The early morning sun struggled to pierce the dense fog that clung to Eldergrove. Jack paced restlessly near the village square, his hunting gear slung over his shoulder, his thoughts as murky as the weather. For days now, the tension in the village had grown unbearable. The usual hum of chatter and laughter was replaced by uneasy glances and whispered rumors. The air felt charged, heavy, as though an unseen storm loomed on the horizon.
Eamon stood by a wooden bench, watching Jack with quiet concern. “You’ve been pacing for nearly an hour,” he said.
Jack stopped, dragging a hand through his blonde hair. “I can’t shake it, Eamon. Something’s wrong. The villagers, the woods, even the damn birds—it’s like everything’s going crazy.”
Eamon sighed, leaning on his staff. “It’s not just here, Jack. I’ve received word from more villages. People are acting strangely—some disappearing entirely. This... this is how the Scourge begins. Slowly, subtly, until the cracks become impossible to ignore.”
Jack turned sharply to face him. “But we haven’t seen anything definitive. Just whispers and signs. How do we even fight something we can’t see or understand?”
Before Eamon could respond, Mike approached, his expression unusually grim. “Jack, Eamon. You’ll want to hear this,” he said, his tone devoid of any humor.
The three moved to a quieter corner of the square as Mike recounted his findings. “I was up near Birch Hollow yesterday. The whole place is deserted. No sign of a struggle, no bodies, nothing. It’s like the people just... vanished.”
Mike nodded. “It gets worse. People in the neighboring villages have been acting strange too—quiet, withdrawn, like they’re afraid of something they can’t name. And then there’s this.”
He pulled out a small wooden cage, crudely carved and painted black, with a broken latch dangling from one corner.
“What is that?” Jack asked, frowning.
“Found it near the edge of the hollow, It gave me the creeps, but I thought you’d want to see it.”
Eamon leaned closer, his eyes narrowing. “A cage...” he murmured. “A symbol of imprisonment, of control. It fits the prophecy, Jack. The Scourge of the Cage isn’t just enslaving people physically—it’s doing it to their minds, their spirits.”
Jack’s unease deepened. “We can’t ignore this anymore. We need to find out what’s happening, and fast.”
Eamon straightened. “Then we start where the signs are strongest. The woods.”
---
The trio set off toward the forest, the tension between them palpable. The trees were dense, their gnarled branches casting twisted shadows over the path. Jack moved ahead, his hunter’s instincts alert to every rustle and snap of a twig. Mike followed close behind, his usual confidence replaced with a wary silence. Eamon brought up the rear, his staff tapping softly against the ground.
As they delved deeper, the air grew colder, the oppressive silence broken only by the occasional cry of a distant crow. Jack’s sharp eyes caught movement ahead—a figure bent over something near a fallen tree.
“Wait,” Jack hissed, holding up a hand.
They crept closer, their footsteps careful. The figure came into view: a man crouched in the dirt, seemingly engrossed in carving something into the ground. His brown hair was tousled, his back to them, but Jack recognized him immediately.
“It’s Justin,” he whispered.
Mike’s brow furrowed. “What’s he doing out here?”
Eamon’s expression was grim. “I don’t like this. Stay alert.”
They stepped into the clearing, and Justin turned slowly to face them. His dark brown eyes glinted in the dim light, and a faint smile tugged at his lips.
“Jack,” he said, his tone calm, almost amused. “I wasn’t expecting company.”
Jack’s hand instinctively went to the hilt of his dagger. “What are you doing out here, Justin?”
Justin stood, brushing dirt from his hands. “Just... thinking, This place helps me clear my mind.”
Jack narrowed his eyes, his frustration bubbling over. “Thinking about what? Why are you always just... there, Justin? First in the village, now here. You don’t seem to fit, and yet you’re always around.”
Justin tilted his head, his expression unreadable. “You sound upset, Jack. Do you think I don’t belong?”
Jack stepped closer, his voice rising. “I don’t trust you. You act like you’re just passing through, but everywhere you go, things get worse. You don’t seem to care about anyone but yourself. What’s your game?”
For a moment, Justin said nothing, his gaze steady and piercing. Then he smiled—a small, unsettling curve of his lips. “Ah, Jack. You’re quick to judge, aren’t you? But let me ask you this: do you truly believe you understand the difference between good and evil?”
Jack blinked, caught off guard. “What are you talking about?”
Justin stepped closer, his tone soft but cutting. “Good and evil. Right and wrong. You hunters love to think in absolutes, don’t you? The prey is bad; the hunter is good. But what if I told you it’s not that simple? What if I told you that morality is nothing more than a construct—an illusion created by mortals to make sense of their small, fleeting lives?”
Jack’s jaw tightened. “You’re deflecting. I asked you a question.”
“And I’m giving you an answer,” Justin said, his voice growing sharper. “You think you can judge me, Jack? You, who kills animals without a second thought? You, who would kill a man if he threatened your home? Are you good because you believe you’re protecting what’s yours? Or are you just another predator, taking what you want because you can?”
“That’s not the same!” Jack shot back, his frustration mounting.
“Isn’t it? You think you’re better because you tell yourself you’re on the side of ‘good.’ "You think yourself the wielder of morality, a flickering light in the vast darkness. But what if that light is just a reflection, a distortion cast by something beyond your understanding?"
Justin’s eyes held Jack’s, unwavering. There was no anger in them now—only something deeper, something unreadable.
"You fight for justice, for compassion. Noble ideas. But tell me, how can you truly weigh the cost of a single action? You celebrate the ‘good’ you do, yet what of the unseen consequences? The suffering that ripples outward, beyond your sight? Is it still righteousness if, in lifting one man up, you unknowingly cast another into shadow?"
His voice was calm, deliberate, but beneath it lay something sharp, something that made Jack’s stomach turn.
"Consider an ant colony, toiling endlessly, unaware of the world beyond their own. A man walks by, crushes their home beneath his heel. Does he know? Does he care? Is his ignorance an absolution… or is it precisely that ignorance that renders him incapable of true judgment? He cannot perceive the full weight of what he’s done—just as you cannot perceive the full weight of what you claim is ‘right.’"
Justin took a slow step closer, his expression unreadable.
"You cling to your certainties, but answer me this—what if morality itself is beyond you? What if the endless cycle of birth and death, creation and destruction, is not random, but part of something greater? A pattern only a superior being could truly understand? What if everything you call ‘good’ and ‘evil’ is nothing more than a child’s crude drawing, an attempt to grasp the complexity of a master’s design?"
His voice softened, but it did not ease.
"And tell me, Jack—if such a being did exist, a being that could see the full, unfiltered truth of morality… would its judgment align with yours? Or would you be forced to accept that your every belief, your every conviction, is a lie?"
A silence stretched between them, thick and suffocating. Justin studied Jack for a moment longer, then allowed himself the barest hint of a smirk.
"It is a terrifying thought, isn’t it?"
Jack’s chest heaved as the weight of Justin’s words sank in. He wanted to argue, to refute everything Justin had said, but the doubts were already creeping in, whispering in the back of his mind.
Eamon stepped forward, his voice firm. “That’s enough, Justin. Whatever your intentions, you’re not helping. Jack, we need to go.”
Justin’s gaze lingered on Jack for a moment longer before he stepped aside, gesturing toward the path. “Of course. Don’t let me keep you.”
As they left the clearing, Jack’s thoughts swirled, Justin’s words echoing in his mind. Good and evil —had he been wrong all along?
---
Later that evening, back in Eldergrove, Eamon and Mike sat with Jack at the tavern, their faces drawn. The villagers moved around them in hushed groups, the tension thick enough to cut with a knife.
“We need to figure out who he really is,” Mike said, his voice low.
Eamon nodded. “I fear we already know.”
Jack looked up sharply. “What do you mean?”
Eamon hesitated, then reached into his satchel and pulled out a weathered book. “The signs, Jack. The cage Mike found. The disappearances. The unease spreading through the land. And now Justin’s words... They all point to one thing.”
Jack’s stomach twisted. “You’re saying he’s the Scourge?”
Eamon’s expression was grim. “I can’t say for certain, but the evidence is overwhelming. He may not have revealed himself yet, but his influence is undeniable. We must tread carefully, Jack. The Scourge of the Cage doesn’t need to fight with weapons. It fights with the mind, with doubt, with division. And it’s already working.”
Jack leaned back in his chair, Justin’s words from the woods still gnawing at him. If Justin truly was the Scourge, then they were already in deeper than he had ever imagined.
And worse, Jack wasn’t sure if he could trust himself anymore.
In a land where every 500 years a powerful Scourge rises to challenge the very fabric of humanity, the world braces for its greatest test yet. As chaos spreads and morality is thrown into question, a reluctant hunter and his companions must navigate a treacherous path through deception, despair, and the weight of their own choices. Bound by destiny and haunted by doubt, they face an unseen enemy whose influence threatens to unravel everything they hold dear. In this gripping tale of sacrifice and ambiguity, the lines between good and evil blur, leaving one question echoing in the minds of all: can mortals truly define what is right and just?
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