Ficool

Chapter 7 - Inner Demons

Hours trickled by like drops of water carving through stone, each moment eroding Kael's nerves. He sat in the dim corner of the ruined office, the air stale with dust and the faint scent of rusted metal, and tried to will himself into sleep. It didn't come. His body was heavy, aching with exhaustion, yet his mind refused to loosen its grip.

The tension in his chest was a clenched fist that would not release. He leaned his head back against the rough wall and felt its coldness seep into his skin, but even that grounding sensation did not ease him. Every sound, every distant howl outside, was enough to jolt him into rigid alertness. The thought of closing his eyes for even a second felt dangerous, reckless. Fear was a weight pressing on his ribs, but also a kind of thread pulling his mind taut. He could not sleep; the Tower would not allow him to.

And yet the body does not care for reason. Fatigue hammered at his skull the way his hands once hammered nails into steel beams, heavy, persistent, relentless. His temples throbbed with each slow pulse of his blood. His eyelids stung from being held open for too long.

 He rubbed his face with one calloused hand, the other never leaving the reassuring weight of the sledgehammer propped against his thigh. That weapon was his tether, crude, chipped, a tool meant for work rather than war, but in his grasp it was the only thing separating him from helplessness. He gripped the haft so tightly that his knuckles ached, as if the act of holding it could ward off sleep itself.

When he dared to lean forward and peer once more through the barricaded window, the street below remained unchanged, though no less threatening. The two glowing orbs still rested on the uneven cobblestones, their faint luminescence pooling like pale drops of moonlight against the grime of the Tower's imitation city. They pulsed faintly, almost as though alive, and Kael found his gaze drawn to them again and again, compelled by the knowledge of what they represented: survival, progress, the faintest promise of power. Yet the orbs sat untouched, bait waiting for prey. He felt certain that sooner or later, someone would try to claim them, and the certainty made his gut twist.

His eyes wandered further into the shadows where he knew the goblins lurked. At first glance the darkness swallowed them whole, but the more Kael stared, the more his weary mind began to discern their outlines. The curve of a bent back, the subtle twitch of a pointed ear, the gleam of a crude stone weapon shifting against the ambient light. Hours of keeping vigil sharpened his vision, until he could distinguish their shapes as clearly as if they had stepped into the open.

 A strange intimacy grew in that long scrutiny, as if he were memorizing every line of their monstrous silhouettes. He recalled, dimly, that there had been more of them earlier, half a dozen, at least, crawling in and out of the alleys like carrion rats. Now, only two remained. The others had slipped away, retreating into the night with the impatient restlessness of hunters too bored to wait for their kill.

Kael exhaled through his nose, a small release of tension that still left his body stiff. Their absence did not comfort him. It meant only that they had found something else to rend, someone else to stalk. Their shrill cries echoed faintly from beyond the blocks, overlapping with the distant chorus of other climbers meeting their deaths. He could hear screams carried on the stale wind, abrupt and jagged, human voices breaking against the uncaring night. Each cry ended too quickly. Each one confirmed that others were falling, devoured in droves while the Tower looked on with cold indifference.

The goblins that remained crouched near the shadows opposite the street, twitching and sniffing. They had grown restless as well, their sharp movements betraying their dwindling patience. One of them kicked at a loose stone, sending it clattering noisily into the gutter. They muttered in their guttural tones, a crude parody of speech that Kael's ears recognized but his mind refused to parse. He wondered, briefly, if they knew exactly how long he had been watching them. The thought slid into his chest like ice.

For a fragile moment, hope flickered. He measured the distance from his hiding place to the orbs, the routes through the street, the rhythm of the goblins' movements. Perhaps, with their numbers thinned and their vigilance fraying, he had a chance. A quick dash, a firm grip, and he might have the orbs in his hand before they even realized he had moved. His heart thumped at the dangerous thought, half fear, half anticipation. For a moment, the image of success gleamed before him, almost believable.

And then the door behind him jerked violently.

The sharp crash shattered the fragile silence, louder than any scream outside. Kael froze where he sat, every vein turning cold. His heart dropped into the pit of his stomach with sickening weight. It was too sudden, too jarring, too impossible. He had not heard footsteps on the stairs. He had not sensed a presence creeping closer. There had been nothing, and then all at once, the door convulsed in its frame as if struck by some invisible force.

His breath caught in his throat. A single drop of sweat traced the curve of his cheek and hung suspended on his jaw before falling to the dusty floorboards. His mind reeled with frantic questions, How had anything gotten here? Had he been so consumed by watching the goblins that he had missed something vital? Or had these creatures found another way inside, a way silent enough to reach his door without warning? The not knowing was worse than the sound itself.

Kael slid his foot slowly onto the desk he had wedged in place earlier, pressing down with careful weight. The wood groaned faintly, a whisper rather than a cry, and he froze again, terrified of making even the smallest sound. His hands tightened around the haft of the sledgehammer, bringing it up close to his chest. He felt his own pulse thudding through the wood. He tried to quiet his breathing, drawing shallow, silent breaths that scraped at his lungs. If something was waiting beyond that door, he could not let it know he was here, not until he was ready.

 

More Chapters