He stared down at his hands. At the floor… at his axe.
There was a bloody axe in his hands.
Pieces o flesh are frozen on the ground… the eight bodies partially broken apart.
Cut apart.
The screeches they made.
All of them.
The Drowners and the hag.
There was a hag.
A bloody hag. A cursed nymph.
A hag!
No wonder more people disappeared. No wonder the drowners got that bold. No wonder everything got out of hand.
Henoch stared at the body. Deformed and mangled, just like the stories said, warped spine, hunched back… face contorted by strange magic.
And now the creature was… dead.
The bomb that could be made from the strange things the trader gave him… it stuck.It worked. It got her to freeze. It got the creature to freeze up and got stuck. Throwing balls of mud, but stuck. Bleeding.
The other bomb’s did much of a part as well. The drowners fell. Spikes of silver stuck in their bodies. Blood everywhere.
Only the last strike needed to be done with his axe. When the hag still moved. When one last screech came from a Drowner.
But now it was done.
Red everywhere.
A terrible stench in the air.
But he’d done it.
The village was safe. Finally.
His hands were shaking.
But he lived. He was alive.
They were safe.
All were safe.
And he could go home.
It was not… glorified.
He did not get a hero’s welcome.
They were suspicious, actually.
Seeing him covered in blood.
But he got home.
Now he had blood on his hands and a strange feeling in his gut… but he got home.
The trader continued to smile and look at him with a gentle gaze, hand running up and down the strap of his backpack.
“I don’t want to keep you either, of course,” he said, stepping out of the way, “I’ll happily provide all you can think off whenever you find the time”
Henoch stared at him, frowned: “… if you have drowner-deterrent, well…”
The trader looked at him for a long moment. Then said: “Well, the best one might be a witcher, would it not?”
He crouched on the floor, putting down his bag, scratching his head.
“Certainly. You possibly met one on the way here? I did give another trader a note to post on the board next village over, so…”
He opened the bag and rummaged in it, looking between Henoch and the bag: “Oh, I saw, yes, Drowner infestation, as you said, but no, unfortunately. There aren’t many witcher’s left”
He looked sorry, but seemed to have found what he was looking for. He kept it in the bag, though.
“I… guessed so. But… someone does need to do something. Witcher or no. It’s… well… the Drowner’s multiply,” talking to a stranger wasn’t that bad. This one had travelled all the way over, after all.
“So, my valued customer wishes to do something against his infestation?”
Henoch raised a brow. An odd thing to say.
“If so, maybe I can be of service, after all” he took out a pouch and pulled a few things out: “Pwdered pearl, Allspice. Ducal Water… I suppose you own Salpeter already?”
“… I… do?”
“Ah, very good. Well, see, one of the Witchers did buy from me once… and he had no funds, so… he did hand me the recipe to get back against the water creatures… makes them all freeze up when mixed.
The other would be an oil. Good against necrophages. Drowners are of such a making, if I remember right. Goes right through them”
He pulled the little flask out and held it against the sun. Red, viscous liquid.
“Mmmh… tallow and Blowball… not at all complicated, but it works,” he half-shrugged at it, “would make such an endeavour easier, I believe. Don’t deal in weapons, but anything sharp might work?”
Henoch stared a bit more. This… sounded very… very obscure.
“Travelling isn’t always easy. I’d like to keep the customers I have, really,” he slanted his head: “The pearl and oil I can part with... if not used soon, they will expire… But I do need a bit of food for my travels. I really am only passing through”
This didn’t sound any less suspicious, but…
The stranger pushed his hat up and smiled again. It sounded made up. It really did.
But so did most things. And not having those things didn’t make his job easier.
… he inclined his head: “… I have some potatoes left over from winter.
“Wonderfu!” He said. And shouldered his backpack again.
It was the strangest meeting.
But the trader followed him. And left both the ingredients there… and left with the potatoes.