《Thieves' Dungeon》1.10 Bells and Lies
Advertisement
Caltern. City of Bells.
The dwarves had built Caltern as a gift to the human empire, and they had built it with all the craftsmanship of their race. Aqueducts carried rainwater from the mountains, and a dozen small rivers ran through the city, spanned by ornate bridges. There was nowhere in Caltern where the sound of water didn’t flow.
And they had built thirteen belltowers. Nobody knew why. You could ring out every hour on a different bell and you would still be left with one to spare.
Today, as the Mane Bell rung, the atmosphere of the city was bruised and oppressive. Nobody wanted to be caught out in the streets by some imagined monsters. The only thing that moved were rumors, and they flew with blinding speed. Trivelin sat in a tavern with his hat tipped over his face listening as the events of the night blossomed into myth.
Olin Frampt had unleashed monsters on the city. Olin Frampt had been devoured by his own creations. He had tried to revive the dragons, or to create artificial life, he had trafficked with demons or offended the gods. The brief glimpses of Aurum became distorted and monstrous until the poor serpent was reimagined as a three-headed lion with the body of a scorpion and a centipede.
Trivelin kept his nose down for as long as he could, but he wasn’t a silent sort. No, Trivelin couldn’t help but tell a good story, and he had such a story to tell.
And it wasn’t harming the Dungeon to tell the truth, or at least a little of the truth.
After all, people were afraid right now. Fear made even common people very dangerous indeed. And if there was one thing that could overpower fear, and Trivelin knew this well, it was greed. So why not tell a few stories of the riches far-off Dungeons had brought to distant cities? Why not stir the pot a little and get people to see the benefits?
“Friends…” He began. “Somebody get me a drink, and I’ll tell you where monsters and gold come from. Dearest friends, you would not believe where I’ve been, the things I’ve seen, or the riches underneath our city…”

But while common people worried and gossiped over what Olin had unleashed on their city, in the halls of power, there was only one matter to discuss.
Advertisement
There was no ruling hand in Caltern. Olin had left three apprentices, and anyone could see the Institute would be torn apart between them as they fought for his legacy. The city would no longer be ruled by the mages.
Eyfrae arrived at the governor's villa at the break of dawn- but even that was too late. In the hour it had taken to lace her into a corset and an expansively frilly gown she had lost the lead, and the courtyard outside the palatial home was crowded already.
Minor nobles lounged about on palanquins carried by golems, or under parasols. They were a high-strung lot, mostly here to seek reassurance that their lifestyles would not be endangered, that they could continue to live as fat ticks sucking the city dry. They weren’t contenders for Olin’s throne..
There were the riverfolk, half-men and half-mer with pale blue skin and tendrils instead of hair, their faces sleek and graceful with barely a ridge where a nose should be, bright pink gills fluttering on their necks.
They rarely ventured into the city, but not a ship came or left without their permission. Their warriors wore fur jackets and pendants of teeth, poised themselves like warriors with hands on the hilts of their swords, but Eyfrae knew them. They would never choose a fight here on fair terms. Instead, they would blockade the city from their home territory in the rivers.
Standing opposite them were the dwarves, the outcasts left behind when the halls of their homeland closed the doors. They were solid and frugal folk, without much decoration beyond the clan symbols they braided into their beards. Suffi Halfhand nodded to Eyfrae. She was a simple, blunt-faced girl, but every workshop in the city would stop if she gave the word.
They could tear Caltern down in days between them.
And the governor hadn’t even invited them in.
Eyfrae had plenty of patience. God knows, she had suffered Olin for years. But Olin had let the city run itself. He was too lazy to be an iron-fisted ruler.
“You can’t go in now. The governor has important business to decide.” The chief of the guard, a man with a leonine beard and a curling chevaliar mustache, stood squarely in her way. In his gold-lined armor and white cape he must have looked quite dashing.
Advertisement
She opened her mouth and exhaled a long dart of flame that caught that oiled mustache like a fuse, his whole head igniting as his hair took light.
Without bothering to linger as he screamed and thrashed, Eyfrae stormed past the guards, flames wrapping around her body as they reached out to stop her. She threw the great doors open with inhuman strength. The carpet singed and scorched under her feet. Her clothes, in all their expensive lace and frillery, curled to wisps of charcoal.
Governor Keldin was entertaining the Captain Immer, the prince of the city’s slavers and Olin’s only true successor. The whip-thin pirate was perched in a chair with his black kidskin boots up on the man’s desk, a coin dancing between his lithe fingers.
And Eyfrae happened to know his knack made that coin as good as a knife to him.
“Ah, so you finally get here. We were just discussing how-”
“I have no time for this.” Flame was all she was now, a human shaped blot of wavering fire. So when she glared at the pirate, with eyes of blazing blue, he froze. “We have lost Olin, we have lost Morghul, and we’re going to lose the bloody city if you leave the mer and the dwarves sitting outside your door any longer.”
“I’m not afraid of a bunch of cast-offs and river pirates. Are you?” Immer scoffed.
“I don’t have time for your bravado, Immer. I don’t have time for you at all.”
Slipping his feet off the desk, Immer drew himself up. He cut a an imposing figure, with his long jacket and long dark hair, with his scarred handsome face. Stepping as close as he dared to the fire and heat that swirled around her, he squared up.
“Are we going to do this the simple way? A fight for who owns the city?” There was something mad and bloodthirsty in the pirate’s eyes. Eyfrae supposed most people would fear that kind of look. All she saw was a rabid dog needing to be put down.
“I think-” Governor Kedlin started, trying to lift his considerable bulk from his seat. But the two snapped in unison-
“Sit down.”
He sank back into his overstuffed sedan chair with a defeated sigh.
“No. I have no interest in fighting you. Here’s my message, and the dwarves and mer will hear the same. This bloated winesack won’t choose who rules Caltern. I will. Whoever binds the Dungeon first will have my support, and the city.”
Her hair had lifted into blazing coils of gold. She turned and departed then, before she could be dragged into petty intrigues, leaving them while her flame still lasted. The mer stared as she paraded past, the guards rushing to stomp out her flaming footprints. Suffi only grimaced in sympathy. Nobody ever listened.
She paused before them, letting them take in the spectacle that made her so feared. The legendary Attunement of Fire.
“There is a Dungeon beneath our city. It is responsible for Olin’s death, and it is the greatest hope for Caltern’s revival. Bind it to your will and you will have my support.”
It was only once she was back inside her carriage, a sturdy little thing built from the fireproof timbre of embertrees, that she could let the flames flicker out. Her dress rained away from her in a fine dust of ash, clinging to her nude form as it disintegrated. Eyfrae sighed as her maidservant handed her a cloak to wrap around herself.
“I don’t know why I bother getting dressed up. Nobody listens when I’m diplomatic.” She paused, and then added. “Olin did. God, I think I might actually miss him.”
“He only listened because he was afraid of you.” Her maid pointed out.
“Yes, he was a coward. One of his better attributes.”
She stared out the window briefly, taking in the high tower of the Noctis Bell, a monstrosity of black iron that croaked at the moment of dusk each day. This would be her city in the end. Because whoever ruled in theory, when the world found out there was a Dungeon here, adventurers would come. People who could bring the guards to their knees. People even the Empire didn’t try to rule over.
Whoever was ‘in charge’ would merely be the one responsible for bowing and scraping to the predators who came to Caltern to hunt in the Dungeon. There would be one true authority that remained, the Adventurer’s Guild- and in Caltern City she was the guild.
Advertisement
- In Serial57 Chapters
The Shadows Become Her
A fantasy progression, a coming of age story, and a tale of revenge... Alvixia "Vix" Altorelli's idyllic childhood is disrupted in one tragic night when the duke's fanatics ransack the Altorelli home and imprison the rest of her family, selling them into slavery across the ocean. Vix soon finds herself fleeing for her life and her freedom, fleeing to the faraway city of Floria on an island ruled by the mysterious Nurass, Prince of Shadows. In Floria, Vix's sharp mind and talent for magic land her a spot at the Perdita Free Collegium, the world's greatest school for spies, saboteurs, swashbucklers, seductresses and, some claim, practitioners of dark magic... and that suits Vix just fine. If the Collegium wants to give Vix the tools she needs to save her family and get her revenge on Duke Orso, she'll take that deal any day of the week and twice on Saintsdays, even if that means making a deal with the Prince of Shadows himself. This is Vix's tale. Author's Note: Now that Writathon 2022 is over, updates will be on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays!
8 105 - In Serial36 Chapters
Daily life of reincarnated goblin [Dropped]
This is the story about a selfish person, the one who seeks peace around him, yet cares none of surroundings Even if he does something unbefitting for his character, it will still be for his selfish desires, no matter how bad or good it seems from the outside He dies because his perfect world of hikkomori is ruined, not because it was other's fault, but due to his own selfishness Dylan did not need the world and the world did not need him so he was erased from his world as if he had never existed, like unneeded game character And there was the new beginning from the end God of games and sovereign of four realms reincarnates him in another world, viewing his growth, refusing to help as he is not worthy yet Despite uncaring nature of sovereign, he wonders whether he will show his full potential in the world that is more befitting for him or not Sovereign has nothing to lose, the eternity and a single second is the same because the time is always ''present'' for a being such as him, as for Dylan he's not the first and also probably not the last person to be candidate of sovereign's ambassador Will he reach the qualifications to reach the end and participate in sovereign's 3 deadly games? Only the time can tell, yet sovereign has sealed his own future foresight, just because he wants to feel more entertained and see the struggle of yet another mortal, who has no idea how dangerous things might get if he ascends and gains the power, qualification to destroy the ???
8 171 - In Serial22 Chapters
Gaia- Legend of Sura
Born with average talent. Helius Sura a person who only excelled at one thing, and was someone who was given a gift to change his life. I won’t die as a normal being. I need to find my lost feeling, I will not stop until the day I get it back. And the day I find it will be the day that my soul will find true peace. Guys this story is evolving as it goes, so there may be some changes here and there, that's the reason for me changing the synopsis 3 times. I don't have a perfect goal in front of me, the story will shape itself according to the extent of my imagination.
8 281 - In Serial37 Chapters
Pokémon Reset Bloodlines Sidestories - Interlude Chapters
Stories never seen from the Pokémon World. Past and present of the new reality and how the events have affected their inhabitants will be explored here, unraveling many of the mysteries of the new world. Series of extra oneshots taking place in the same continuity as the main story of Pokémon Reset Bloodlines, starring characters who aren't Ash Ketchum and his group. Knowledge of the main story isn't fully required but is recommended.
8 121 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Tablets of Gitata
Set in the world of Ioga, a grain hanging from a ripe, cosmic ear of wheat afloat in the vast emptiness of the heavens, this is the defining story of an era. The main characters are all people of the Riverlands; a fertile valley filled by three parallel rivers. Full of blood, battles, feuds and mythic beasts, the tablets of Gitata make up the largest body of literary work by the people of the Riverlands, the Gigi'abid in their own tongue, meaning 'beautiful people'. The tablets tell the story of the boy-king, Gitata and his struggles for power. They also cover the tales of Ninri'a, warrior woman beyond reproach, as well as the priest Pinpirig and his unlucky journey to reclaim the stolen statue of his beloved goddess. Along the way, a slew of gods are introduced and the the machinations of the distant elemental god of mercury threaten to end the reign of the Riverlanders.
8 185 - In Serial14 Chapters
Abandon all hope by Darkmatter
Aleg, the second prince of the Slavon Kingdom, experienced bullying since an early age.The betrayal of his loved ones made him fall into the darkest pits of hell. Cursing his fate and swearing to get revenge for everything, he had endured, and returning it a hundred fold.This is not a story about legends being born, but the story of the Awakening of a Devil.Strong language and mature content
8 89

