It set Gatito’s teeth on edge.
He tapped his pen against the edge of the notebook open before him, mulling over the components of a spell he wanted to test in the Canopy neighborhood. There was something missing, but he couldn’t quite put his finger on what.
His companion this afternoon was the Celestial Tiger who had been with him since his time in the Citadel, and who had taken to haunting the blossom-laden branches of his treehouse in the Canopy. The massive cat lay by his feet, watchful despite the quiet of the office.
“This would be a lot simpler if I could just blow the darkness away with a stiff wind,” Gatito grumbled. He scribbled something in the margin of the page, near a diagram he had drawn nearly an hour ago, then paused. “Maybe I should try that.”
The Tiger lifted their head from their paws. Little one.
“The question is how to keep it from blowing everything else away.”
You have company. The Tiger sat up on their haunches.
“Maybe if I set—” A knock upon the office door halted Gatito’s train of thought and left him blinking at the page. He was slow to lay his pen down, slow enough for the knock to sound again.
“Viens.” He sat back in his chair and ran his hands over his face. What was it now? Had the shadows begun to grow horns and forked tongues? Had a building collapsed beneath the weight of the darkness? The thoughts were absurd, but at this point, he wasn’t sure anything could surprise him about this situation.
“I hope I’m not interrupting,” came a smoky, feminine voice.
![](https://i.imgur.com/6azUTbE.png)
Aelia Carifir was both queen and priestess, and she was neither. She was Archdruid of the Celestial Order.
“My Lady Aelia.” Gatito stood, keeping the desk between the doorway and himself. He gestured to the chairs standing opposite him. “Please come in. Have a seat.”
“Warden Lindo,” Archdruid Aelia said by way of greeting as she entered the office. She did not address the Tiger by name, but she did briefly meet their lightning-filled gaze and inclined her head to them. The Tiger returned the silent greeting with a tilt of their own head.
Gatito sank back down into his chair as Aelia claimed one of the seats across from him. “To what do I owe the honor of your presence?” It was rare, he thought, that the grove’s Archdruid ran her own errands.
“I’ve come to request more of your help,” Aelia said, “with our current predicament.” She gestured in a way that seemed to indicate the whole of the Isle and the darkness covering it.
“Of course,” he said. “Tell me what I can do and I’ll do it.”
“We need the Keepers,” she said. “We need them to invoke their elements and help us drive back the darkness and corral it. Based upon what we have found in the Codex of Shadows, it seems the Dark Hunter requires as complete a darkness as possible to be able to ride into our plane of existence. We hope that with the Keepers’ help, we will have a better shot of sealing the doorway against the Hunter.”
She met Gatito’s eyes, and he saw a spark of hope there. “Can we count on their help?”
“I cannot speak for them and make promises on their behalf. You’ll have to ask each of them and hope that they are all willing.” He watched her take a deep breath and compose herself; she nodded once more and started to rise. He added, “For what it’s worth, I think most of them will be willing.” There were a couple of wildcards in the bunch. One, he thought he could influence, if need be. The other … only time would tell.
“I hope you are right,” Aelia said, standing.
Gatito stood, as well. “So do I.” Then he showed her, kindly, to the door.
Beneath the deepening midnight sky, Aelia dispatched the druids who had accompanied her to the Duel of Magic offices. As four of them set off for the elemental Towers, she turned her attention to the magnificent Citadel floating above the Isle itself. The darkness had not yet sent it careening to the ground below, but wreathed as it was in shadows and night, it had become difficult to see. But that was no matter. The darkness would not keep Aelia from her business.
She set off toward the Citadel. It was time to have a talk, Archdruid to Archmage.
(( Keepers, when you’re ready, please post your contributions to the story below! ))