Morning mist blanketed Greystone in an eerie calm, shrouding the town's gray stone buildings and rising towers. The winds blew colder than usual, whispering dread to the hearts of its people. A heavy silence hung in the air, broken only by the creak of wagon wheels and hushed voices.
Dozens of townsfolk had begun to gather near the outer gates, some with carts piled high with belongings, others clutching children or beasts. The fear was palpable. Rumors of the advancing Tide had spread like wildfire since Lucas and Elira had left, and with no firm defense completed and no word from their lord, panic had begun to take root.
"We should go while we still can," a tall man with a fur-lined cloak said, his voice rising above the murmurs. "The Tide spares no one! Greystone will fall!"
"They say entire towns to the north are gone! Overrun by white-skinned monsters!"
"We can't wait here to die!"
The voices grew louder, anxious. One woman sobbed quietly as she gripped her husband's arm. Children huddled against their mothers, some of them with small bonded beasts trembling at their sides.
Inside the castle keep, Reynard had just finished another strategy session with Sir Hale and the militia captains when a scout burst into the hall.
"Captain Reynard! A crowd is forming at the gates. More than twenty people. They're talking about leaving Greystone."
Reynard stood, his expression tightening. He moved quickly, Fen, his husky-like beast, at his side. As he exited the main hall and strode toward the gates, his mind raced.
'Not now. We need every able hand. If morale collapses, our defenses will too.'
When he reached the outer gates, the sight struck him like a blow. The mass of townsfolk had swelled. Dozens of carts, bundles, and fearful eyes. Men armed with pitchforks and old swords looked more like travelers than defenders.
He stepped up to the gate platform, voice booming. "People of Greystone, hold! This is not the time to give in to fear. We are fortifying the walls, building watchposts, and Lord Lucas himself—"
"Where is he then?" someone shouted. "You say he fights for us, but we haven't seen him in days!"
"We need to survive, not be martyrs for a broken town!"
More voices joined, calling out fears and doubts. Reynard gritted his teeth. Fen growled beside him.
Then—
A gust of wind swept over the road beyond the gates.
From the mist, two silhouettes emerged—Lucas and Elira, walking side by side. Behind them, Luna padded forward, and strapped to the beast's back were sacks and crates—loot from their recent battle. Zephyra flew overhead in a graceful arc, and Umbra moved like a shadow beside Lucas, a black blur of quiet power.
The murmurs turned into silence.
Lucas walked calmly through the gathered crowd, his expression unreadable, his coat torn slightly at the shoulder, his hands wrapped in blood-streaked bandages. Yet he walked tall.
He stepped up beside Reynard.
"You're afraid," he said, voice low but clear. "I understand that. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't."
He looked out across the people, his eyes scanning each anxious face. "The Tide is coming. I've seen what they are. I've killed their scouts. Six of them. Seven-foot-tall white-skinned apes that move faster than wolves and hit harder than hammers. They bleed like we do."
A hush fell over the crowd.
Lucas continued. "You think running will save you? It won't. The Tide doesn't care about walls or distance. It doesn't care if you're a farmer or a merchant or a soldier. It only cares that you're human. That's why we fight—not just for Greystone, but for every last soul it protects."
He turned, gesturing to the sacks Luna carried. With a nod, Elira pulled them open, revealing weapons, beast cores, rations, and even a few shimmering rare materials.
"These are from the scouts we killed. From the enemy. And this is just the beginning. I swear this to you now: any who stay and fight will be armed. Fed. Rewarded. Greystone will not forget those who stood their ground."
He drew his sword—a new one, forged with alloy from the apes' armor—and raised it high.
"You want to run? Then go. I won't stop you. But know this—when the stories are told, when the next generation asks who stood when the world trembled, I will say your names."
Silence followed. Then—
One man stepped forward. Then a woman.
"I'll stay," said the man. "My children deserve a place to call home."
"We can help with the walls," said another. "I was a mason before."
Bit by bit, the tide of fear began to slow. More people stepped forward, emboldened by Lucas's speech and the promise of defense.
Reynard exhaled slowly. He looked at Lucas and smiled faintly. "You were born for this."
Lucas didn't answer. He just looked back at his people—their faces weary, but no longer broken.
They would stay. Greystone would stand.
And he would make sure of it.