Arc of the Wandering Stars: Letters from Nandaria
The journey went long before noon. Riku’s ankle still ached a little, but he kept walking. He’d tell you pain doesn’t scare him the way stagnation does.
Saya, five paces ahead, waved him on. “Don’t space out, today’s run shouldn’t be easy.” Behind her ponytail, the rundown roofs of Nandaria’s border-town glimmered against the dry land.
You ever felt a town’s mood before you walked in? Nandaria pressed in close. Everything seemed louder, but people avoided the dusty main street’s center. Even Mugo – the loud shaman kid who thought sleeves on robes were for weaklings – fell quiet as they entered.
Riku saw the major’s notice tacked near the tavern: “No Helps wanted. All solves done. No debts.” The fonts changed partway as if someone had added things at gunpoint.
Can a town actually close itself? Their trip to the library, then the well, came up empty. Saya scowled at whispers around sharp, broken laughter from behind curtain-flaps. Riku ducked as an old boot hit the dirt near Mugo’s feet. No one said if the heroes ruined dinner, but that’s how they acted.
“We’ll try the shrine.” Most towns, even with bad water, never closed spirit-places to strangers. Very few things stall Saya, but she froze when she saw the shrine gate sealed with white cloth and three heavy wooden seals.
Mugo read the blessing. It wasn’t for fortune – it was to keep things in.
Lights fluttered overhead but never reached the altar. Beside an overturned water jar, something rustled — an envelope, marked on curling blue with their own guild’s stamp.
Mugo grabbed it, tore it open. Here came the next part: a call for help left unsaid. A drawing mapped out three homes, four missing children, a sign that kept resetting between dawn and dusk. The last line? ‘Figures in Dog-masks return for debts we didn’t know we owed.’ Saya exhaled. “Every town hides hurt under the welcome mat.” Mari the runt clicked her tongue. She asked, half-awake, “Who bets whatever’s gone wrong is more than just ghosts this time?”
Riku’s curiosity won over habit. Do you feel the itch growing when a clue falls in your lap? He wanted to understand why even the mayor—hell, even the bakery-staff—ignored these calls for help. Heroes new to moving never learn when to look back. The team splits to scout before night hits.
Mugo lingers by laundry on the lane, waiting for clues. Mari tabs along a path children once used, counting cracked marbles along the fence posts. Sora is up on a roof across from the main inn, and the air bristles with blue autumn chill. Riku sticks by Saya as shadows move at windows. They aren’t sure what they’re watching for, but every sound could be a sign.
Just past nightfall, thin cries echo. Was it wind, or a child’s laugh trimmed sharp? A sliver-masked figure glides by the well. Neither Dokkaebi nor bandit – closer to folk-tale hint, less to do with truth. Riku tells Saya by whisper, “There should be one child at that house over there. Are you thinking what I am?” She just nods. Mugo circles, Mari signals – it’s time.
The chase breaks quiet first. Sora flings a spell-cloth from the roof. The masked figure turns; behind it, black smoke turns to fireflies. It splits as Saya rushes forward, barely dodging a thrown mask. They charge, see two doors slam. Mugo somersaults, lobbing his blessed dust at the nearest figure. Mari pulls three stones, ignoring the broken glass biting her palm.
The overlooked child at the far end runs – hair flaming red, night-clothes dirty. “No one trusted you before. Why now?” she shouts, more grown-up than the rest. Saya tries to calm her: “That’s old pain you hold, isn’t it? Let us help.” But the redlight on her bracelet pulses. This isn’t just lost kids or missed debts. It’s something tangled deep – a contract reaching from outside the town, burning inside its walls.
The young hero group regroups, eyes drawn to the center green. All the missing kids line the stone circle, heads lowered, dog-masks gleaming. A tall, hooded stranger steps into the light between them, voice calm. “Debt isn’t paid by coin, strangers. It’s sealed with memory. Leave here before dawn and you’ll lose yours, bit by bit.”
Who is this? Can debts cloud a whole town? What memory would you give to stay safe one more night?
Saya’s grip tightens on her friend’s sleeve.
Riku says, “Leaving isn’t an answer; none of us will. We’ll face your deals.” Black fire rings out underfoot. It burns cold. The stranger just smiles through the mask, listing one memory each is asked to give as price. Night deepens; not one lantern flickers. Mari gulps, looking at shadows that start to sparkle – maybe hope, maybe a trick.
The flames ring them, but the story twists. A voice none but Riku hear: “Trade memory, trade soul. Do you honor town or friend?” His answer is lost in the roar. Flames become doors, their exit uncertain. Which would you choose if every next step could steal your past?
The episode cuts as Riku hesitates, fever-bright, a little scared for the first real time. The hooded figure drops a third mask at his feet. All uncertainty hangs: Will the heroes leap, bargain, or burn?