The Serpent’s Gale: Descent into the Crumbling Halls
Part I: Ash under Blue Skies
Raen doesn’t notice the burning sun on his back. He stands at the edge of Blackspur Ravine, staring down at the fog-torn slope. Yang, his blunt yet loyal friend, swings his heavy pack, causing rocks to slip free from the edge with a tap of his heel. ‘You still in or not?’ Yang’s voice breaks through Raen’s memory; his sister Lira’s smile seems miles off, as unreachable as the Vyleth Tear stone he’s here to find. There’s only one way to find the Tear and save Lira, who waits in bed, bones brittle, fading more as each moon passes.
Then Kara steps up. Her lean frame shows hints of old wounds, and she adjusts a sheath on her hip. Kara never quite fits any group, but she knows the wild’s secrets. ‘We go in when the wind dips. If you panic in the Tunnels, none of us come out.’ Her words drag. Cold, almost bored—yet Raen can’t help but trust her more than anyone else. Do you have a friend you trust that much?
The goal is below: the ruins called the Crumbling Halls. Legend says the Vyleth Tear formed in the shadow of the Trident Serpent, coiled so tight it warped stone. He nods to Yang. Then, with barely a whisper, they begin.
Part II: The Descent’s First Trial
The ravine isn’t silent. Rocks clatter. Jade mist creeps up, chill biting at ears. Soon lantern light can barely cut the murk. Kara points. There’s a rope, half-buried; old knotted, smells like rot. She’s done this before. Raen’s empty stomach flips. ‘Last down buys drinks, got it?’ Yang tries his old joke. No one laughs.
Halfway down, something above groans. It’s the stone, they hope—not anything else. At the end, they reach the ledge and stare at the carved entrance. It’s older than their town. Symbols picked clean by wind, door half peeled away, shaped almost like the sigil on Lira’s necklace back home. ‘They say the first room tests your eyes,’ Kara says. ‘Don’t blink more than you have to.’ Do you believe in old curses?

They duck inside. The dark eats the sound and gives little back. The first step cracks tile. Mist slithers in over boots. Shapes weave in the jade murk. Yang mutters, raindrops of sweat on his brow. A row of faded steps, and then: scattered bones. The first lost hunters, forgotten. In this place, every quest leaves scars.
Part III: Shadows in the Long Hall
That room’s silence kills courage quick. Then thumps. Beneath, far below. The floor dips in a pattern—like snake’s scales. In the mid-light, something big shifts, all tail and clatter. A puzzle waits on a battered slab; picks and lines scratch at the crust. Kara kneels. ‘If I mess the order the noise gets louder,’ she says dry. Raen crouches too. He can pick lockboxes, corners, tripped ropes, but this is old magic.
‘Do it,’ he nods. Kara lines up the tiles. Pattern left, then right, eyes darting between glyphs as she fights her shakes. When she’s done, the rumble fades off. A breath later, stone moves and candles blaze ahead. ‘Open,’ Kara grins. Somewhere Yang curses, slapping mist from his arm. Is it fear that draws you on, or is it hope?

Part IV: Into the Broken Chamber
Now they see a wall broken to reveal another way down, older, shaped like spiraled fangs. Treading slow, they count only eight steps before Yang cries out—a lattice pit, barely seen, yawning right beneath his feet. He dangles from Kara’s grip. Raen throws rope, lashes it to iron. Time stops for three pulls ’til Yang rolls free. He pants, done in. But they can still hear the halls rumble. Lira’s fading, no choice but on.
Paint flakes off columns, cold fog swirls about their feet. Glints in cracks show traps—sun-faded chain, struck by many clumsy hands over years. None want to stop, so fast yet careful. Kara says, ‘The next room’s the real test: Mirrors. Only take the doorway that shows you all three.’ The air tastes sour now. Yan wipes dirt off his brow.

Part V: The Eyes of the Serpent
The Mirror Room feels awake. It’s angles and corners where the world shifts; one step, then three, then the floor moves under light like it’s wet. Kara stares at three doors reflected—but only two lead anywhere at first glance. Raen watches. His hand thumps hard on his chest, but he sees something catches. Kara points. ‘There. Smallest mirror, last on the right. Us. All three.’
He nods, steals a glance at Yang’s tight jaw and Kara’s twitching eye. Through the hidden opening, a scent of ozone rides the gasping air. Down one hall yet another room waits—and behind that, what every story warns about: ancient stone, green fire, and the hissing echo that matches only a great scaled throat opening somewhere below.
The quest isn’t done; if anything, the halls now hum alive. Raen stands close to the goal but fear, heat, and drowsy air say this place isn’t kind. ‘You still ready?’ Yang asks one last time, worry veiled under stubborn pride.
“Have we come so far to break now?” Kara snaps.

A heavy breath shakes through Raen. Does he run? If he flees, his sister Lira fades for good. Flame cracks on old shields. Their shadows stretch huge and hissing on the walls.
As they cross into the last room and face the great vault where something moves, not a single one says another word. The true test is just through this door, but as Raen grips the flask of borrowed light, even Kara’s sure step slows. No going back now.
Do you think you’d step through?