《Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story》Chapter 2
Advertisement
299 A.D. Age of the Drunken Monk, Somewhere on the border of the Middle Kingdom
“Ash, you stupid little dumbass!”
The boy was sitting in the hallway of a house so small that it looked more like an oversized shed. The woman called out for him again, but he didn’t hear her, being too busy watching the sky and feeling the wind caress his hair gathered in a tight tail tied with a leather strap. Stroking the air with his fingers, he observed the clouds, as if trying to reach them. He felt as if they were talking to him, but he knew that that was nonsense as clouds couldn’t talk.
“Ash, you spawn of demonic lust, I’ll tear you apart!”
Gwel, on the other hand, could talk. Too much and too often. Sometimes he wished that she’d shut up for a little while. No, not wished. He would’ve preferred it if she’d shut up forever. Perhaps one of the kitchen knives ran across her throat would make her quiet down?
Ash got up and went into the room that smelled of herbs and old age. Gwel was sitting in her chair and staring at the cauldron hanging over the fireplace. Over the years, she had grown so old and ill that she could no longer move or see on her own, so Ash had to drag everything over to her or her to wherever she needed to go. As there was only one bed in the small “house,” he preferred to sleep outside.
“You little cretin,” she hissed, “I should’ve left you in your whore mother’s womb who thought it wise to lay with the beasts.”
“Yes, mistress.” Ash nodded although he didn’t understand what she was trying to convey with her insults. Then again, he didn’t understand what anger was. He didn’t understand concepts like “contentment,” “envy,” “sadness,” “joy,” “hate,” “desire,” or any other “emotion” many others seemed to be experiencing. Gwel had said that that was because he looked at the world through the eyes of the Fae and not those of a human. But Ash didn’t understand this for he seemed to himself very much human. However, he’d often feel like his soul was split in half. And until the two halves found harmony, he’d walk this earth as an animated doll, devoid of emotion.
Long story short, the old woman was senile and spewing gibberish.
“Throw the grass into the cauldron,” Gwel grunted.
“Yes, mistress.”
The boy went over to the table, stood on tiptoe, and tore a bunch of grass from one of the bundles. Separating the blades, he threw them into the seething brew the color of sick.
Advertisement
“Your mother should’ve taken this potion.” The old woman smelled worse than the concoction that was being brewed, but Ash endured. “One sip... One sip and I wouldn’t be having to deal with you now...”
“Yes, mistress.”
“What?” Gwell coughed. Ash immediately brought her a pitcher of water. She always had one nearby in case her throat started feeling itchy. “Thank you, you little bastard.”
A wrinkled, warm hand ruffled his hair. If Ash had known the difference between “good” and “bad,” he would’ve considered Gwel good but foul-mouthed. She often threatened to whip, strangle, starve, drown, or burn him, but she never acted upon those words. And during the long, hard winters when food was scarce, she always made sure that he had enough to eat.
“What did you see in the woods today, boy?”
Every day she’d ask him what did he see or hear in the woods as if she thought that the trees would come to life and share their stories to him, or that one of the animals would suddenly speak a language he could understand.
“Trees, grass, flowers, animals and clouds...”
“And?”
Ash pondered and then it dawned on him.
“I saw a squirrel.”
Gwel blinked a couple of times and burst into raspy laughter that resembled the croaking of a dying crow. The laughing continued until she started coughing again.
“A squirrel he says,” she grunted, taking a sip of water. “Eyes of a Fae, but blind as a bat.”
“Yes, mistress.”
“How can I teach you to talk if you can’t listen?” the old woman continued. “It’s been so long and you still can’t talk.”
“I can,” Ash said, stirring the concoction with a long wooden spoon.
Tomorrow at dawn, a girl from the village should come for a vial of the potion. Gwel told him that it got rid of bloating in women, but Ash wasn’t stupid, he knew that the potion killed the fetus inside the womb.
“You can growl and hiss like a beast, but you can’t talk.”
“Yes, mistress.”
If there was one thing that Ash had learned it was that there was no point in trying to argue with Gwel. She was very old and for every argument Ash had, she had a dozen more.
“By the Queen, if you say ‘yes, mistress’ one more time, I’ll drown you in the cesspool!”
“Yes, m―” Ash swallowed when his eyes met her half-blind glare.
“Atta boy,” she said, stroking her staff. “And why are you having such a difficult time learning words? You have enough terna for several people, so you’re right.”
“Terna?” Ash asked. “And I know words! I’m talking to you, aren’t I?”
Advertisement
“I’ve told you about Ternites and terna and why our world is nameless, didn’t I?”
“Is it really nameless?”
Gwel swore so hard that the potion’s stench got even viler.
“By the Queen, I’ve been waiting for you to listen, but you seem to not know what you’re listening to.”
Ash would’ve been offended if he could, but all he did was wait for Gwel to continue her speech. Which she did after more cursing and another sip of water.
“No one knows where the power came from, but a couple of eons ago, people became equal to nonhumans. Not all, of course, but only those who could wield it. They called it terna. Since then, the Ternites, those who could wield this power, were taught how to use this gift. No ordinary warrior is stronger than a Ternit Warrior, no alchemist wiser than a Ternit Alchemist, and no mage more skilled than a Ternit Mage. So, it was for many thousands of years until the Ternites exiled the ordinary people... And there was no more division.”
Gwel coughed again and Ash, not waiting for her to tell him to bring him water, ran outside to the barrel in which they collected rainwater. Expecting a long conversation, he filled the pitched to the brim, brought it back inside, and filled Gwel’s cup. She eagerly drank the cold water and, wiping her lips with a wrinkled hand, continued her story.
“In general, the Ternites replaced the Ernites ― ordinary people. The maximum that an Earnite can hope to achieve is to be given chainmail and die in a war as a soldier, or cannon fodder, as they’re more frequently called. The rest of the ‘jobs’ were taken over by the Ternites. Assassins, witches, magicians, paladins, necromancers, sorcerers, wizards, hermits, heretics, hunters, and so on and so forth... Like locust, they swarmed the Thirteen Kingdoms.”
Despite listening carefully, Ash had little idea what she was on about.
“At one point, there were so many Ternites that the cities became so small for their giant egos. And then the Kings, even those of ordinary men, decided that Ternites should serve only for the benefit of the mankind. So, thank you, I guess, you little maggot, for not yet doing them a disservice. Anyway... The Ternites now roam the world, carrying out various tasks. Those who refuse this sacred task are considered heretics and hunted like wild beasts. Such is life.”
“But what does that have to do with words?” Ash asked, stirring the brew.
“It has to do all with everything!” the old woman barked and coughed again. “With you, Ash, the terna is water and you’re a fish, it’s all around you.”
Ash shrugged. “I don’t feel it.”
“Because you can’t feel it! You don’t know how... But more about that later... Let me teach you about words. All, even the poorest people, have their language. Take a stone, for example, there are a thousand words with which to describe and call it, but they’re all false. You have one name, Ash. It’s not the best, but not the worst one either,” she said. Ash wanted to tell her that it was her that had given him that name, but he kept silent. “And just like you, this stone as its own name.”
“What is it?”
Gwel’s lips moved but he heard nothing.
“You don’t hear,” she said, “and you won’t be able to hear until you learn how to listen. Just like you and the stone, everything in this world has its name. Its true name, let’s say. Those names make up the language spoken by the Gods who created our world. And knowledge
of this language, knowledge of the name, gives power. That’s why no one knows the name of our world, for the Gods are afraid of the power that it holds. This is the language you must learn how to speak if you want to understand the essence of magic.”
“Why does it have to be magic?” Ash asked.
“Look at yourself... You’re small and scrawny, you ain’t worth for anything else other than carrying a staff and an entire library in your head.”
The boy shrugged again. He didn’t care.
“Hold on,” she said, genuinely angry, “you haven’t seen me do magic?”
“You do magic?”
Gwel froze, then laughed, and then spent some time praising and cursing her Queen that had played such a cruel trick on her.
“Looks like the timing is right,” Gwel said suddenly. “Observe, little maggot.”
The old woman ran her fingers over her staff and whispered something. A moment later, the kitchen came alive. Knives jumped out of their boxes and began cutting herbs. The spoon with which he had been steering the potion leaped out of his hand and continued stirring on its own. The tablecloth suddenly rose into the air and move to the window to shake off crumbs off itself. The fire in the hearth danced vigorously and the chair in which Gwel was sitting swayed a little bit slower.
“Ah, I still got it,” Gwel whispered contentedly and closed her eyes.
“Are these words?”
“The best kind... Now, go outside. I want you to learn at least one word by tonight.”
Advertisement
- In Serial53 Chapters
Plague Children
Years ago, in the country of Sei'O, a plague spread and turned half of their population to stone. The children of those infected were born with skin abandoned of all color. Completely grey, they were known as Plague Children. Though they possessed no ability to spread the plague, they were heavily mistreated, discriminated against, ostracized, and often times killed at their younger ages. The story follows the young Plague Child Ora, as he gains one of the strongest relics the world would ever come to see. With it, everything changes with relative ease. What fate awaits this world that heavily mistreated Ora? In this world of magic, relics, and ancient arts, no one could be certain. Tags OP Main Magic High Fantasy Races Lore World Building Evil Main Multiple Views Multiple Arcs Relics Tragedy Grimdark Strategical Politics Evil Organization Light Humo Death Elves Beastkin Magic Technology
8 194 - In Serial8 Chapters
Sacrifice
Michael Strong never had a very good life nor he thinks he has done anything special. But then, something comes his way. Something that will finally change everything that was bad. Something which will give him the meaning he always wanted. But every meaning requires a sacrifice...
8 196 - In Serial12 Chapters
The New Magnolia: Red Fungus, White Spore
The art for this cover was drawn by StarsColdNight whose account you can find on DeviantArt and BookCoversRealm for some great and splendid artwork at fair prices. Rillia flees from the Red Mountain Ant Colony and her country of Wassergras, hoping to find and explore the Primeval World, a legendary and untamed world she has only read about. However, after a surprise storm nearly drowns her, she is saved by Jason, a shrunken human with little memory of his past life. He is the first in a series of new allies she meets along with Melsil, the mushroom swordsman and Vesha the crawfish. A storm is brewing in Wassergras of political intrigue, prejudice and schemes within schemes that threaten to tear apart their world. Rillia must put her traveling plans on hold as she and her newly made friends work to defeat this threat—one that has been waging since the dawn of the world between the forces that created it.
8 195 - In Serial12 Chapters
Waking the old world
Gaia wakes up screaming, pain vibrating through every part of her being and exploding beyond. A mother is forced to become something new to protect her child when a wave of essence explodes out of the earth and changes everything. A litrpg apocalypse essentially, based around a mothers love for her child and just what she would do to protect those she calls her own.
8 153 - In Serial17 Chapters
My brothers best friend, / Adam Banks TMD
This is based on D3. The third mighty ducks movie. It involves Adam Banks and Charlie Conway and Charlie's twin sister, Kendra.Completed
8 128 - In Serial96 Chapters
Never in a Million Years ✔️
She's back and better than ever. Living in Chicago for the junior Law program was a fun year of her life but Bailey-Belle couldn't be happier to be home. Just in time for senior year too. She missed her six brothers, her hometown and everyone else in it. Well... almost everyone. Caleb Kazer has been best friends with her older brothers since birth. He's the ultra smart, flirty and ever charming bad boy who has teased Belle since they could talk. He is undeniably hot and he knows it. He's arrogant, cocky and constantly teasing or antagonizing Belle. But despite all of this, she can't deny the fact that she would defend him if he were ever in trouble. She says she can't stand him, but deep down she knows things would be boring without him. Bailey 'Belle' Kalanski is this intimidatingly intelligent, fun loving spitfire of a girl that Caleb can't help but be intrigued by. He always has been, ever since they were kids. She's annoyingly stubborn and always has an answer for everything. The only things they seemingly have in common is their smarts, sarcasm and love for fun and their family. Shes the ultimate pain in his ass, but he knows that he would protect her forever, even though she really didn't need. He couldn't deny the fact that things wouldn't be the same without her.Through nightly talks and their constant bickering the two suprisingly grow closer. What happens when, to both of their confusion and dismay, feelings start to bloom?What happens when both of their worlds come crashing down around them? They say a lot can change within a year, and although Belle likes to let go of most of the turmoil that's happened througout her life, this year would definitely be impossible to forget, no matter how hard she tried. 'Never in a Million Years' is the hilarious and heartbreaking tale of Bailey-Belle Kalanski's life, full of family, friends, love and laughter.
8 256

