
THE ISHENSA RIVER | HALVARDSEN'S VIGIL | EARLY NIGHTFALL
River‑spray turns to sleet, stone stands mute, every broken window feels like an eye waiting to blink.
Stubby watch‑towers stud the bends now, stone throats coughing smoke into the grey. At one narrow bend a rank of orcs swings a chain-boom across the channel and snarls for tribute. Wexley’s first offer, a cask of salted eel too ordinary to tempt, wins only rough laughter. The old gnome’s eyes crease: he beckons the leader close and produces a sealed clay jar marked with the red sigil of a Shadow quartermaster. Inside sloshes pitch‑black tar-spirit, a naval caulk coveted for winter repairs. Greed smothers suspicion; the guard waves them through still examining his tribute as the Netherthistle drifts on.
By dusk the current grows sluggish and the air brittle. Cloudbanks swallow the western glow, swapping sunset for early winter. Snow starts as whispered flakes, then thickens, white noise on dark water. At last, a ruined watch‑tower looms through the flurry: cracked stone, half‑collapsed roof, a lonely silhouette against swirling grey.
The barge noses into a half‑frozen eddy below the slope. Wexley grips each wrist in turn, words rasped soft enough that snow must lean close to hear. Thaelin offers a crooked smile and a swifter farewell; within moments they push off, lantern shuttered, purpose unspoken as the Netherthistle melts upriver into white shadow.
Now the wind owns the silence. You stand on the bottom of a hill, snow drifts beginning to form, necks craned toward the dark mouth of the tower—no light, no welcome, just a wall against the gathering storm.
Between you and the stones lies only rising snow, the stories this night chooses to tell and the ever-begging question:
What do you do?