《Legends of Arenia》Book 2, Chapter 36: Druid's Grove
Advertisement
Angela hiked between the trees of the Druid Grove, and it wasn’t long before her dad disappeared from sight. Not just her dad, either. All sounds of industry from the south bank vanished, leaving nothing but the murmer of a healthy forest.
She smiled. It was a nice place. Peaceful. Not too dense, with open space for grasses and a wide variety of trees that represented the species found around Palmyre. She wasn’t sure how she knew that, but it made sense. Because, y’know…druid.
Angela continued walking for a while, but eventually she stopped. Scratching her head, she looked around and frowned.
Nothing was happening. Why wasn’t anything happening?
At a bit of a loss over how to proceed, she closed her eyes and waited to experience something. Anything.
Nope.
That didn’t seem right. Shouldn’t there be a flood of energy? A deep connection with the earth? A desire to strip naked and frolic? Instead, all she felt was an urge to return to the city and see if hashbrowns had been invented.
“Okay, I’m here!” she called out. “In the Druid Grove! Because I’m a druid!”
Nada.
She waited.
Then she waited some more.
“Oh for fuck’s sake, Ennàd, what am I doing here!” she shouted.
“Hey, keep it down!”
Angela looked around, trying to find the source of the voice.
“Up here, lady!”
She tilted her head upwards, finally spotting a grey squirrel sitting on a branch, staring at her.
So far as squirrels went, it was large. Very large. Huge, even. Not height-wise, so much as it lacked what one would call a “traditional” squirrel figure. More of a pear shape. Or gourd? Yeah, gourd was better, but a distorted gourd. The kind you’d see in a grocery store, then immediately text a picture of it to your friend with the caption, “Dude, WTF is up with this gourd?”
Okay, it was obese. It was a staggeringly obese squirrel.
“Uh, did you just talk to me?” she said to the squirrel in the tree.
The squirrel flapped its arms. “Whadda ya mean, ‘Did you just talk to me?’ Of course I talked to you! What? Didya think, it was the tree shoutin’ at ya?”
This morning was turning out weirder than she had expected. “Sorry, but I wasn’t expecting to speak with any animals today.”
The squirrel looked skyward. “Oi, this lady don’t know from nothin’.” He looked back down at her. “Chickadee, you’re a druid, standing in a Druid Grove, and you didn’t expect to talk to no animals? What’s wrong with you?”
A small bird with a white and black head landed on the squirrel’s branch. “Leo! I told you to stop calling women chickadees! It is offensive to my very nature.”
“And I told ya my name is Leonard!” the squirrel said, lazily swinging a paw at the bird, who easily dodged his hand.
“Now, Leo,” the bird trilled back at him, “we have been acquainted for nearly three years. It is only proper that we adopt cordial diminutive names by this point.”
The squirrel—Leonard—shook his tiny fist at the chickadee. “Yeah, well where I come from, it’s proper to dispose of bodies in the river. You want I should take up that hobby, too?”
The bird’s feathers puffed up, and she trilled in indignation. “Well, I never! Let’s see if I help you the next time a spider crawls into your home.” Then she hopped off the branch and flew away.
Leonard ran to the end of the branch, shouting after her. “No! I’m sorry! You know I hate those eight-legged bastards! I’m sorry!” When she was out of sight, he visibly sighed and hung his head.
Advertisement
He looked down at Angela. “Look at me. Acting like some thirstbucket ’cause a chickadee won’t take care of spiders for me.
“Oh well,” he said, suddenly perking right back up. “Kay, I’m comin’ down!”
Then he jumped off the tree and dropped three metres onto the top of Angela’s head.
“AAAGH! WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU DOING!” she shouted, slapping at her head and dancing in a circle.
“Hey, stop it lady! You’re gonna hit me!” he shouted, barely holding on with his front paws as she spun around, his hind legs flailing through the air.
“That’s what I’m trying to do!”
“Well stop it! I’ll get down if ya stop spinnin’ already!”
Angela gritted her teeth and stopped, allowing the squirrel to climb out of her hair. It took far longer than she would have liked—not surprisingly—and by the time the chunky squirrel made his way onto her left shoulder he was audibly panting with exhaustion.
She craned her head to look at him. He was bent over, one paw on her ear and the other on his knee, heaving for breath.
“Oh man. I am so out of shape,” Leonard said through wheezing breaths. “It’s this grove, ya know? Dumb good acorns here. I got a cousin, lives up near da temples? Says they got acorns just as good. What a gavoon.”
Of all the things Angela had considered facing when entering the Druid Grove, chauffeuring an obese squirrel wasn’t one of them.
“First things first,” she said, “can you please explain to me why you’re speaking like an extra from The Sopranos?”
“I got no idea what that means, lady,” he said.
“Why do you have a Brooklyn accent?”
He shook his head again. “You gotta throw me a bone here. You’re just spoutin’ words that don’t make sense.”
Angela closed her eyes and turned her head skyward. Fucking druid class.
“Let’s try something simpler,” she said. “Why are you on my shoulder?”
“Oh, dat,” he said. “We gots ta go into the grove. I’m supposed to go with you.”
“Why’s that?”
He shrugged. “No idea. But we gotta go.”
“What if I don’t?”
“Ain’t no choice.”
“There’s always a choice. In fact, I think I’m going to—”
“LADY!” the squirrel shouted. “I’m dead-ass on this one. We’re goin’ to da centre of the grove to see a god. Ya really don’t want ta piss off the gods.”
“Ugh. Fine,” Angela said, resigning herself to heading into the grove with Leonard the Brooklyn Squirrel perched on her shoulder. Because apparently, that kind of thing was normal now.
“You know, I’m pretty sure you don’t even have a real accent,” Angela said as she marched through the forest. “It sounds kind of fake.”
“Hey, dis is how all squirrels talk. I don’t need some prejudiced cab driver tellin’ me I don’t sound ‘Grove’ enough just ’cause I moved here from da city.”
“Cool,” Angela said. “Cool, cool, cool. I’m your cab driver now. FYI, I expect to get a tip when we get wherever we’re going.”
“Yeah, well lay off the smack talk and we can look into it.”
As they progressed into the glade, the canopy got denser, but there was still enough light getting through that it dappled the ground with spots of sunlight. It illuminated a path through the undergrowth that wasn’t worn so much as it was grown, with a low carpet of grass that wove between berry bushes and scrub until it reached the centre of the grove. The path terminated at a square, stone planter, around a metre tall and three times that on the edges. It was filled with soil and hosted a topiary sculpture of a woman sitting cross-legged, staring upwards at a sunbeam that broke through the gap in the canopy. Her body was made of some kind of broad-leafed shrub, while her robe consisted of a red-berried vine that fell from her shoulders in a manner almost indistinguishable from fabric. Even sitting down, she was probably 5-metres tall.
Advertisement
Well, that thing is clearly going to start talking to me, Angela thought, just as a woman’s voice loudly said “Hello!” directly behind her ear.
“Jesus! Fuck!” Angela shouted, jumping away from the voice at the exact same time Leonard did, the combined force of the two jumps launching the unfortunate squirrel through the air and into the topiary, where he disappeared into the sculpture-woman’s bosom.
“What the hell, lady!” Angela said as she turned around to see Ennàd smiling at her. Angela leaned back and plunked her butt down on the planter's edge, clutching her chest. “You almost gave me a heart attack.”
“Come now, you think I don’t know how much strain your heart can handle?” the goddess asked.
“Yeah? What about me!” Leonard shouted from within the topiary. There was a rustle of branches, followed by the squirrel dropping out the bottom of the shrub and landing on his back. His little legs flailed in the air for a moment as he tried to roll over, finally managing the feat by rocking side to side to gather momentum. Once he was back upright, he waddled to the planter’s edge and climbed up beside Angela. “You coulda killed me with that stunt!”
Ennàd raised an eyebrow. “I see your familiar has already picked up your irreverent ways.”
Pebbles flew through the air.
Druid Familiar Acquired
Leonard the grey squirrel is now your druid familiar.
Both Angela and Leonard’s eyes went wide.
“Oh, hell no,” Angela said.
“Not a chance,” Leonard added in chorus, rubbing his head where the pebble had hit.
“Too late,” Ennàd said with a lilt in her voice. “A druid doesn’t pick the familiar; the familiar picks the druid.”
“Whadda ya mean, the druid picks the familiar?” Leonard said. “I thought I was supposed to pick da druid if I want the job. Which I don’t.”
“Wait, what?” Angela said. “She just said the familiar picks the druid.”
“No, she didn’t. She said the druid picks the familiar.”
They turned to Ennàd.
“Did you just say two different things at the same time?” Angela asked.
“Anyway,” Ennàd said, ignoring her question, “we should probably discuss your home in the city. While I don’t object to you maintaining a separate residence with your family, that is not where a druid spends their days—or their nights.”
“Yeah, about that,” Angela said, sucking air through her teeth. “The whole ‘spending time in nature’ thing? That didn’t really work out for me. Turns out I’m a city girl. Guess you’re going to have to revoke my class, right?”
“Child,” Ennàd said distractedly, “that is simply not how it works.” She held up a hand so a butterfly could alight on it like she was a frigging Disney princess. “You have sworn service to a god and completed their Class Quest. You are tied to me, now.”
Crap. Apparently, Angela couldn’t get out of this garbage class.
“Ugh. Fine, but if I’m stuck with the job, could you at least tell me what I’m supposed to be doing?”
“You go into nature!” Ennàd said, with a bounty of enthusiasm. “Search out corruption of the natural order. Evil magics, invasive species. You have an exceedingly high Swimming Skill—perhaps become a shepherd of the seas?”
Angela cocked her head. That didn’t sound so bad.
“So, like, stop overfishing?” she asked.
“No, nothing like that,” the goddess said. “I have priests and priestesses who bless crops and bounties of harvest from both land and sea. Why would I restrict that?”
Angela stared at her. Was she serious? She couldn’t be serious.
“Uhhh…isn’t too many bountiful harvests basically the definition of overfishing?”
“No, that is a separate issue,” Ennàd said, sounding flustered.
“So, how does this work then?” Angela asked, confused. “The priests pray for bountiful harvests while the druids are stuck trying to stop the fish from dying off? Seems like a raw deal for the druids.”
“No!” Ennàd said, her eye beginning to twitch. “That is not how it works at all!”
Leonard snapped his fingers—something that Angela was pretty sure should be impossible for a squirrel. “Hey, since we’re talkin’ about it, what about all dem factories with da harvested wood? I got a cousin, lived upriver. Says his house is some kinda furniture now.”
Angela snorted. “Yeah, and if Arenians ever discover coal, this planet is screwed.”
“What’s dis coal stuff?” Leonard asked.
“It’s these black rocks that can burn super hot for a long time, but they release a gas that destroys the environment and makes the planet too hot for life to exist.”
“Whoah!” Leonard said. He turned to Ennàd. “Dis coal sounds like some pretty serious stuff. You should get on dat, pronto.”
“That is not my duty!” Ennàd said, stamping her foot. “My job is to keep nature balanced and provide a bountiful harvest for those who pray to me! My druids work in nature, and my clergy work in the cities. It is clean, and it is comfortable, and it works, and I don’t want to talk about this!”
Angela and Leonard glanced at each other, then back at Ennàd.
“I don’t understand how you can balance nature while simultaneously ignoring the impacts of civilization on nature,” Angela said in confusion.
Ennàd balled her hands into fists and waved them up and down, again stamping her foot like a 6-year-old having a tantrum. “No! I am about life, and growth, and giving! The people of Arenia adore me, and I will not have that threatened. I am the people’s favourite god, and these questions are—”
Ennàd burst into flames.
“AAAAAGH!” Angela and Leonard shouted in unison. Angela tripped backward to sit on the edge of the planter, her familiar grabbing tight to her trousers as they watched the flames rip through Ennàd’s form in seconds. The intensity of the fire was a testament to its supernatural nature, and a moment later the god was reduced to nothing but two blackened trees, their charred trunks and limbs twined together in a skeletal mockery of Ennàd’s prior shape. Before Angela and Leonard could process what had happened, little green buds began sprouting on the blackened limbs. Soon, those buds exploded into growth as the foliage re-acquired its humanoid shape. Then, when the trees had grown enough to achieve the complete form of a person, they underwent a moment of sudden metamorphosis, transforming into godly flesh once again.
Only this time, it wasn’t Ennàd.
Advertisement
- In Serial7 Chapters
Realm of Noria [LitRPG series. Book 1. The Birth]
For those who hunt for the best gems of the LitRPG genre. An impossible to miss new explosive release sure to catch the eye of all the fans of Sword Art Online and Log Horizon! The Fate has to lead you to a stone dead! The body languishes in the captivity of the regeneration capsule; the mind is connected to the virtual game of the new generation. Well, you could take it, but a strange system error has deprived you of the connection with reality and outside help. Now for NPCs you are one of them, and for the players you are one of NPCs. There is the only chance to recover your body, crippled by the catastrophe. It is to survive in this superfluously cruel world! To survive here--you need to become stronger. But who could make you stronger but the 'Shadows', the most famous assassin guild in Noria?'The Birth' is the first book by Paul Kite (real name - Pavel Korshunov) - one of the most popular Russian LitRPG series 'Realm of Noria'. Paul Kite is one of the top-rated of the new wave gamelit-author. He has created the story of Kraven, a person who accidentally became a captive of the virtual world and fought not only for his freedom, but also for his life. The whole book is available on Amazon. Welcome! It's Kindle available! https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B07L43CBC9
8 145 - In Serial15 Chapters
Zarif's Story
Please note this is a 18+ so it will have descriptions and scenarios that only a grown up would tolerate and be capable of handling without feeling repulsed. Zarif, a demi-human slave of orcs and goblins is brutally murdered when he does not accomplish the impossible - awakens to find himself resting within the arms of an elderly woman with tears in her eyes. ____________________________________________________________________________ As I like to be a little creative in the way I write, there might be a few mistakes per chapter - so be sure to notify me in the comments if you think something seems wrong. You might be confused as you read on since I switch about constantly, but please continue reading and maybe leave a comment on why you did not like what you read and decided to drop the story.
8 88 - In Serial41 Chapters
Cyber-multiverse Milieu
Eric is given the opportunity to modify/create a world for him and others to live in. He can change the laws of nature, physics, reality and anything else that he wants for his new world. He adds magic and other things to his new world but he realized that he can connect his world to other worlds created/modified by other people who were given the same opportunity. Join Eric and others living in his created world as they try to figure things out.
8 108 - In Serial39 Chapters
Magic Continent Zero
Long ago the world was in peril with infighting and bickering. A great war broke out when the invading demon continent attacked the human continent. The demons are much stronger than the humans but the humans were able to hold off the demons with their ability to use magic. It all seemed lost until a great wizard rose up and helped lead the humans to victory. A talent like the world has never seen. His profound understandings of magic made him respected by all the nobles on the continent. After the war he turned down all positions and decided to only teach the students he wanted noble or not. These were the choosen 7 children and only them were given his direct knowledge on magic. However, 20 years ago a great tradgedy befell the human continent. No one knows the exact details but what was known is a great magical barrier went up over 1/3 of the entire human continent that has stood ever since. The teacher was betrayed by one of his students. Himself and the rest of his students scattered across the human continent and into obscurity. Our protagonist is of low birth and has no talent but longs to learn magic. Usually only the rich nobles can afford magic teachers and the books needed. Will he ever become the great wizard he wishes to be? ***** There are no release dates for this story but I tend to try to drop 3 chapters a week spaced 2-3 days apart from each other.
8 96 - In Serial106 Chapters
Burnouts
Trust fund babies and the less fortunate coexisting through the turmoil of relationships, friends, drugs, and sex ... basically the normal 1990s teen antics.
8 168 - In Serial54 Chapters
My Annoying Roommate | Hwang Hyunjin
(1st book) Akari moved to a place near her new school with an affordable price and will soon meet her annoying roommate named Hyunjin.
8 99

