Chapter 12
I woke up with three geodes and that strange scroll still in my backpack. For a moment it felt like the scroll was whispering at the edge of my hearing. I tried to ignore it and went to grab the four copper bars cooling beside the furnaces.
Dudley trotted over and brushed against my leg—the only living thing here that didn’t judge me. He meowed or at least made some sound that felt affectionate.
Good cat, I thought.
I dropped the geodes and the scroll into the chest. As soon as the lid shut, the whispering stopped. Thank Yoba.
A letter from Lewis arrived:
Dear Eric,
Tomorrow we’re holding the Egg Festival in the town square.
You should arrive between 9 AM and 2 PM if you’d like to attend.
You wouldn’t want to miss the annual egg hunt!
–Mayor Lewis
It was raining again, which meant relief from watering crops. At least the weather would make for a fresh festival tomorrow—a rare chance to breathe.
Town Square was empty when I passed through. No Sebastian storming out in a cloud of angst. No Abigail blindsiding me with sudden plans. Oddly, that only made the quiet feel more uneasy.
Up in the mountains, I found two leeks for the mines later. Linus’s campfire smoldered weakly under the rain.
Level 25: Grass everywhere—good for seeds and fiber. A Rock Crab ambushed me. A slime dropped a ladder.
Level 26: I loaded up on copper ore, found a red mushroom (too late for Lewis’s request), and killed a grub. Another grub turned into a fly. Wonderful. I somehow found a rice shoot. Didn’t think that was possible.
Level 27: The ladder was right there, but I wanted loot. A Duggy jumped out; flies swarmed. And then—
A distorted voice.
Well done, kid. Eighty flies? Come see me later…
I flinched. That voice sounded human. Too human for the metal demon.
Level 28: Cleared grass in a narrow corridor. No seeds. Found an abandoned mine track loaded with coal. Why was this place abandoned?
Don’t tell me the metal demon has been killing people…
I tried a bomb. Nothing. Went back to cracking rocks—found the exit on the third swing.
Level 29: Looted crates full of hardwood and mixed seeds. Then more flies. My body felt like it was burning. I scarfed down a cave carrot and the leeks I’d found earlier.
Level 30: Finally, a moment of safety—just the demon’s gibberish whispering, something like
“This is only the beginning.”
Gil handed me a bizarre weapon at the Adventure’s Guild.
“Better keep this one. Might be your strongest yet,” he muttered, rocking in his chair like he was already asleep.
God, everyone in this town is hiding something.
“Hey kid! Reached pretty deep for someone who’s only lived here a few weeks!” Marlon called.
I waved and headed to the Saloon.
Pam, Gus, Emily, and Shane were at their usual spots.
Leah, Willy, Clint, and Harvey clustered around one of the small tables near the fireplace.
Leah spotted me immediately and waved like she’d been waiting for entertainment to arrive.
“Hey, farmer! How’s life?”
“Busy,” I said, sliding into the seat beside them.
Willy leaned forward. “Caught anything lately, my boy? I could always use another eel!”
Leah snorted and practically fell sideways laughing.
I winced. Right…
that day.
“Looks like he’s been stuck in the mines again,” Clint said, half teasing, half concerned.
“Hope you’re not hurting yourself,” Harvey added.
Leah wiped her eyes. “Eric, you don’t understand—people
still talk about the eel thing.”
“What? Just because I brought an eel into the Saloon—”
Leah burst into laughter again.
Clint shook his head. “If it was fried eel? Spicy eel? Fine. But a
living eel?”
“Well,” Harvey said gently, “a raw eel isn’t the worst gift in the world…”
“Still better sold than gifted!” Willy bellowed. “Good thing my boy Eric showed up at the
perfect time that day!”
Leah groaned, grinning. “Oh god, I really thought you were going to hand that eel to Lewis for his birthday…”
I sank deeper into my seat while they cackled.
Yeah—this town never lets things go.
The door opened, letting in a gust of rain.
Sebastian stepped in, shoulders damp, expression blank.
“If you’re out tonight, you might see frogs,” he said offhandedly. “Good weather for them.”
His eyes flicked to me—sharp, unreadable.
I nodded stiffly.
Leah immediately noticed.
“Hey! You got into a fight with your parents again?” She asked.
“Eh, Joja’s closed. I only came here for a Joja Cola.” he mumbled.
He didn’t stay. Just grabbed his drink and stepped back out into the rain.
But before the door shut, he glanced back at me one more time.
Pam whistled. “Oy! That kid thinks you’re actin’ suspicious lately!”
I forced a laugh. “Just mining. Long hours.”
Emily appeared at the table carrying a tray of fresh drinks.
She hesitated—just for a heartbeat—before her whole face lit up.
“Eric! Hey, are you excited for tomorrow?”
“What, the Egg Festival?” I asked.
“Yeah! It’s your first one since you got here!”
“I could use the break,” I admitted. “Mining’s been… a lot.”
Leah nudged me. “Don’t forget to buy strawberry seeds. Profit heaven.”
Emily laughed softly.
“I’m glad you’re taking care of yourself,” Emily said, her voice gentler now. “I felt awful about what happened with Haley… and when you stopped coming around.”
“I didn’t think that’d be my introduction to your sister…”
Emily cringed. “It could’ve gone better…”
Leah grinned like a fox. “Emily, are you
crushing on Eric?”
Emily went scarlet. “W-w-what?! I—I mean—he
is charismatic—”
Leah burst out laughing. “Too bad you’re stuck dancing with Shane at the Flower Dance!”
Emily froze.
And that was the match to the fuse.
Shane stormed at our table, his hand tightened around his glass, knuckles whitening.
“Can we
not do this right now?” he muttered—low, cold, warning.
Leah rolled her eyes. “Oh relax, Shane. We’re just teasing—”
“HEY!” he exploded, slamming his glass onto the table.
The whole Saloon jumped.
“This wasn’t even my choice! It was my aunt’s! Stop acting like Emily and I are some couple!”
Everyone stared. Emily looked mortified.
Then he spun toward me.
“And YOU—”
My stomach dropped.
“—you’ve got some nerve acting innocent.”
“H-hey, I’m just being nice—nothing’s happening—”
“Really?!” His voice cracked with anger. “You think I don’t see it?!”
Before I could react, he grabbed my shirt.
Chairs scraped. Clint and Harvey rushed to pull him off. Pam stumbled forward, tried to help, and fell into a chair.
“You—you never should’ve come here!” Shane yelled as they held him back.
Emily’s voice shook.
“E-Eric… I’m so sorry…”
“It’s not you,” I said quietly. “I think I should go.”
And just like that, the room felt ten degrees colder.
I stepped away from the table, away from Shane’s fury, away from the eyes watching the fallout.
The door shut behind me.
The noise of the Saloon dimmed.
And all I could think was:
Shane isn’t just jealous.
He’s unravelling.
Sebastian stepped out from the shadows like the rain had shaped him there.
“Eric. We need to talk.”
Perfect.
He didn’t wait for a response — just jerked his head toward the beach. I followed.
The shoreline was empty, the tide swallowing sound.
He tried lighting a cigarette. The rain killed it. He didn’t try again.
“You ever notice how Lewis suddenly stopped caring where you go?”
I blinked. “What?”
“You’ve been in the Community Center after hours. You’ve been around the docks late. You’re in and out of places Sam, Abigail and I would get chewed out for.”
His tone wasn’t accusatory.
It was analytical.
“Lewis patrols. He watches. He’s obsessed with appearances. But you?” He glanced at me. “You get a pass.”
“That’s not—”
“The Joja paperwork went through faster than it should’ve,” he cut in. “In the Saloon earlier, I heard rumors that there were signatures missing. That Morris was rushing to buy more real estate.”
He then gave me a sharp glance.
“And then suddenly? Some random farmer that Lewis supposedly knew gets land, equipment, and too much freedom. No questions asked.”
The rain softened, but his stare didn’t.
“Few days ago, when it was raining and I went out for a smoke; the Wizard’s Tower glowed. I was about to check it out until then suddenly; the Community Center glowed. I went inside. Saw the symbols in the floor. Saw those… Juminos walking around. When it started shaking, I ran.”
A pause.
“I saw you chasing after me.”
I didn’t answer.
“You caught up to me near the docks. You were yelling.”
He stepped closer.
“What are you involved in, Eric?”
Not angry.
Not hostile.
Worried.
And that was worse.
I swallowed. “I didn’t ask for any of it.”
Silence stretched between us.
“You show up,” he continued, quieter now. “Weird things start happening. The mines get louder. The Wizard’s tower lights up. Lewis goes quiet.”
His jaw tightened.
“I don’t know if you’re the problem, but I think someone is using you. And I don’t like not knowing who.”
He pocketed the lighter.
“If this blows back on the town… if this turns into something bigger… I need to know you’re not blindly walking us into it.”
Then he turned.
“If I’m late, my mom will start yelling again.”
A pause over his shoulder.
“You started something. Even if you didn’t mean to.”
And then he was gone.
The rain followed me all the way up the path to the farm.
Pelican Town was quiet again. Too quiet. Like the Saloon hadn’t just erupted an hour ago. Like Shane hadn’t grabbed my shirt in front of half the town. Like Sebastian hadn’t looked at me the way people look at a crack forming in a dam.
Dudley would probably be waiting at the door.
At least someone wasn’t reassessing me.
Shane’s face replayed in my head — not just the anger. The humiliation. The desperation.
You never should’ve come here.
That wasn’t about Emily.
That was about displacement.
Before I arrived, Shane didn’t have to compete. He didn’t have to define what he was to her. Now he does. And instead of stepping forward… he lashed out.
Which means he sees me as a threat.
That thought sat heavy in my chest.
I didn’t want to be anyone’s rival.
And yet here I was.
Then Sebastian.
He wasn’t angry.
He was thinking.
He noticed the passes Lewis gives me. The doors that don’t close. The patrols that somehow miss me. Sam and Abigail get chased off rooftops for less.
Why don’t I?
Why does Lewis tolerate me?
Why does the Wizard answer me?
I hadn’t asked those questions before.
Now I couldn’t stop.
Someone’s using you.
The words stuck like splinters.
I came here to escape being a pawn.
And somehow I might’ve just become one again.
The farmhouse came into view, lantern dim in the rain.
And then there was Emily.
Her face when Shane exploded.
Mortified. Guilty. Cornered.
She doesn’t deserve that.
Whatever Shane feels — jealousy, insecurity, pride — none of that justifies turning her into collateral damage.
And the Flower Dance…
The image of her standing beside him, trying to keep things light, trying to smooth over tension that isn’t hers to fix—
It twisted something in me.
I don’t know what I am to her.
But I know she deserves better than volatility.
The rain softened to a mist as I reached the porch.
I don’t want this to turn into factions.
I don’t want the town splitting into sides.
I don’t want to be the catalyst for something ugly.
I just wanted to farm. To make my grandfather proud.
Tomorrow is the Egg Festival.
Public. Bright. Harmless.
Maybe that’s what we need.
A reset.
A reminder that this place can still be simple.
I rested my hand on the door handle and let out a breath I didn’t realize I’d been holding.
Let this die down.
Let tomorrow be normal.
Please.
I stepped inside and shut the door on the storm.