I hated how much comfort it still had power to give me.
When I reached the others, I passed along Kaltyra’s information first, then her request for Celduil. I do not know how rough the words came out, but Celduil heard enough.
Tyn brought back another burden soon after. He returned from Cloakwood bloodied and beaten. Much of what he learned came to me through his account rather than my own eyes. He had gone looking for Shadow Druids and found one willing to say enough. If the Unicorn was dead, then nothing was coming. It was already here. The force moving against us was ancient, and it would run over the land until things were as they once were.
The Shadow Druid blamed the Circle. He named the burning of the Sharpteeth by Black Orcs, the lizardfolk beaten and raided, their eggs stolen, the wolves driven out. He spoke of our inaction as if the whole wound of the land could be laid at our feet. It would be easier now to say he lied. He did not need to lie about everything. There had been failures enough to gather and sharpen.
That was the worst part. Some of it was true enough to hurt, which made it easier for him to use.
The lizardfolk mattered. The stolen eggs mattered. The Shadow Druids had their own story for why the Circle deserved to be cast aside, and they had found an old force willing to make their anger useful.
The Unicorn’s grave did not feel like an ending after that. I had the locket back, but I kept touching it like I expected it to be gone again. Tyn had returned alive. That should have been better news than it felt. Each thing brought back to us only showed another place where something had been broken.
We did not yet know the full pattern. We did not know how many more guardians were at risk. We only knew the Grove’s guardian had been taken first, and that the ones who took her were not done.


