Writing Book 2: Summer, Year 1

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Book 2 – Summer, Year 1

The second installment shifts focus from personal beginnings to collective strain as Pelican Town faces a series of destabilizing events that test both the community and its members.

The narrative expands beyond Eric’s perspective, incorporating viewpoints from characters such as Shane, Sam, and Harvey, each of whom is directly impacted by the town’s unravelling.

The Green Rain and the Luau serve as major turning points, exposing underlying tensions and accelerating changes that can no longer be ignored. Relationships are strained, decisions carry heavier consequences, and the illusion of stability begins to break down.

Rather than focusing solely on growth, Book 2 explores how people respond under pressure—whether by adapting, withdrawing, or breaking entirely.

Book 2 is complete (30+ chapters). Like Book 1, chapters will be posted gradually to allow for discussion and feedback.

Constructive critique is welcome — particularly on pacing, character perspective, emotional payoff, and thematic cohesion.

Books
Book 1 - Spring, Year 1
Book 2 - Summer, Year 1

Chapters
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 2.5 - Demetrius
Chapter 3
 
Last edited:

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Chapter 1
I still couldn’t believe that Spring had already passed.

It hadn’t just slipped by.
It had… shifted things.

Summer light poured through the window—brighter, heavier somehow—settling on my skin even after I sat up. It should’ve felt like a fresh start.

Instead, it felt quieter.

When I stepped outside, the air moved slower, thicker, like the valley had exhaled and decided to rest. For a moment, I just stood there, taking it in—the warmth, the stillness.

Spring had been anything but that.

I looked over my field. The strawberry plants had already wilted, their leaves dry and curling inward. Not dead—just finished. Their time had passed.

I stepped forward and cleared them with my scythe. The stems gave way easily, brittle under the blade.

No disaster. No loss.
Just the season moving on.

I paused, resting the scythe against my shoulder.

A few weeks ago, I wouldn’t have thought twice about it. Crops in, crops out. Profit, efficiency, repeat.

Now…

Now it felt different.

Like every ending carried a bit more weight than it used to.

I shook the thought off and moved to the edge of the field, digging out a space for the orange sapling. It took a bit more care than the rest—something that would stay, not just cycle out with the season. I pressed the soil back in gently, making sure it sat right.

“Grow well,” I muttered, more out of habit than anything.

Then I turned back to the field, scattering fertilizer across the soil before planting the melon seeds near the scarecrow. The motions came naturally—plant, cover, water—but I didn’t rush through them this time.

The ground was warm under my hands.

Steady.

Reliable.

I straightened, looking over the small patch of fresh soil.

“Hm…” I murmured. “Could use a bit more.”

Not urgency.

Just… room to grow.

I stopped by Pierre’s, catching Gus and Marnie near the counter as I picked up some Blueberry Seeds.

“Hello, Eric!” Pierre called. “Our strawberry harvest was a success! Not bad for an upstart farmer. Let’s hope the blueberries turn out just as well!”

“Yeah…” I said, rubbing the back of my neck. “Though I think Gus deserves most of the credit for that. The last week of Spring was… a lot.”

Gus laughed. “Hey now, don’t sell yourself short! Those strawberries were a great investment. I got more than my money’s worth out of them.”

Marnie nodded. “Same here. I used my eggs for the cakes—took a lot to get the hens laying that well, but it paid off.”

Pierre folded his arms with a smug grin. “Sounds like you’ve made quite the impression around here.”

I smiled but didn’t quite know what to do with that.

A season ago, no one here even knew my name.

“Well, I’ve still got fields to tend,” I said, stepping back. “Summer’s not going to wait on me.”

I left before the conversation could stretch any further.

Back on the farm, I worked the soil into neat rows, planting the blueberry seeds where they’d catch the most sun. The motions came easier now—less guesswork, more instinct. Nearby, I scattered wild seeds into another patch, letting them grow however they wanted.

It wasn’t perfect.

But it felt like progress.

I then went down, waved at Elliot—who was staring out over the water in Cindersap Forest—and headed to the Beach for some quick fishing. My Pickaxe was getting upgraded, and for the first time in a while, I wasn’t in a rush to go back underground.

The sound of waves was easier on the ears than stone collapsing in the dark.

I saw Willy fishing near his shop. I took my rod out and caught 2 Red Mullets and a Tuna. The Tuna had 10 bait pieces, 1 doll, and 2 geodes attached to it, and was a real challenge to get. Good thing—it was one of the Community Center offerings I needed.

I saw Elliot arrive at the Beach, where he approached me and Willy.

“Howdy, Eric,” Elliot exclaimed. “How is fishing going for you?”

“Got my first Tuna,” I said.

That got Willy’s attention.

“Ah! Tuna! Those fish are really tough for beginners, so good on you reelin’ one out!” Willy called.

I nodded.

“I heard the Trout Derby is coming soon,” Elliot chimed in.

“Yep! On the 20th and 21st of Summer!” Willy bellowed. “Fishermen from across the valley comin’ in for Rainbow Trout! You in, Eric?”

I drifted for a second—sunlight on water, gulls overhead—then snapped back.

“Oh! Uh… yeah. Could do with more fishing this month. I spent most of Spring in the mines. This feels… different.”

Willy laughed.

“You might even see some peculiar folks! Heard the fishing sisters show up regular for these Derbies!”

“Fishing Sisters!” Elliot echoed.

“Yep!” Willy smiled. “Two young lasses—famous for their skill. Caught more legendary fish than most old-timers.”

“Sounds cool,” I said. “I should get going. See you.”

I left him some wood to repair the beach bridge.

The Saloon was quieter than usual—Pam at her usual spot, Gus behind the counter, Emily and Clint nearby. Shane wasn’t immediately visible.

“Huh. Shane’s gone… again?” I asked.

“He’s here.”

The voice came from behind me—flat, familiar.

I turned to see him leaning against the wall near the door, arms crossed.

“Oh—didn’t see you,” I said.

“Yeah,” he muttered. “That’s kind of the point.”

He pushed off the wall and stepped past me, not quite brushing my shoulder this time.

“Move.”

I stepped aside.

Same tone. Same Shane.

…just not as sharp.

“Eric! Have a seat!” Gus called. I took a chair near the counter. “How’s your first day of Summer treating you?”

“Fine,” I said. “Did some fishing instead of mining.”

Gus raised an eyebrow. “Oh? Change of pace.”

“I heard the Trout Derby’s coming up,” I added. “Willy mentioned it.”

“Ah, the fishing sisters!” Gus said. “Hard to believe how young they are with what they’ve caught.”

“Maybe I’ll give them some competition,” I said.

Pam snorted. “Wish I’d gotten into fishing earlier. These old bones don’t like the cold water anymore.”

Gus chuckled. Emily leaned in slightly.

“I hope you’re treating the fish with kindness,” she said softly. “Every living being deserves respect—even those of the sea.”

“I mostly sell them,” I said. “Not eat them.”

Emily smiled. “I thought so.”

“You could smoke fish someday,” Gus added. “Good money in that. Bit outta reach for now, though.”

“I’ll keep it in mind,” I said.

There was a brief lull—just the sound of mugs shifting, quiet conversation, the hum of the room settling.

Then—

“You still going down there?”

I blinked and turned.

Shane hadn’t moved from his spot at the counter, but he was looking at me now.

“The mines,” he added, like it wasn’t obvious.

“Uh… yeah,” I said. “Just taking a break while my pickaxe gets upgraded.”

He gave a short nod.

“Good.”

I waited.

He didn’t elaborate—just took a sip, eyes drifting away like the conversation was already over.

“…Good?” I repeated.

He exhaled through his nose, annoyed at being made to explain.

“You go too often, you start thinking it’s the only thing that matters,” he said. “It isn’t.”

I frowned slightly. “You’ve been down there?”

“Not the mines,” he said. “Something else.”

A beat.

“Same idea.”

He set his drink down harder than necessary.

“Point is—pace it. Or it’ll chew you up and you won’t even notice.”

It didn’t sound like advice, but a warning he’d learned the hard way.

“…Got it,” I said.

He shrugged, already retreating.

“Do what you want.”

But he didn’t sound like he meant that.

I stood after a moment. “Alright. I’ll see you all around.”

Gus and Emily waved—Emily with that same easy warmth.

As I headed for the door, I glanced back.

Shane wasn’t looking at me anymore.

But he wasn’t ignoring me, either.

The night air felt different.

Warmer than Spring, but not heavy—just enough to settle in your lungs and stay there. The kind of warmth that didn’t rush you.

I took the long way back from the Saloon, passing by the edge of town where the sounds thinned out into crickets and distant water.

For once, I wasn’t thinking about the mines.

No stone walls. No ladders. No constant push to go deeper, faster, farther.

Just the rhythm of the waves from earlier, the pull of the line, the quiet stretch of time between casts.

Fishing hadn’t felt like progress.

But it hadn’t felt like failure either.

Just… space.

I exhaled slowly.

Maybe that was the point.

Shane’s voice lingered in the back of my mind.

“You go too often, you start thinking it’s the only thing that matters.”

I hadn’t noticed it happening—but he was right.

The mines had a way of narrowing everything down until it was the only thing left.

I kicked a small stone along the path, watching it skip ahead in uneven hops.

Strange.

Of all people, Shane was the one who pointed it out.

I thought back to the way he said it—half-dismissive, like he didn’t care, but still said it anyway.

And earlier… the tuna.

He didn’t have to say anything.

But he did.

I let out a quiet breath.

Guess people don’t just change all at once.

Sometimes it’s just… smaller things.

A word here. A warning there.

Not softer.

Just… less distant.

The farmhouse came into view, dim against the night.

Spring had felt like something I had to survive—figure out, keep up with, push through.

Summer didn’t feel like that.

Not yet, anyway.

It felt slower.

Wider.

Like I didn’t have to chase everything all at once.

I rested my hand on the door for a moment before heading inside.

Maybe that wouldn’t last.

But for now…

That was enough.
 

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Chapter 2
An ordinary Tuesday with an extraordinary list of chores to do.
Demetrius wanted a Topaz, probably for his research, and I still had offerings to make at the Community Center.
My Steel Pickaxe was ready for pickup.
And I had a handful of donations for the Museum.

After watering my plants, I headed into town.

I picked up my Steel Pickaxe from Clint first, with little fanfare. He handed it over without much to say, avoiding eye contact more than usual.
After that, I made my way straight to the Museum.

Gunther looked up from his desk as I came in.

“Gems, gems, and more gems,” I said, setting my pack down. “Oh — and some artifacts too.”

Penny, Vincent, and Jas had been nearby. Penny looked up immediately and walked over, her face brightening.

“Wow, Eric… you really collected all of this in just a month?” she said. “I didn’t think anyone could make progress like this so quickly.”

“Glass shards, a Frozen Tear, and… a weird doll,” I replied. “Honestly, the deeper I dig, the stranger the stuff gets.”

Penny laughed softly, but Gunther didn’t.

“It’s amazing what turns up when someone actually looks,” Penny said, quieter now. “We get books, tools, stories… things people forgot were even here.”

Gunther’s pen stopped moving.

I noticed it then — the way his shoulders tensed, the way his eyes lingered on the artifacts a second too long. The room felt smaller, like the air had thickened without warning.

“Eric,” Gunther said sharply. “We need to talk. Privately.”

I flinched.

“Is this about—” I started.

“Now.”

I swallowed, nodded, and followed him outside.

The moment the museum door shut behind us, Gunther spun around.

“What do you think you’re doing?” he snapped.

I froze. I’d heard irritation in his voice before, but never this — sharp, unfiltered, almost panicked.

“I’m donating artifacts,” I said carefully. “That’s… kind of the point of a museum.”

“That’s not what I mean,” he said, stepping closer. “You know exactly what I mean.”

“I really don’t.”

He laughed once, bitter and hollow.

“You come here with scrolls. With shards. With things that haven’t seen daylight in decades. Centuries, in some cases.” His voice dropped. “Things that were buried on purpose.”

My stomach tightened.

“I didn’t know,” I said. “I just dig. I mine. I fish things up. No one ever told me—”

“No one could tell you,” Gunther cut in. “Because the last time people talked about this openly, Pelican Town nearly tore itself apart.”

That stopped me.

“You’ve found Dwarvish Scrolls,” he continued. “You’ve pieced together fragments of a language that was never meant to be reconstructed by one person. And every piece you bring back—”
He pressed his fingers into his temple. “—it wakes something up.”

I felt defensive heat rise in my chest.

“I’m not summoning anything,” I said. “I don’t even know what half this stuff means. If there’s danger here, shouldn’t people know?”

Gunther’s voice cracked.

“No.”

The word came out too fast. Too afraid.

“You don’t understand,” he said, quieter now. “The Dwarf isn’t just… a person. Not anymore. What’s left of him is bound to language, to memory, to recognition. Every scroll you recover restores something — not just knowledge, but presence.”

My throat went dry.

“You’re saying I’m bringing him back.”

“I’m saying you’re making it possible,” Gunther replied. His anger collapsed in on itself, leaving exhaustion behind. “Slowly. Piece by piece.”

I took a step back.

“Then tell me how to stop,” I said. “Tell me what not to touch. What to avoid.”

Gunther looked at me, really looked at me — not like a curator, not like a bureaucrat, but like a man cornered by history.

“Stop finding the scrolls,” he said.
Then, softer:
“Please.”

The word landed heavier than any order could have.

Before I could answer, there was a sharp scrape behind us.

We both turned.

Clint stood just outside the museum’s side entrance, frozen mid-step. His eyes were wide, his hands clenched around something he’d dropped — a small cloth bundle, shaking slightly.

“I— I didn’t mean—” he stammered.

Gunther’s face went pale.

Clint bolted.

He didn’t even wait for a response — just turned and ran down the path toward the square, boots stumbling over themselves.

For a long moment, neither of us spoke.

“That,” Gunther said quietly, “is exactly why this can’t spread.”

I stared after Clint, my pulse still racing.

Whatever I’d dug up in Spring hadn’t stayed underground.

And Summer had only just begun.

Robin’s shop was quieter than usual.

The front door creaked as I stepped inside, the smell of sawdust and sap still hanging in the air, but the place felt hollow — half-finished beams resting against the walls, tools laid out like they’d been abandoned mid-thought.

“Robin?” I called.

No answer.

I frowned. Demetrius wasn’t here either, which was unusual given the time of day. I was about to turn around when I noticed the door to the basement slightly ajar.

Sebastian’s voice drifted up first.

“…yeah. No. I’m home.”

I hesitated, then knocked lightly against the wall.

The footsteps came up slowly.

Sebastian emerged a moment later, hoodie half-zipped, expression unreadable in that way of his — not hostile, not friendly, just aware.

“Oh,” he said. “It’s you.”

“Sorry,” I replied. “I was looking for Demetrius.”

“He’s not here,” Sebastian said. “Neither is my mom. She’s at aerobics.”

That tracked.

“Do you know where Demetrius went?” I asked.

Sebastian shrugged. “Could be wandering the forest pretending that’s research.”

I nodded, relieved to at least have a direction.

“Thanks, I owe you one.” I said. “I’ll check—”

“Wait.” He said. “We’re not done yet.”

I stopped.

Sebastian leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed loosely.

“You’ve been hanging around a lot,” he continued. “Asking questions. Showing up places, you don’t really need to be.”

My stomach tightened.

“I live here,” I said carefully.

“Sure,” he replied. “So, do I. That doesn’t mean I don’t notice when someone’s listening.”

The words weren’t sharp — that was what made them worse.

“I wasn’t spying,” I said.

Sebastian tilted his head slightly.

“Yes you were,” he said. “Just not very well.”

Silence settled between us. I could hear the distant creak of wood shifting in the shop, the ticking of something metallic cooling.

“If this is about Abigail—” I started.

“It’s not,” he interrupted. “that’s besides the point.”

He studied me for a moment, then spoke again.

“You show up at the mountain when you think no one’s there. You linger when conversations end. You ask questions that don’t match the answers you’re given.” His eyes narrowed slightly. “You’re not subtle for someone trying to be quiet.”

I swallowed.

“Then you should know,” I said, before I could stop myself, “that the Wizard’s been watching you.”

That finally did something.

Sebastian’s expression shifted — not shock, not fear, but recognition.

“…Yeah,” he said after a beat. “That tracks.”

“You already knew?” I asked.

“I knew something was off,” he replied. “He’s terrible at minding his own business. Keeps secrets like trophies.” A faint, humorless smile crossed his face. “But he can’t resist showing them off.”

I hesitated.

“You talk to him,” I said.

Sebastian didn’t deny it.

“Sometimes,” he admitted. “He doesn’t lie. He just… withholds. Lets you fill in the gaps yourself.”

That explained too much.

“So why tell me?” I asked. “Why let me know that you meet him at all?”

Sebastian straightened.

“Because if you’re going to hover,” he said, “you might as well be honest about it.”

He stepped aside, gesturing loosely toward the stairs.

“You don’t need to spy,” he continued. “If you’re unsure about something, just come in. Ask. Lurking just makes things worse.”

I let out a breath I hadn’t realized I was holding.

“…Alright,” I said. “I didn’t mean to cross a line.”

Sebastian looked unconvinced — but not angry.

“I’m still not sure what your deal is,” he said. “But I don’t think you’re stupid. And you don’t feel dangerous.” A pause. “Yet.”

That was as close to reassurance as I was going to get.

“I really do need to find Demetrius,” I said.

Sebastian nodded. “Check the mountain pa—. Actually, better yet? Check Town Square. He hates being predictable.”

I turned toward the door.

As I stepped outside, a thought lingered — sharp and unfinished.

Sebastian had let me go too easily.

And whatever he wasn’t telling me, he’d decided — at least for now — to keep it to himself.

I pushed the thought aside.

Robin would know where Demetrius was.

And I still had a gift to deliver.

I pushed into Pierre’s shop a little too fast, nearly colliding with Abigail at the counter. She frowned at me, clearly confused.

“What are you doing here?” she asked.

She looked at me like I’d broken an unspoken rule. I didn’t have time to explain — not when every delay felt like another piece clicking into place without me.

I slipped past her and headed through the side door. The aerobics class was still ongoing, music echoing faintly through the room. Jodi was the first to notice me.

“Er… Eric,” she said carefully. “Class is still going. Don’t you think you should wait until it’s over?”

“I’m just looking for Robin,” I said, trying to steady my breathing.

Robin turned, surprised but smiling.
“Eric? Do you need something?”

“Demetrius asked for a Topaz,” I said, holding it up. “Do you know where he is?”

Her eyes lit up as she remembered.
“Oh! He mentioned heading toward the fountain earlier. I’m not sure why, but that’s where he went.”

“Alright. Thanks.”

I left before Abigail could ask anything else.

Demetrius was exactly where Robin said he’d be, standing near the fountain with his hands folded behind his back.

“Ah, Eric,” he said warmly. “You have the Topaz.”

I handed it over.
“Here.”

He took it, weighing it in his palm — then his gaze drifted to my bag. He lingered there a second too long.

“You’ve been busy,” he said. Not accusatory. Observational.

I stiffened but said nothing.

“Stone, metals…” He tilted his head slightly. “Construction materials, perhaps?”

I swallowed.

After a pause, he continued, almost idly,
“If you complete enough of those offerings, it usually opens up another section. The Boiler Room tends to come next.”

My fingers curled at my side.

“And once that’s restored,” he added after another beat, “the minecarts are operational again. Quite efficient, really.”

He looked back at the fountain, as if the thought had simply occurred to him.

“Of course,” he said lightly, “there’s always the Joja route. Membership, funding, expedited repairs. Throw money at the problem and bypass the process entirely.” A brief shrug. “But you don’t strike me as someone who would choose that.”

I didn’t answer.

“Oh,” he added, turning back to me, voice lowering just a fraction, “and if you’re concerned about the scrolls…”

He paused.

“You could always give them to me.”

For a moment, I couldn’t tell if he smiled — or if it was just air leaving his nose.

“I could use them for research.”

My stomach dropped.

“I… should get going,” I said.

“Of course,” Demetrius replied easily. “Don’t let me keep you.”

I walked away, the weight in my chest growing heavier with every step.

This was already moving without me.
Someone always hears something. That was the real problem.

I made the usual donations—fish, materials.

And just like Demetrius said, something shifted.

A new scroll appeared near the Boiler Room.

I stared at it for a moment.

He knew.

I didn’t go in.

Not yet.

As I stepped back into the square, I spotted Alex near the ice cream stand.

“Ah! Hey, Eric!” he called. “You grabbing one? I could use the money—college isn’t cheap.”

I paused. “Didn’t know you worked here.”

“Yeah,” he said with a shrug. “Gotta start somewhere.”

For a second, I envied that.

Simple goals. Clear direction.

“Not today,” I said.

“Right,” he muttered. “Saloon, then.”

“Hey, Eric!”

Leah’s voice caught me before I could move on.

“You heading to the Saloon?” she asked.

“Yeah. You?”

“Beach,” she said. “I heard you fixed the bridge. Figured I’d try painting out there.”

I nodded. “Nice.”

She smiled, then added, a little more thoughtfully:

“You’ve been getting a lot done lately. It’s… different around here now.”

I hesitated.

“Yeah,” I said. “People keep saying that.”

Her expression shifted—just slightly.

“Just don’t burn yourself out,” she said. “It’s easy to do that when everything starts moving at once.”

That stuck more than it should have.

“Oh—and I’m usually at the Saloon on Fridays and Saturdays,” she added. “If you see Emily, tell her I said hi.”

“Will do.”

She waved and headed off toward the beach.

I stood there a moment longer than I meant to.

Then I turned toward the Saloon.

The Saloon was quieter than usual. Pam, Gus, Shane, and Emily were scattered around the room. Clint was nowhere to be seen.

Gus didn’t greet me when I walked in.

That alone felt off.

I took a seat anyway.

“I heard Clint was running around like a panicked child!” Pam barked. “Couldn’t make out a word he was yelling!”

Gus forced a small laugh, but his eyes flicked toward me — just for a second too long.

“So, uh… Eric,” he said, wiping the counter. “You’ve been keeping busy lately.”

“Yeah,” I replied. “Working on the Community Center. Getting the offerings sorted. Slow, but steady.”

“Mm.” Gus nodded, though he didn’t look convinced.

I hesitated, then added, “Ran into Demetrius earlier. He… knew a bit more than I expected. About the Center.”

That landed.

Gus stopped wiping the counter.

Emily tilted her head slightly. “Demetrius is very observant,” she said gently. “Sometimes more than people realize.”

I let out a quiet breath. I wanted to say more — about the scrolls, about Gunther — but the words stayed stuck where they were.

“Hello, Eric,” Emily said, smiling softly. “I feel oddly tired today.”

“Aerobics?” I asked.

She laughed lightly. “Yes… and then you rushed in looking for Robin. That was unusual.”

“Help Wanted request,” I said. “Topaz.”

Emily nodded, satisfied. “Ah. That makes sense.”

Silence crept back in — not empty, just… careful.

Shane broke it.

“Something happen, Eric?” he asked.

I glanced at him. His tone was casual, but his eyes weren’t.

“Uh… no,” I said. “Nothing major.”

He held my gaze a second longer than necessary — then let it go.

“Whatever,” he muttered. “Not my business.”

A pause.

Then, almost like he was filling the space on purpose:

“I saw Demetrius at the Mart today.”

That got Gus’s attention.

“He doesn’t usually shop there,” Gus said.

“Yeah,” Shane replied. “He wasn’t shopping.”

He leaned back in his chair, frowning slightly.

“He was talking to Morris.”

The room shifted.

“What about?” Gus asked.

Shane shrugged. “Didn’t catch much. But it didn’t sound like customer and manager.”
A beat.
“More like… they already knew what they were talking about.”

No one said anything after that.

Pam broke the tension with a loud scoff.

“Oy, Shane! What’s with the shipments lately? Feels like we’re always out of Joja cans!”

Shane rubbed his temple.

“I told you, Pam. Andy’s stretched thin. Roads out here are garbage.”

“Classic Andy!” she snorted. “Guy ever gonna show his face around here?”

Shane huffed a quiet laugh — but there wasn’t much humor in it.

“Doubt it. Heard his drinking’s worse than mine.”
A pause.
“And he doesn’t get quiet about it.”

That sobered the mood again.

I frowned slightly. “Andy?”

Shane glanced at me.

“Our supplier,” he said. “Hates Morris. Hates the job. Still does it.”

He looked down at his drink.

“If you think I’ve got it bad…” he muttered. “You’ve got no idea.”

That stuck with me.

Even now, there were still people caught in it. Same system. Same grind. Just different faces.

I stood up.

“Well… I should get going. Night, everyone.”

This time, Gus nodded. Emily waved.

Shane didn’t say anything — but as I turned to leave, I caught him glancing over.

Not sharp. Not dismissive.

Just… watching.

The air outside was cooler than I expected. Summer nights still hadn’t decided what they wanted to be.

I walked past the Community Center without stopping. The doors were closed, but I could still picture the Boiler Room — the space where something new had appeared because someone knew it would.

Demetrius hadn’t told me everything. He hadn’t needed to.

Sebastian’s voice crept back in instead — not the words, but the look. The way he’d already decided I wasn’t innocent, just careless. He’d been right about that much.

I thought about how easily secrets moved here. From the mines to the Museum. From whispers to conclusions. From one person to another without anyone ever meaning for it to happen.

Someone always hears something.

By the time I reached the farm, I wasn’t sure who I was more afraid of anymore — the people who knew too much, or the ones who pretended they didn’t.
 

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Chapter 2.5 – Demetrius
I hadn’t intended to stop by the Saloon.

Routine deviation usually irritates me. It introduces noise. But Clint had been pacing outside the Blacksmith earlier, hands moving too quickly for someone who claims to work with precision tools. I noticed it because his rhythm was wrong—starting, stopping, turning as if someone had spoken his name, then continuing anyway.

People only do that when they’re replaying something.

Inside, the Saloon smelled like yeast and grease and overheated air. Gus was behind the counter, polishing glasses he’d already polished. Clint stood too close to him, speaking in bursts—too quiet, then too fast. He never sat.

I took a seat near the wall. Not the bar. Close enough to hear, far enough to be ignored.

Fragments carried.

“…I didn’t mean to—”
“…wasn’t supposed to—”
“…he just kept asking questions.”

Gus leaned in. His voice dropped. He glanced toward the door once, then again.

That was enough.

Eric’s name came up only once. Quietly. Like a test word.

Clint’s shoulders tightened at the sound of it.

Interesting.

Eric was efficient. That much was obvious. In less than a season, he’d repaired infrastructure that had sat dormant for years—the bridge, the mine access, the Community Center itself. Quietly. Without permits. Without funding requests. Without authorization.

That kind of progress doesn’t happen unless systems are already failing.

Lewis knew this. Or he should have. He’d spent years preserving the appearance of stability, mistaking inertia for control. Eric didn’t create the problem—he simply moved faster than the safeguards meant to contain it.

The Wizard has to be aware of this too. Rebuilding the Community Center is no one man feat, even with Eric’s work ethic. Lewis is burdened with other responsibilities, so the only other suspect has to be the Wizard.

He’s no hermit. There is something going on with him.

Clint rubbed his face with both hands. “I shouldn’t have said anything,” he muttered. “I didn’t know it mattered.”

Gus said something I couldn’t hear. Clint nodded too quickly.

This wasn’t panic over gossip.

This was panic over sequence.

I left before either of them noticed me. Confirmation narrows options.

Outside, the air felt heavier than it should have. Summer hadn’t fully settled yet. It was the kind of day where people confuse clear skies for clarity.

They’re wrong about that more often than not.

I walked toward the fountain.

Eric arrived shortly after. He always walks like someone counting steps without meaning to—measured, slightly tense. He handed me the Topaz I’d requested. Clean. Untarnished. Recently mined.

I thanked him. Watched his eyes flick to my hands. To my bag.

“You’re busy,” I said. Not a question.

He hesitated.

That was answer enough.

I let the silence stretch—not long. Just enough.

“You’ll be at the Community Center today,” I added.

He flinched.

People think flinching is about fear. It isn’t. It’s about recognition.

His bag was heavy. He knew it. He also knew I knew.

“Once you complete a section,” I continued, casually, “another tends to open. That’s how these things work. Systems prefer momentum.”

I watched him process that.

“The boiler room,” I added after a beat. “If you reach it, you may notice certain… efficiencies. Transport. Flow.”

Still nothing from him. Good. He was listening.

“There’s always the Joja alternative, of course.” I shrugged. “Capital is very good at bypassing complexity. Crude, but effective.”

He shifted his weight.

I could have stopped there. But curiosity isn’t a switch—it’s a gradient.

“And if the scrolls are bothering you,” I said lightly, “you could always give them to me.”

I didn’t smile. I didn’t laugh. I exhaled through my nose.

He stiffened.

Good.

After he left, I remained by the fountain longer than necessary. People passed—Leah with paint beneath her nails, Alex hauling the ice cream stand into place, posture loud, purpose thin.

Patterns.

I entered the Mart and paused just inside the doorway.

Fluorescent light hummed overhead—too bright, too even. The entire space was washed in pale blue, like something meant to look clean rather than be clean. There was a faint smell of bleach beneath it all.

Sebastian had once compared it to a hospital.

He wasn’t wrong.

The cashier noticed me immediately.

“Um… hello,” she said.

“Claire,” I replied, glancing at her nametag. “We’ve met.”

A small nod. “There aren’t many customers.”

“Two, typically,” I said. “Jodi. Pam.”

She blinked.

I held her gaze a moment longer than necessary—just long enough for recognition to turn into uncertainty—then looked past her.

Sam was sweeping. Inefficiently. Shane was stocking shelves, movements mechanical, delayed by half a second—fatigue, or distraction.

I stepped closer to the counter.

“How long are your shifts?” I asked.

Claire stiffened. “I—sorry?”

“Hours,” I clarified. “Start time. End time. Variance.”

Her fingers tightened against the register.

“I don’t think I’m supposed to—”

“You’re not in trouble,” I said, evenly. “I’m not your employer.”

That wasn’t reassurance. It was clarification.

She hesitated, then spoke anyway.

“They change a lot,” she said. “Sometimes mornings. Sometimes late. Not much notice.”

“Breaks?”

“Short.”

“Compensation?”

A pause.

“…low.”

I nodded once, filing it away.

“And managerial oversight?” I asked.

That did it. Her eyes flicked toward the back room.

“He—he checks in,” she said carefully. “Mostly when something’s wrong.”

Of course.

I let the silence sit—not heavy, not light. Just present.

“He also solicits customers from competitors,” I added. “With limited success.”

Claire let out a small, surprised breath before she could stop herself.

“That’s… yeah.”

“And when those attempts fail,” I continued, “the response is redistributed downward.”

She didn’t answer that one.

She didn’t need to.

I shifted my attention slightly, enough for her to follow it—toward Shane, toward Sam, toward the shape of the store as a whole.

“This location underperforms,” I said. “Not because of demand. Because of structure.”

Claire swallowed.

“I didn’t mean to say anything bad,” she said quickly.

“You didn’t,” I replied.

And I meant it.

That seemed to unsettle her more.

Footsteps cut in behind me.

“Claire,” Morris snapped, “I believe I’ve already told you to watch your tone around customers.”

I turned.

“Ah,” I said. “Morris.”

He stopped short.

There was a flicker—recognition, then irritation.

“Oh no,” he muttered. “Why are you here?”

“A conversation,” I said. “Preferably outside.”

It wasn’t a suggestion.

Morris hesitated, then forced a tight smile and gestured toward the door.

As we stepped out, I caught it—just at the edge of my vision.

Shane had stopped working.

Watching.

Not like an employee.

Like someone trying to understand what role I played.

Good.

We stepped outside.

The door hadn’t even shut before Morris turned on me.

“So,” he snapped, irritation spilling over, “why are you here?”

I didn’t answer immediately. I let the question sit—long enough for him to feel it.

Then, calmly:

“Your expansion metrics are underperforming.”

Morris blinked.

“…Excuse me?”

“Customer conversion remains stagnant,” I continued. “Retention is negligible. Community resistance is higher than projected.” A small pause. “And your primary target has already rejected you.”

His jaw tightened.

“Hmph. That’s his mistake,” he shot back. “He doesn’t know what he’s missing.”

“That’s not the variable that failed,” I said.

Silence.

Morris’s expression shifted—just slightly. Not confusion.

Recognition.

“You’re applying pressure to a system that doesn’t respond to it,” I went on. “Pelican Town isn’t scalable in the way your model assumes. Forcing it produces diminishing returns.”

“Don’t talk to me about models,” Morris snapped. “You don’t know how this company operates.”

I looked at him then.

Really looked.

And for the first time since we stepped outside, he hesitated.

“You’ve received three formal complaints from staff in the last quarter,” I said. “Two prior to your transfer. One after. Scheduling instability. Wage dissatisfaction. Misallocation of inventory.”

His face went still.

“You—” he started.

“And the drilling incident in Spring,” I added, almost idly. “An avoidable error. Caused by miscommunication between regional oversight and local management.”

“That wasn’t my fault!” Morris snapped, too quickly.

“No,” I agreed. “It wasn’t.”

That didn’t reassure him.

It made it worse.

He took a step closer. “Then why was my name attached to it?”

“Because you were visible,” I said.

That landed.

For a moment, he didn’t have a response.

Then, defensively:

“You think you’re above me just because you’re up for some director position?”

“Candidate,” I corrected.

He scoffed. “Whatever. Don’t get it twisted. I was assigned to expand this town. And I will. This is just the beginning.”

“Of course,” I said.

Not agreement. Acknowledgment.

“You’ve been given a mandate,” I continued. “Expansion. Acquisition. Standardization.” A slight tilt of my head. “You’re executing it exactly as instructed.”

Morris opened his mouth—

—and stopped.

Because there was nothing to argue.

“That’s the problem,” I said.

Silence stretched between us.

“You don’t win here through force,” I went on. “You win through integration. Gradual dependency. Reduced alternatives.” A beat. “You’re accelerating too quickly.”

Morris’s expression hardened.

“We’ll see how that plays out,” he said. “The Joja Ceremony’s coming up.”

“I’m aware,” I replied.

Two words.

Too precise.

His confidence flickered—just for a second.

“…Right,” he muttered.

He turned sharply and pushed back into the Mart, the door rattling behind him.

I didn’t move right away.

Instead, I glanced toward the window.

Shane stood just inside, half-obscured by shelving. Not working.

Watching.

Not like an employee.

Like someone who’d just realized the rules were different than he thought.

Good.

I turned and left.

When I returned home, Robin was already there. She looked up from her workbench, eyes narrowing just slightly.

“You’re late,” she said.

“I ran into a problem.”

Her irritation surfaced immediately.

“It’s going to be one of those problems, isn’t it?” she said. “What’s going on?”

“I’ll tell you later,” I replied. “Not now.”

She didn’t like that. She never does.

Maru wasn’t home yet. Hospital shift. Another long one. Understaffed again, if her last message was accurate.

Sebastian was in his room. Door closed. Music low enough to be intentional. As I passed, I felt it—attention, sharp and held. Not curiosity. Appraisal.

He knows something shifted today.

Not what. Not how. Just that it did.

Later, alone, I organized what I knew.

Morris was a distraction. Loud, predictable, motivated entirely by acquisition. People fixated on him because he was visible—because Lewis needed something tangible to oppose.

The Governor was worse in a different way. Sluggish. Ceremonial. He’d arrive for the Luau, taste the soup, declare it satisfactory, and leave convinced he’d done his duty. Power without engagement. Authority without comprehension.

Gunther and Lewis feared him because they relied on permission.

I did not.

Government oversight functions on delay and deference. Both can be bypassed.

Gunther, on the other hand, was actively suppressing information—not destroying it, too obvious, but controlling access. He relied on sequence, on ritual, on the assumption that knowledge is only dangerous when assembled.

That’s a fragile assumption.

The Wizard was worse. Unobservable variables always are. Influence without documentation. Reach without accountability. He watched instead of intervened.

Those are the ones you plan around.

Eric was the catalyst. Unintentional, most likely. Catalysts rarely understand the reactions they initiate.

Which left me with a problem of scale.

The scrolls weren’t powerful individually. They were contextual. Linguistic. Historical. Dangerous only when complete.

Gunther believed fear would prevent completion.

He was wrong.

Completion doesn’t require intent. It requires delegation.

I thought of Maru—her precision, her patience, her frustration at being left out. She already worked with data the hospital didn’t fully understand. She collaborated easily. Trusted systems. Trusted me.

She wouldn’t ask why something needed studying.

She’d ask how.

I closed my notebook.

The solution had been present all along.

I would proceed carefully.

Careful people last longer.
 

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Chapter 3
I woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of stone grinding against stone.
It was distant—deep, like the earth shifting its weight rather than breaking. The kind of sound you feel more than hear.

I stayed still for a while, listening.

Then it stopped.

By morning, everything looked the same.

I went outside to check my crops, half-expecting snapped stems or uprooted soil, but they were untouched. Leaves bright. Soil damp. Whatever had moved beneath Pelican Town hadn’t bothered the surface.

I watered them anyway.

Routine helped. It always had.

By the time I checked the mailbox, the feeling had dulled—pushed somewhere behind muscle memory and small tasks.

Inside was a single letter.

Eric—
This is embarrassing... I lost my lucky purple shorts. I’m telling you because I think I can trust you.
If you find them, bring them back to me DISCREETLY.
I’ll pay well.

Mayor Lewis

Purple shorts?

I read it again. Then a third time, slower.

Discreetly.

My grip tightened slightly on the paper.

Lewis didn’t strike me as the kind of man who misplaced things. Not important things. Not the way my grandfather used to describe him—steady, composed, always thinking two steps ahead. The kind of person who held a town together just by being consistent.

This didn’t fit.

I stared at the letter a little longer than I needed to, like it might explain itself if I gave it time.

It didn’t.

Instead, something else surfaced.

Spring.

The Saloon.

Pam laughing too loudly—
Marnie going quiet—
That look on her face when Lewis’s name came up.

And then Shane stepping in, cutting it off before it could turn into something worse.

At the time, I’d brushed it off. People have history. Small towns always do.

But this…

Discreetly.

I exhaled slowly.

“What exactly are you hiding?” I muttered, more to the paper than to anyone else.

My grandfather used to talk about Lewis like they were inseparable. Stories about long nights planning festivals, arguments about crops and taxes that somehow ended in laughter. He spoke about him with… respect. Trust.

But thinking back on it now—

He never mentioned Marnie.

Not once.

I frowned, folding the letter carefully, like it might fall apart if I didn’t.

That wasn’t like him.

My grandfather talked about everything. The war. The mistakes. The things he regretted.

So why not her?

Unless it wasn’t his story to tell.

Or worse—

Unless it was a story he chose not to.

The thought sat heavier than it should have.

I shoved the letter into my bag, a little more forcefully than necessary.

“Yeah,” I muttered. “Not dealing with that right now.”

The Help Wanted board could wait.

People could wait.

The mines didn’t ask questions.

The mines felt easier.

Level 65 was familiar. Predictable.

Stone. Dust. The same low hum of something ancient settling into itself.
After everything that morning—the letter, the questions I didn’t want to ask—predictable felt… necessary.

Level 66 wasn’t.

I saw it half-buried near a broken crate—a book that hadn’t been there before. Dark cover. No title.

A Monster Compendium.

I picked it up, brushing off the dust. The pages were intact. Too intact. No wear, no fading—like it had been waiting.

I flipped it open.

Slimes. Bats. Stone golems.

Nothing new. Nothing I hadn’t already fought.

Each entry was clinical. Clean diagrams. Short descriptions. Weak points noted without flourish. No fear. No story. Just function.

Like a report.

I turned the page.

And paused.

The drawings changed.

The lines were rougher. Less certain.

Shadow People.

Not like the others. Not physical in the same way. The text beneath them didn’t describe behavior—only presence. Movement without pattern. Observation without interaction.

I frowned.

“That’s… not how anything works,” I muttered.

Another page.

A taller figure. Bipedal. Elongated limbs. No defined face—just a suggestion of one, like something half-remembered.

No weaknesses listed.

No habitat.

Just a single line:

“Do not assume absence.”

Something about that sat wrong.

I turned the page again, slower this time.

And then I saw it.

Short. Stocky. Metal helm. Bronze cap. A red cloak draped over its shoulders. The proportions were different from the others—solid, grounded. Real.

My grip tightened.

“…The Dwarf?” I whispered.

The name came too easily.

Like I’d already known it.

I leaned in, trying to read the text beneath—

The page blurred.

No—that wasn’t right.

It shifted.

The ink seemed to pull inward, lines collapsing into themselves, as if the page was being rewritten faster than I could see.

“What—”

The book snapped shut in my hands.

And then it was gone.

No weight. No sound. Just—

Nothing.

I stood there, staring at empty air.

For a moment, I thought I’d dropped it. I looked down.

Stone. Dust. Nothing else.

A pulse ran through me—sharp, sudden.

Strength.

Not like before. Not the steady kind I’d gotten used to. This was different. It surged, then settled somewhere deeper, like something had been… added.

Or unlocked.

I exhaled slowly.

“…Damn,” I muttered. “I should’ve checked that with Gunther.”

The words felt hollow as soon as I said them.

Somehow, I knew it wouldn’t have mattered.

A Frozen Tear lay nearby.

I picked it up, letting the cold ground me. Solid. Real. Something that didn’t disappear when I looked at it too closely.

Level 67 had veins of Topaz and Aquamarine.

Clean breaks. Clean strikes.

Work I didn’t have to think about.

Level 68 held a gray vest in an old chest. I swapped out my overalls and pulled it on.

It fit better than it should have.

I adjusted the collar slightly, catching my reflection in the dull metal of my pickaxe.

I looked… different.

More put together.

More like someone who belonged down here.

The thought lingered longer than it should have.

Level 69 was rich with Iron Ore.

Level 70 rewarded me with a Master Slingshot.

I turned it over in my hands, testing the weight. Balanced. Precise.

Useful.

Later.

The deeper I went, the quieter everything became.

Not just the mines.

Me.

The questions from the morning—the letter, Lewis, my grandfather—they didn’t disappear.

They just… stopped mattering.

Down here, things made sense.

Rocks were rocks.

Monsters attacked because that’s what they did.

You fought. You won or you didn’t.

And either way, the rules stayed the same.

No one pretended.

No one hid behind words like discreetly.

I exhaled, steady.

People were harder.

People hid things.

Down here, nothing pretended to be something it wasn’t.

The mines were almost…

Peaceful.

I headed back up toward town as the sky began to dim. The air felt heavier than it should have, like the day hadn’t fully decided to end.

On the path near the Saloon, I ran into Demetrius.

“Good evening, Eric,” he said. His eyes flicked—not to my face, but to my backpack. “You look like you went deep today.”

I nodded. “Yeah.”

A pause.

Not long. Just enough to feel deliberate.

“Did you happen to find any scrolls?” he asked.

My grip tightened slightly on the strap.

“Er… no.”

“Ah.” He inclined his head.

No reaction. No disappointment. Just… acknowledgment.

Like he was marking something off.

Then—

“Anything else unusual?” he added.

I hesitated.

“…Like what?”

Demetrius studied me for a moment. Not suspicious. Not curious.

Evaluating.

“Books, perhaps,” he said lightly. “They turn up, occasionally. Where they shouldn’t.”

My stomach dropped.

“I—what?”

He didn’t react to that. If anything, his tone smoothed out further.

“There’s an old volume,” he continued. “Circulated during the late Ferngill period. Misleadingly labeled as a bestiary.”

I said nothing.

Didn’t trust myself to.

“It wasn’t intended for general use,” he went on. “More of an internal document. Observational. Incomplete.” A small pause. “Dangerous, depending on how it’s interpreted.”

The word dangerous didn’t sound like a warning.

It sounded like a classification.

I swallowed.

“You’re talking about the Monster Compendium,” I said.

Demetrius didn’t confirm it.

He didn’t need to.

“The Kingdom attempted to suppress it,” he said instead. “Unsuccessfully.”

My pulse picked up.

“Why?” I asked.

That got the faintest shift out of him. Not emotion—just interest.

“Because it was copied,” he replied. “Not widely. Not cleanly. But enough.” His gaze drifted briefly toward the mountains. “One dissenter is all it takes, if they understand distribution.”

The way he said it—

Like it wasn’t history.

Like it was a principle.

“They show up in circulation from time to time,” he continued. “Merchants. Ruins. Mines.” Another pause. “Usually incomplete.”

I felt cold.

The pages. The way they changed. The way it vanished.

“You’ve seen one,” he said.

Not a question.

I didn’t answer.

Didn’t deny it either.

Demetrius exhaled softly through his nose.

“Then you understand,” he said.

“I don’t,” I shot back, a little too quickly. “It disappeared. I didn’t even get to finish reading it.”

That made him go still.

Not surprised.

Focused.

“Of course it did,” he said quietly.

Something about that made my chest tighten.

“What does that mean?” I asked.

He looked at me again—really looked this time.

Not like a neighbor.

Not like a scientist.

Like I was part of something he was mapping out.

“It means,” he said, “that it wasn’t done with you.”

Silence.

I felt it again—that same unease from earlier.

Like I was already involved in something I didn’t agree to.

Demetrius stepped back slightly.

“Don’t let it discourage you,” he added, almost casually. “Access to information is rarely linear.”

That wasn’t reassuring.

Not even close.

“There’s a great deal this town doesn’t understand about its own history,” he continued. “No reason for you to inherit that limitation.”

I shivered.

He said it like a compliment.

It didn’t feel like one.

“See you around, Eric.”

He walked past me, unhurried.

No tension. No second glance.

Like the conversation had gone exactly how he expected.

I stood there for a moment, the weight of it settling in slowly.

He hadn’t explained anything.

But somehow, I felt like I understood more than I wanted to.

The Wizard crossed my mind briefly.

If anyone would know about something like this…

I pushed the thought aside.

One problem at a time.

I headed toward the Saloon, the lights ahead feeling dimmer than they should have.

Hoping—quietly—that whatever waited inside was simpler than everything I’d just heard.

I passed the Help Wanted board I’d skipped that morning.

Help Wanted
Bream needed for a dessert.
—Sebastian
135g on delivery.

Bream… for dessert?

I stared at it for a second, then shook my head.

Some things in this town just weren’t worth figuring out.

The calendar beside it caught my eye.

Jas’s birthday. Tomorrow.

I had a daffodil back at the farm. That would do.

Simple. Easy.

I pushed the thought aside and stepped into the Saloon.

Pam, Shane, Gus, Emily, Clint, and Marnie were already there. The usual crowd. The usual noise.

“Ah, hello, Eric!” Marnie called, bright as always.

“Hey,” I said, taking a seat beside her.

“It’s nice of you to stop by,” she said. “Feels a little livelier these days. How’s Summer treating you so far?”

I glanced down at the counter, thinking.

“It’s… fine,” I said. “Just a lot going on.”

“That sounds about right,” Marnie replied with a soft laugh. “The Luau, the Moonlight Jellies… and Willy won’t stop talking about that Trout Derby.”

I nodded.

There was a pause.

A small one. Easy to miss.

The kind where a different question could’ve slipped in.

Lewis.
My grandfather.


I could’ve asked.

Instead—

“The Trout Derby,” I said. “You heard about those fishing sisters?”

Marnie looked up, a little surprised at the shift.

“Oh—yes, actually,” she said. “I’ve only heard about them, though. Supposedly they’re not much older than Jas.” She smiled faintly. “Hard to believe, isn’t it?”

“Yeah,” I said.

Another pause.

I leaned back slightly, keeping my tone light.

“You ever think about getting into fishing?”

Marnie let out a quiet breath, her smile softening into something more tired.

“I wish I could,” she said. “But the farm takes up most of my time. Animals don’t really wait for you to feel like taking a break.” She glanced down at her drink. “When you’re looking after a place—and kids—it doesn’t leave much room for anything else.”

I nodded.

From across the room, I caught Shane looking away, his jaw tightening just a bit.

He didn’t say anything.

But he’d heard it.

Then Pam wandered over.

“Ah! Marnie!” she slurred. “Didn’t see you there. How’s life treatin’ you?”

Marnie’s shoulders dipped slightly.

“Fine,” she said.

Pam didn’t seem to notice.

“You headin’ to that Trout Derby?” she went on. “I would, but I never get the time anymore.”

Marnie raised an eyebrow.

“Really?” she said. “I’d think you’d have more time than most.”

Pam scowled immediately.

“Oh, come on. Taking care of my daughter’s hard work! And going to Joja every day? Exhausting! I can’t just leave Gus here on his own!”

Gus froze mid-wipe.

Slowly, he set the glass down.

“Pam,” he said flatly, not looking at her, “the Saloon will survive without you.”

She waved him off.

“Yeah, yeah.”

That’s when Shane stood up.

“Pam,” he said, voice sharp, “you’re one of the last people who should be talking about ‘hard work.’”

She turned on him instantly.

“Oh yeah? And who asked—”

“You yell at Claire over soda shortages,” Shane cut in, not raising his voice, just tightening it. “Loud enough that I have to step in so you don’t get kicked out.”

The room shifted.

Not louder.

Just… tighter.

Pam bristled.

“I can do whatever I want! I—”

She stopped mid-sentence.

Then doubled over, coughing hard before retching onto the floor.

Again.

No one reacted.

No one moved.

They just… waited.

Like this was routine.

Like it always ended the same way.

Shane dragged a hand down his face.

“Dear Yoba…” he muttered. “That’s the fifth time this year…”

“I’ll take care of it,” Clint said quietly, already reaching for the mop. “Don’t worry.”

Shane turned to Marnie.

“Aunt Marnie,” he said, calmer now, “we should head home. Jas is at Jodi’s, right? We can pick her up.”

Marnie nodded immediately, already standing.

As they passed, Shane hesitated.

Just for a second.

Then he gave me a small wave.

Not much.

But not nothing either.

I blinked, a little caught off guard.

“…Yeah,” I said under my breath.

“Well,” I added, standing, “I should probably head out too.”

“Eric,” Emily said softly, stepping closer, “want to walk me home?”

I looked at her, then nodded.

“Yeah,” I said. “I’d like that.”

We stepped out into the night together.

The air had cooled just enough to feel intentional, like the day knew when to let go. The Saloon’s noise dulled behind us, replaced by crickets and the soft rhythm of our footsteps on packed earth.

It struck me then how fast Spring had passed.

Not quickly—just… completely.

“When I first got here,” I said, breaking the silence, “you were basically a stranger.”

Emily glanced at me, smiling.
“And now?”

I thought about it for a moment.

“Now you’re one of the closest friends I have.”

She slowed, just slightly.

“Really?” she asked, like the word surprised her.

“Yeah,” I said. “And the weird part is… it just happened. No effort. No worrying about saying the wrong thing. No trying to prove I was worth keeping around.”

I rubbed the back of my neck.

“I spent most of my life doing that. Making sure I didn’t give people a reason to leave.”

Emily didn’t interrupt. She just listened.

“With you,” I continued, “it’s like… I don’t have to do anything. You just… are. And somehow that’s enough.”

She let out a soft laugh, quieter than usual—but warmer.

“That makes me really happy to hear,” she said. “I think… I’ve been feeling that too. Things feel a little less heavy lately.”

We walked a few more steps in silence.

“I’ve noticed Shane’s been acting better,” I said. “Since… you know.”

Emily nodded, thoughtful.

“I’ve noticed,” she said. “But change is fragile. Sometimes people want to be better before they know how.”

“That sounds about right.”

We passed by Marnie’s place, the barn dark and still for the night.

I slowed without meaning to.

“Marnie feels… tired,” I said. “Not physically. Just… like she’s carrying something she doesn’t get to put down.”

Emily followed my gaze.

“She carries more than most people see,” she said softly.

I hesitated.

There it was again—that question. The one I didn’t ask back in the Saloon.

About Lewis. About her. About my grandfather.

I exhaled.

“I almost asked her something tonight,” I admitted.

Emily glanced at me. “What stopped you?”

“I wasn’t sure I wanted the answer.”

That earned a small, knowing look.

“What was the question?”

I took a second longer than I needed.

“…What really happened,” I said. “Between her and Lewis. And… where my grandfather fits into all of it.”

Emily didn’t respond right away.

“I grew up hearing grandpa’s stories about Lewis,” I continued. “About how he held this place together when things got bad. How he trusted him. Relied on him.”

My voice lowered.

“But he never spoke about Marnie.”

The silence stretched—not uncomfortable, just… deliberate.

“And now Lewis is asking me to find his ‘purple shorts’ and keep it discreet,” I added, a little sharper than I meant to. “And Marnie can’t even hear his name without—”

I cut myself off.

Emily didn’t push.

“I don’t know,” I said. “It just feels like I walked into something that already happened once.”

She tilted her head slightly.

“History doesn’t always repeat,” she said. “But people do.”

I let that sit.

We started walking again.

“You know how Clint’s always at the Saloon?” I asked her. “The way he looks at you?”

Emily sighed, but not in frustration.

“I know.”

“It reminded me of something,” I continued. “Marlon. The way he looks at Marnie.”

Emily’s expression softened.

“Some feelings don’t get to become anything,” she said gently. “They just… exist. Quietly. For a long time.”

“That sounds kind of miserable.”

“Sometimes,” she admitted. “But not always. There’s something honest about it too.”

I frowned slightly. “Honest?”

She smiled, but there was something a little distant in it.

“Not everything is meant to be resolved,” she said. “Some things are just meant to be understood.”

We reached her house soon after.

She turned to me, eyes bright in the dim light.

“Thanks for walking me home,” she said. “Tonight meant a lot.”

“Yeah,” I replied. “It did.”

She hesitated—like she almost wanted to say something else—then just smiled and went inside.

I stood there for a moment longer than I needed to.

Then I turned back toward the farm.

Emily’s words lingered, quiet and persistent.

History doesn’t always repeat. But people do.

By the time I reached the road, I wasn’t sure which part worried me more.

The road back to the farm felt longer than usual.

Not because of the distance—because of the silence.

The valley had settled into itself. No voices. No music. Just wind through the trees and the faint rustle of leaves shifting against one another.

I passed the Community Center without stopping.

For a second, I thought about going in. Checking the boiler room. Making progress.

But I didn’t.

Emily’s words kept circling instead.

People repeat.

I thought about Lewis.

About Marnie.

About my grandfather—everything I knew, and everything I didn’t.

How much of his story was real?

How much of it was… edited?

The farm came into view, dim against the horizon.

It didn’t feel like an inheritance in that moment.

It felt like a continuation.

I wasn’t sure if that was a good thing.
 

Terdin

Farmer
I think your story is why I woke up with Meet Me Halfway by the Moody Blues on my mind. For one thing it fits Eric's romantic arc so far. Though many of the songs from their album The Present would fit various NPCs. So far, Under My Feet seems like it might be a good fit for this book, with lines like: "The earth shook, right under my feet, gave way" or "But you came and took me by surprise, when you stole upon me, I didn't see though your disguise".

Although I doubt the instrumental Hole In The World fits in anywhere (even if it leads into Under My Feet) since it more brings to mind an army with elephants marching through a mountain pass.

I think I'll stop there. I've been a fan of the Moody Blues for about 35 years so I know a lot of their songs by heart.
 

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
I think your story is why I woke up with Meet Me Halfway by the Moody Blues on my mind. For one thing it fits Eric's romantic arc so far. Though many of the songs from their album The Present would fit various NPCs. So far, Under My Feet seems like it might be a good fit for this book, with lines like: "The earth shook, right under my feet, gave way" or "But you came and took me by surprise, when you stole upon me, I didn't see though your disguise".

Although I doubt the instrumental Hole In The World fits in anywhere (even if it leads into Under My Feet) since it more brings to mind an army with elephants marching through a mountain pass.

I think I'll stop there. I've been a fan of the Moody Blues for about 35 years so I know a lot of their songs by heart.
I haven’t heard of that band before but that sounds cool. It’s surprising how this story gave you that vibe.
 

Terdin

Farmer
I haven’t heard of that band before but that sounds cool. It’s surprising how this story gave you that vibe.
My taste in music is partly older than I am, so I'm not all that surprised. The Moody Blues started in the late 60's. Same with some of the other bands I like to listen to, most of which started with me "borrowing" an album or two of theirs from my dad's collection. He hasn't asked me to return them.
 

Gamer1234556

Sodbuster
Chapter 3.5 – Shane
The fluorescent lights never change.

Doesn’t matter if it’s morning, evening, or that dead hour where your brain gives up trying to count time. Same buzz. Same pale glow. Same corporate cheer baked into the walls like mold you’re not allowed to acknowledge.

Pam was already yelling when I came back from the stockroom.

“—I know you’ve got more in the back,” she slurred, leaning halfway over the counter. “Don’t lie to me, sweetheart.”

Claire stood stiff behind the register, hands folded exactly how corporate tells you to keep them when a customer is being difficult.

“I’m sorry, ma’am,” she said evenly. “We’re out.”

Pam scoffed. “Funny how you’re always ‘out’ when I’m the one asking.”

I sighed and stepped in before Morris noticed.

“Pam,” I said flatly. “They’re out.”

She spun on me. “Oh, so now you’re the manager?”

“No,” I said. “I’m just the guy who has to clean up after you throw up in the Saloon.”

Claire winced. Sam snorted before he could stop himself.

Pam opened her mouth, thought better of it, and grabbed a six-pack instead.

“Whole town’s going to hell,” she muttered as she stumbled out. “Nobody appreciates anything.”

The door slid shut behind her.

Claire exhaled — barely. Like she’d been holding it in on instinct.

“Thanks,” she said quietly.

“Yeah,” I replied. “Don’t thank me. I’m just doing damage control.”

Sam leaned on the counter. “You think she even remembers this tomorrow?”

“No,” Claire and I said at the same time.

That got a small smile out of her. It didn’t last.

The store settled back into its usual hum — lights buzzing, fridge units clicking on and off like a bad heartbeat.

I glanced down the aisles.

Empty.

Too empty.

For a second, I thought about earlier.

Demetrius.

Standing too still.

Watching without looking like he was watching.

Asking questions that didn’t feel like questions.

“…You okay?” Claire asked.

I didn’t answer right away.

“Claire,” I said instead, keeping my voice low, “you think there was something off about him yesterday?”

She stiffened.

Not obvious. Just enough.

“Off?” she repeated. “No… he seemed fine.”

Too quick.

She turned slightly, straightening a row of candy that didn’t need straightening.

“I mean… people ask questions all the time,” she added. “That’s not weird.”

I watched her for a second.

She wasn’t lying.

She was… choosing.

“He knew things,” I said. “About this place. About how things run. More than Morris does.”

That got her attention.

Just for a second.

Then it was gone.

“…He’s a scientist, right?” she said. “Maybe he just notices things.”

“Yeah,” I muttered. “Maybe.”

But that wasn’t it.

Scientists ask to understand.

He asked like he already did.

Sam shifted beside me.

“Sebastian talks about him sometimes,” he said.

I glanced over. “Yeah?”

Sam shrugged, but there was something more behind it.

“Not like—accusing him of anything,” he added quickly. “Just… stuff.”

“What kind of stuff?”

Sam scratched his cheek.

“Says things have been tense at home,” he said. “More arguments. Mostly about Maru.”

Claire glanced over, quieter now.

“Arguments how?”

“Control, I guess,” Sam said. “Like… who she talks to. Where she goes. He got pretty worked up about her dancing with Harvey at the Flower Dance.”

I frowned.

“That’s… weird.”

“Yeah,” Sam said. “Sebastian thinks so too. Says it got worse after Eric showed up. Like something changed.”

I felt that settle somewhere I didn’t like.

Changed.

That was the word for it.

Not wrong.

Not obvious.

Just… off.

I looked back down the aisle again.

Same shelves. Same products.

Same place I’d been standing in for years.

But now it felt like something had shifted just out of view.

Like we were all working inside something we didn’t understand.

And someone else did.

“…You’re overthinking it,” Claire said gently.

Not dismissive.

Careful.

Like she wanted that to be true.

“Yeah,” I said after a second.

Maybe I was.

But it didn’t feel like it.

It felt like missing something important.

And not knowing where to look.

Before I could say anything else—

The air tightened.

Morris.

You can feel him before you see him — like the air tightens.

“What was that noise?” he snapped, scanning the front like rebellion might be hiding behind the candy display.

“Customer,” I said.

Morris frowned. “Which one?”

“The loud one,” Sam offered helpfully.

Morris ignored him and turned on me.

“And where’s the farmer?”

I stiffened.

“Which one?” I asked, already knowing.

“The new one,” he said. “Eric.”

There it was.

“He’s been everywhere,” Morris continued, pacing. “Fixing things. Talking to people. Slipping through paperwork like it doesn’t apply to him.”

I should’ve dropped it.

That’s what I usually do.

Keep my head down. Get through the shift. Don’t make it worse.

“…Maybe because it doesn’t,” I muttered.

Morris stopped.

Slowly.

“He’s a problem,” he said. “And I don’t like problems I can’t track.”

Something in me shifted.

Not anger.

Not exactly.

Just… clarity.

“Let me guess,” I said. “He’s a problem because you can’t control him.”

Morris’s face tightened. “What did you say?”

I felt it then—that moment where you can still walk it back.

Say it was a joke. Shrug it off.

Go back to normal.

I didn’t.

“Get real,” I said. “Lewis only signed that contract because he was cornered. The Governor’s going to show up, eat the soup, smile for appearances, and leave pretending he did something.”

Morris’s eyes flickered.

I kept going.

“If you want to hijack the town meeting just to start a scene, go ahead,” I said. “But this place? It’s on borrowed time. You just don’t see it yet.”

Morris slammed his fist on the counter.

“Hah!” he barked. “Lewis has been awful quiet about that meeting! Almost like he’s trying to push us out! After everything we’ve done for him!”

I let out a short breath.

“Yeah,” I said. “Inflate projections. Push people around. Then act surprised when they stop listening. Real solid strategy.”

His hands curled into fists.

For a second, I thought he might actually swing.

I didn’t move.

Neither did Sam—but I felt him shift beside me, just enough.

Morris saw that too.

Something in his expression faltered.

Not fear.

Calculation.

“Bah!” he scoffed. “Once Joja’s in, you don’t get us out. That’s how this works. I’d better not get blindsided by any ‘meetings’—I’ve got a few things to say to Lewis.”

He turned sharply and stormed back into his office.

The door slammed.

The hum of the lights rushed back in.

I exhaled slowly.

“…You good?” Sam asked.

I didn’t answer right away.

Because I wasn’t sure.

That… wasn’t me.

Or it hadn’t been.

I leaned back against the counter, staring at nothing.

Eric didn’t tell me to say any of that.

Didn’t ask me to.

But ever since he showed up…

It’s like I stopped accepting things the way they are.

I don’t know if that’s a good thing.

But I didn’t back down.

And for once—

I didn’t hate myself for it.

Claire rubbed her temples.

“I swear,” she said quietly, “this place is going to eat us alive.”

“Or choke on us,” Sam said. “Good thing I might not be here long enough to find out.”

She smiled faintly, then glanced at the clock.

“I should go.”

“Hey,” I said before I could stop myself. “You wanna— I don’t know. Sit at the Saloon for a bit? Decompress?”

She shook her head gently.

“Can’t. My mom needs help tonight.”

Of course she does.

Sam watched her leave.

“You ever notice,” he said slowly, “how she kinda looks like Penny?”

“Yeah,” I said. “And lives like her too.”

“You think they’re related?”

“No.” I paused. “Just stuck the same way.”

Claire endured the system.

Penny wanted to tear it open.

Eric tried to fix it without permission.

And me?

I just wanted the noise to stop.

When my shift ended, I headed for the Saloon.

I walked back with Aunt Marnie and Jas.

Jas went straight to bed, clutching one of her dolls like nothing in the world could touch her.

Marnie lingered in the kitchen.

“You’ve been in a better mood lately,” she said carefully. “Handling the breakup better than I expected.”

I let out a short laugh.

“Yeah… I guess.”

It felt strange hearing it out loud.

Better.

I glanced at the counter.

No cans. No empty bottles. No half-finished anything waiting for me.

That used to be the first thing I looked for.

Now it just felt… unnecessary.

“Funny thing is,” I said, “I think I was getting worse trying to make Emily happy.”

Marnie sighed, rubbing her forehead. “I really thought it would work. I didn’t mean for it to end like this.”

I stepped closer, resting my hands on her shoulders.

“It wasn’t your fault,” I said. “It was mine.”

She looked up at me.

“Emily’s kind,” I continued. “But she carries too much. The house. Pam. The Saloon. I thought being there helped.”

I shook my head slightly.

“Didn’t realize I was just adding to it.”

“The Flower Dance…” Marnie started.

“Wasn’t a punishment,” I finished quietly. “It was inevitable.”

I looked away.

“The cancellation was too far. But honestly? I felt worse after. Like I was trying to force something that wasn’t there anymore.”

Marnie’s expression softened, but her eyes drifted downward.

I remembered that night.

Her walking me home.

Crying harder than I was.

That’s when it really ended.

Not at the dance.

Not at the argument.

Right there.

“I just wanted you to be happy,” she said softly.

“I know.”

And I did.

“I think I am,” I added after a moment. “Just… differently.”

I let go of her shoulders.

“I should get some sleep. Early shift.”

“Good night,” she said.

“Night.”

My room felt quieter than usual.

Not empty.

Just… still.

I sat on the edge of the bed, staring at nothing.

For a second, I thought about grabbing a drink.

Not because I needed it.

Just because that’s what I used to do.

Instead, I didn’t.

That felt… new.

I leaned back, exhaling slowly.

I thought about Eric.

That conversation we had.

How he didn’t try to fix anything. Didn’t tell me what to do.

Just… said things straight.

Made it harder to hide behind excuses.

I used to think that would make things worse.

Turns out it just made things clearer.

I frowned slightly.

Then my thoughts shifted.

Demetrius.

The way he talked.

The way Morris—Morris—didn’t talk back the same way.

Like he knew something.

Like they weren’t on the same level.

I rubbed my face.

Why was I the only one seeing this?

Claire didn’t.

Sam didn’t—at least not like this.

Even earlier, it felt like I was trying to explain something I didn’t fully understand.

That was the worst part.

Not knowing what was wrong.

Just knowing something was.

I lay back, staring up at the ceiling.

I thought about Claire.

How careful she was with every word.

About Sam.

How badly he wanted out.

About this place.

How it kept people exactly where they were.

I used to think I’d just… fade into it.

Same shifts. Same routine. Same ending.

Then Eric showed up.

And now—

I couldn’t ignore it anymore.

Not the job.

Not myself.

Not whatever the hell was going on around here.

I let out a quiet breath.

I had this stupid idea that Eric would fix things for me.

Like he was fixing everything else.

He didn’t.

He just made it impossible to pretend things were fine.

I turned onto my side, pulling the blanket tighter.

I didn’t know if that was better.

But it was real.

And for once—

I stayed awake long enough to feel it.
 
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