Chapter 8
It’s been about a week since I first moved to Stardew Valley.
Yet somehow it felt like I’d been here for months—like I knew more than I should, more than anybody was saying aloud.
I woke up to the rooster crowing again. Please let that be a good omen.
I glanced at the two geodes sitting in my chest.
Might as well take them to Clint today.
Weather: Sunny
Spirits: Happy
Good start.
Living Off the Land:
Let’s talk fences! Fences are useful for keeping weeds at bay…
My potatoes were ready—no silver or gold stars, unfortunately.
I checked the mail.
Hi.
Me sell hats. Okay, poke?
Come to old old old haus, poke. Bring coines.
—hat mouse
Right. This valley really is full of strange characters nobody talks about.
Another letter:
Robin here!
I know there’s a lot of stone scattered around your farm…
At least her voice was reassuring. Too bad I couldn’t tell her anything about yesterday.
I watered the rest of the crops.
Evelyn was asking for herring on the “Help Wanted” board.
I had other priorities—mostly finding a leek to finish the Spring Foraging bundle. The daffodil, horseradish, and dandelion were ready in my pack. Just one leek left.
Luckily, I found one east of the mountains.
I returned to the Community Center, offered the four items, and read the golden scroll. A soft glow washed over the room, and a bundle of spring seeds appeared at my feet—thirty in total.
Then something else happened:
Two other plaques lit up, and two new golden scrolls faded into view—Crops and Fish.
A yellow Junimo toddled out, collected the foraging bundle, and carried it into a tiny hut in the corner.
Still surreal.
Back at the farm, I planted the thirty seeds in a neat 10x3 grid.
When I returned to town square, Harvey was taking a break. Vincent was hiding in a bush. Jodi and a green-haired woman were chatting.
“Oh! Hello, Eric!” Jodi waved. “Have you met Caroline yet?”
“Er… no.”
“This is Caroline—Pierre’s wife and my best friend.”
We shook hands. They went back to gossiping about their kids.
Evelyn hummed to herself as she trimmed flowers.
Maru was sitting at the bench; we exchanged a wave.
I checked the Blacksmith shop.
Closed at 4 PM.
Of course. Too late.
I sighed and went to Gunther, donating quartz, amethyst, topaz, and earth crystals.
“Try to be more careful down in the mines,” he warned. “Several government and Joja workers went down there but never came back. Let’s hope you aren’t one of them.”
I nodded. He said something else under his breath—something about the Wizard—but I couldn’t catch it.
Outside, I spotted Maru chatting with Penny near the clinic steps. Penny stood with her hands folded in front of her, listening more than speaking, like usual.
“Hey, ever think about taking a break from teaching?” Maru teased.
“No, I actually enjoy working with kids!” Penny answered, smiling but soft.
They noticed me approaching.
“Oh! Hey, Eric,” Maru called. Penny gave a small, polite wave — the kind of wave meant for someone she wasn’t sure she knew well enough yet. “How’s the mineral collecting?”
“Pretty good. I dropped off some of the common ones at the museum.”
“Good call. Amethyst’s the real winner—Emily loves it, Abby too, and Clint.”
“Emily told me. The Abby part surprised me.”
Maru grinned. “There’s a joke that she eats the stuff.”
I laughed despite myself.
“Topaz is nice for dresses — Emily uses it. Earth Crystals and Quartz are better for crafting. Mayonnaise Machines, sprinklers… all that.”
As I spoke, Penny stayed quiet, eyes dipping down toward her shoes like she didn’t want to interrupt. Maru nudged her gently with an elbow.
“What about you, Penny? You like minerals?”
Penny startled a little, as if she hadn’t expected to be part of the conversation.
“Oh—um, Emeralds and Diamonds!” she said quickly. “But those seem hard to find.”
“You can get them,” I reassured. “They’re just… deep.”
“Ah.” Her smile was small, almost shyly grateful.
There was a pause — not awkward, just soft — the kind that fit Penny’s calmness more than any kind of silence from me.
I said goodbye and headed toward the Saloon.
Emily brightened the moment I stepped inside—like she’d been holding her breath all evening, waiting for me to appear.
“Ah! Hey, Eric!”
“Hey.”
Before I could say anything else, Gus leaned over the counter with a grin.
“Emily’s been worried about you. Says you’ve been avoiding her!”
I froze.
Avoiding her?
I’d been avoiding
everyone, but hearing it said aloud landed heavier than I expected.
“Oh… really?”
Emily’s hands fidgeted at her waist, the excitement in her expression dimming.
“Well… I heard you fainted in the mines, and I got stressed out,” she admitted. “I thought I wouldn’t see you again.”
“Really?”
I hadn’t imagined she’d think about it past the moment it happened.
“It wasn’t that bad,” I muttered. “Just went too deep.”
But Emily wasn’t letting me off that easily.
“Then you stopped talking to me.”
Her voice was softer now, but sharper too.
“During Lewis’s birthday… you came in, dropped off your deliveries, grabbed cake, and left. You didn’t even look at me.”
I winced.
That was true.
But at the time all I could think about was the Wizard, the Junimos, and Lewis collapsing under the weight of running this town.
“That wasn’t about you,” I said quickly. “It’s… complicated.”
Emily stepped a little closer.
“And I thought I finally met someone to whom I could talk. Someone who wasn’t just… passing through my life. And then you go and put yourself in extreme danger.”
That hit harder than I expected.
She’d really been thinking about this.
“Emily… I made a mistake,” I said. “I should’ve been more careful. I didn’t faint
in the mines, I just… spent too long down there and collapsed on the way home.”
I scratched my cheek. “I didn’t think it was a big deal.”
She breathed out slowly, some of her tension leaving—but not all.
“Still… you have to take care of yourself,” she said quietly. “I don’t want you getting hurt.”
There it was again.
Simple, unfiltered concern.
She didn’t ask what I’d been doing. Didn’t press. Didn’t judge.
Just cared.
“I’ll be careful,” I said. “Promise.”
Her shoulders finally relaxed.
Then she perked up a little.
“Oh! Have you met my sister Haley yet?”
“No. Alex mentioned her though.”
Emily rolled her eyes. “I keep telling her to say hi to you, but she won’t listen. It’s been a week! She drives me nuts sometimes.”
I shrugged. “Some people are harder to warm up to.”
“True,” she sighed. “But she’s my sister. I just… want to be a good example.”
There was a sadness there I hadn’t noticed before.
Before I could respond, the door slammed open.
Pam stormed in, Shane trailing behind her like a shadow.
“Hey Gus! Back for more!” Pam hollered.
She glanced at me. “Oh, hey Eric! Thought you didn’t wanna talk to us anymore!”
I lowered my gaze. “Just had a lot happen this week.”
“You mean mining? Careful down there! One wrong move and bam, you’re dead!”
Emily’s expression tightened instantly—Pam had voiced the exact fear she’d been suppressing.
And suddenly it felt obvious:
Emily hadn’t been overreacting.
She actually cared.
Maybe more than she should.
And maybe more than I realized.
“I gotta go,” I said. “See you.”
“Remember the promise, Eric!” Emily called after me—smiling now but still watching me like she wasn’t convinced I wouldn’t keel over the second I left the building.
I nodded.
As I turned toward the door, Shane’s eyes flicked up.
Not anger.
Not annoyance.
Resentment.
And something bitter underneath it.
Maybe envy.
Outside, I spotted Leah.
“Hey, Leah. Heading to the Saloon?”
“Nah, got some projects to work on.”
“Oh.”
She glanced toward the trees. “This area’s beautiful. If you stick around, I’ll show you what I’ve been carving.”
I nodded.
“Hey—why’d you become a farmer?”
“I made a promise to my grandfather. I hated my old city life and wanted out. Nothing fancy.”
She smiled faintly. “I get that. I left the city too. Broke up with my boyfriend and came here to reconnect with nature.”
That caught me off guard.
“You had a boyfriend?”
“Yeah. It felt like he didn’t really value my work. He liked the idea of me being creative. Not the reality of it.”
There was something bitter in the way she said it.
I hesitated. “I broke up with my girlfriend before coming here too.”
Leah looked up. “Really?”
“Yeah. We worked together. I started noticing things. Late nights. Closed-door meetings that didn’t need to be closed-door.” I gave a humorless shrug. “Probably another co-worker climbing the ladder.”
“You never found out?”
“No.” I paused. “Didn’t want to.”
Leah studied me for a moment, like she almost wanted to say something more.
“Oh—” she glanced at the sky. “I’ve got to go. See you around, okay?”
And just like that, she was gone.
Up in the mountains, I saw Sebastian leaving the house as Robin and Demetrius talked.
“Hey Sebastian!” Demetrius called. “You been talking to Eric lately?”
Sebastian ignored him entirely.
“Hey! Don’t ignore me—”
Robin sighed. “Just give him time! He won’t warm up in a week.”
“Well, he could at least say hi! If Maru can do it—”
“I
know, Demetrius. I’m working on it.”
They noticed me.
“Oh! Sorry you heard that,” Robin laughed nervously. “Going to the Community Center?”
“Yeah. Lewis showed it to me.”
I wanted to mention the Wizard. Couldn’t.
“It’d be great if you fixed it up. It’s been abandoned forever.”
I wonder why…
Demetrius chimed in, “Maru helps me with research sometimes. Glad you two get along.”
Robin shot him an exasperated look.
“I’m heading to the mines,” I said.
“It’s 7 PM, Eric. Be careful,” Robin warned.
“Probably don’t go too deep,” Demetrius agreed.
“Yeah, I’ve been catching up with people. Lost track of time.”
“Well, good thing you’re talking to us now!” Robin said. “Dinner time! See you.”
I only reached level 12 before nerves made me turn back. Still got good copper, though.
The last two days had felt like an earthquake—a shift in tone, a sense that trust was… limited.
But today was different. Lighter.
Talking to Maru, Emily, Robin—actually feeling seen again—helped more than I expected.
Penny didn’t say much, but she always seemed like more of a listener than a talker anyway.
Here’s hoping tomorrow stays on this track.