Camden Daystar - Stories
Posted: Fri Jan 16, 2026 2:30 pm
Chapter One: The Child of Ash and Fire.

1325 DR - Outskirts of Elversult
The defiled temple of Chauntea burned long after the screams had ended.
It's roof had collapsed inward, blackened beams leaning like broken ribs over a sanctum choked with ash. What remained of the village - once called Camden Dene, for the river that carved the valley in a slow silver arc - lay scattered in smoking ruins along the water’s edge.
The river's now murky waters flowed on, untroubled, carrying embers and fragments of charred remains of prayer scrolls, debris and shards of timber toward lands that would never know their source.
Darvin 'Greybeard' stood cautiously at the threshold of the ruined shrine, the fur mantle on his shoulders dusted grey, his breath slow and steady despite the heat. His greatsword remained sheathed. There was no enemy left to hunt.
His skills had served him well following the tracks here - boot leather, cart ruts, horse shoes, the careless signs of bandits who believed themselves beyond consequence. They had taken the village months ago, driven out its folk or put them to the sword, and turned the Earthmother's temple into their headquarters and counting house. The ranger had expected blood.
He had not expected judgment.
Behind him, the strange heretic priests of the 'Yellow God' and their hired guards moved among the ruins with quiet purpose. Their prayers had ended an hour earlier, when the last of their holy firestorms guttered into coals. What had begun as a cordon of holy flame - meant to trap and frighten the bandits within - had become something far greater. Darvin did not pretend to understand the full shape of it. He only knew that when the priests raised their voices, the sky itself had seemed to listen before erupting.
Now, only one sound broke the crackle of dying embers.
A child's cry.
Darvin froze.
It was faint. Thin. Alive.
He stepped forward without looking back, boots crunching over scorched stone as he followed the sound into the temple’s heart. The altar had split in two, its painted depiction of Chauntea's holy symbol scorched and unrecognisable, but beneath it - cradled in ash and shattered stone - lay a dirty bundle of cloth that still smouldered, yet did not burn.
Inside it, an infant stirred.
Darvin knelt, ignoring the heat that bit through his gloves. The babe’s coppery skin glowed faintly, as though embers lived beneath it. White hair coiling to to tips the colour of fresh flame clung damply to a brow already marked with soot. When the child opened his eyes, they reflected firelight like molten gold - staring up at him with wonder.
The ranger swallowed.
"I’ll be damned," he murmured, voice rough as gravel.
Footsteps approached. Robes brushed stone.
Kaspian Dawnfire knelt beside him, reverent and unafraid, the sun symbol at his throat gleaming brighter as he looked upon the child. He was young - barely more than a man, but divine power sat easily upon him, like a well-worn cloak. His expression was not shock, nor horror, but quiet awe.
"The Yellow God preserves whom He wills,” Kaspian said softly. “Even here."
Behind him stood Sunmaster Alric Vaelor, A man in his mid-thirties of equal age to Darvin, his superior - stern, broad-shouldered, his beard still dusted with ash. The senior priest’s gaze was sharp and appraising, not unkind, but unyielding. He studied the child as one might study a sigil burned into stone.
"The holy fires were ours," Vaelor said at last. "The judgment was lawful. If the child yet lives, then his survival is no accident."
Darvin shifted, instinctively turning the babe away from the lingering heat. "Or it’s just luck," he said with uncertainty. "Plenty of folk survive fires they shouldn’t."
Kaspian glanced at him, a faint smile touching his lips. "You do not believe that."
The ranger did not answer.
The truth was, he had seen too much fire in his life through his duty to his own god, Gwaeron Windstrom to trust coincidence. He bore the scars of it still - flesh and memory both - earned three years ago when Vaelor and his acolytes had dragged him half-dead from a burning caravan ambush along the Dragon Coast. A debt was a debt that must be honoured. That was why he walked with them now, why he had led them to Camden Dene before the priests even knew its name.
Vaelor stepped closer. "The bandits followed Mask," he said with little surprise in a tone which seemed careful and economical with the information being shared. "A demarchess from one of Westgate's guilds, by the signs. Ruthless but not especially clever... She used this place to bleed the coast roads dry, but her men's activities were blatant."
"And the child?" Darvin asked, regarding Vaelor carefully.
Vaelor’s jaw tightened as Kaspian replied. "There were no others of her rank among the dead."
The implication settled like the ash at their feet.
Kaspian reached out, fingers hesitantly hovering just above the child’s brow. The flames did not touch him. Instead, they bent - softening, dimming - as if in deference - as if they were a part of the child itself. "If he is hers," Kaspian said, "then even so, Amaunator has claimed him from her shadows. Justice does not end with blood."
Darvin grunted irritably as he scanned around the temple, the smouldering and barely recognisable cadavers of the bandits seemed to counter the young priest's sentiments.
"More of your heresy."
Kaspian met his gaze, unoffended and speaking in the tone of a man far older than his youthful age. "The Yellow God teaches us that justice refines. That even sun fire may temper, not only destroy that which is irredeemable."
Vaelor said nothing, but nodded gravely - his silence heavy with assent.
The child stirred again, a small fist curling around Darvin’s thumb. Heat pulsed faintly through the ranger’s glove - warm, not burning. Alive.
"You found the child... You should name him." Kaspian stated in a gentle tone, surprising Darvin.
Darvin looked down at the babe and sighed, turning his gaze toward the valley beyond the shattered walls, where the river caught the dawn and turned it to gold.
"Camden,” he said, with thoughtful weight. "For this place, and what was lost here."
Alric Vaelor nodded once. “And Daystar,” he added humourlessly. “For the light - his light, that always endures.”
Darvin exhaled slowly, eyes never leaving the orphan child’s ember-bright gaze.
Camden Daystar did not cry again. He only watched the rising sun through the remains of the temple's broken roof, unblinking, as though he already knew it's name.

1325 DR - Outskirts of Elversult
The defiled temple of Chauntea burned long after the screams had ended.
It's roof had collapsed inward, blackened beams leaning like broken ribs over a sanctum choked with ash. What remained of the village - once called Camden Dene, for the river that carved the valley in a slow silver arc - lay scattered in smoking ruins along the water’s edge.
The river's now murky waters flowed on, untroubled, carrying embers and fragments of charred remains of prayer scrolls, debris and shards of timber toward lands that would never know their source.
Darvin 'Greybeard' stood cautiously at the threshold of the ruined shrine, the fur mantle on his shoulders dusted grey, his breath slow and steady despite the heat. His greatsword remained sheathed. There was no enemy left to hunt.
His skills had served him well following the tracks here - boot leather, cart ruts, horse shoes, the careless signs of bandits who believed themselves beyond consequence. They had taken the village months ago, driven out its folk or put them to the sword, and turned the Earthmother's temple into their headquarters and counting house. The ranger had expected blood.
He had not expected judgment.
Behind him, the strange heretic priests of the 'Yellow God' and their hired guards moved among the ruins with quiet purpose. Their prayers had ended an hour earlier, when the last of their holy firestorms guttered into coals. What had begun as a cordon of holy flame - meant to trap and frighten the bandits within - had become something far greater. Darvin did not pretend to understand the full shape of it. He only knew that when the priests raised their voices, the sky itself had seemed to listen before erupting.
Now, only one sound broke the crackle of dying embers.
A child's cry.
Darvin froze.
It was faint. Thin. Alive.
He stepped forward without looking back, boots crunching over scorched stone as he followed the sound into the temple’s heart. The altar had split in two, its painted depiction of Chauntea's holy symbol scorched and unrecognisable, but beneath it - cradled in ash and shattered stone - lay a dirty bundle of cloth that still smouldered, yet did not burn.
Inside it, an infant stirred.
Darvin knelt, ignoring the heat that bit through his gloves. The babe’s coppery skin glowed faintly, as though embers lived beneath it. White hair coiling to to tips the colour of fresh flame clung damply to a brow already marked with soot. When the child opened his eyes, they reflected firelight like molten gold - staring up at him with wonder.
The ranger swallowed.
"I’ll be damned," he murmured, voice rough as gravel.
Footsteps approached. Robes brushed stone.
Kaspian Dawnfire knelt beside him, reverent and unafraid, the sun symbol at his throat gleaming brighter as he looked upon the child. He was young - barely more than a man, but divine power sat easily upon him, like a well-worn cloak. His expression was not shock, nor horror, but quiet awe.
"The Yellow God preserves whom He wills,” Kaspian said softly. “Even here."
Behind him stood Sunmaster Alric Vaelor, A man in his mid-thirties of equal age to Darvin, his superior - stern, broad-shouldered, his beard still dusted with ash. The senior priest’s gaze was sharp and appraising, not unkind, but unyielding. He studied the child as one might study a sigil burned into stone.
"The holy fires were ours," Vaelor said at last. "The judgment was lawful. If the child yet lives, then his survival is no accident."
Darvin shifted, instinctively turning the babe away from the lingering heat. "Or it’s just luck," he said with uncertainty. "Plenty of folk survive fires they shouldn’t."
Kaspian glanced at him, a faint smile touching his lips. "You do not believe that."
The ranger did not answer.
The truth was, he had seen too much fire in his life through his duty to his own god, Gwaeron Windstrom to trust coincidence. He bore the scars of it still - flesh and memory both - earned three years ago when Vaelor and his acolytes had dragged him half-dead from a burning caravan ambush along the Dragon Coast. A debt was a debt that must be honoured. That was why he walked with them now, why he had led them to Camden Dene before the priests even knew its name.
Vaelor stepped closer. "The bandits followed Mask," he said with little surprise in a tone which seemed careful and economical with the information being shared. "A demarchess from one of Westgate's guilds, by the signs. Ruthless but not especially clever... She used this place to bleed the coast roads dry, but her men's activities were blatant."
"And the child?" Darvin asked, regarding Vaelor carefully.
Vaelor’s jaw tightened as Kaspian replied. "There were no others of her rank among the dead."
The implication settled like the ash at their feet.
Kaspian reached out, fingers hesitantly hovering just above the child’s brow. The flames did not touch him. Instead, they bent - softening, dimming - as if in deference - as if they were a part of the child itself. "If he is hers," Kaspian said, "then even so, Amaunator has claimed him from her shadows. Justice does not end with blood."
Darvin grunted irritably as he scanned around the temple, the smouldering and barely recognisable cadavers of the bandits seemed to counter the young priest's sentiments.
"More of your heresy."
Kaspian met his gaze, unoffended and speaking in the tone of a man far older than his youthful age. "The Yellow God teaches us that justice refines. That even sun fire may temper, not only destroy that which is irredeemable."
Vaelor said nothing, but nodded gravely - his silence heavy with assent.
The child stirred again, a small fist curling around Darvin’s thumb. Heat pulsed faintly through the ranger’s glove - warm, not burning. Alive.
"You found the child... You should name him." Kaspian stated in a gentle tone, surprising Darvin.
Darvin looked down at the babe and sighed, turning his gaze toward the valley beyond the shattered walls, where the river caught the dawn and turned it to gold.
"Camden,” he said, with thoughtful weight. "For this place, and what was lost here."
Alric Vaelor nodded once. “And Daystar,” he added humourlessly. “For the light - his light, that always endures.”
Darvin exhaled slowly, eyes never leaving the orphan child’s ember-bright gaze.
Camden Daystar did not cry again. He only watched the rising sun through the remains of the temple's broken roof, unblinking, as though he already knew it's name.
