For over an hour, Hafred led his highborn companions through woods that would be difficult to navigate even by the light of day. The pervasive darkness of the night and the fact that he had now trod further under those trees than he had ventured in many a year did not bode well for his sense of direction. Yet there were subtle signs that he was on the right track. An old, dry streambed offered a clue where higher ground might lie, and he followed it upward, ever upward to where the trees thinned and the ground grew steep and rocky. The ridgeline from which the Broken Stone jutted forth had fewer trees than the surrounding woods, and soon the sky opened up above them, offering a clear view of the stars and moon. The Broken Stone was a dark blot, a void of blackness against an otherwise bejeweled canvas.
With less foliage, the cool night's breeze passed freely amongst the trio, tousling Hafred's hair as it carried the chirrups of night insects, and the faint squeaking and clicking of bats as they swarmed through the air on their nightly hunt. From time to time, Hafred could have sworn he saw distant fire amongst the trees, in the midst of the forest on the opposite side of the ridge from the village. When it was brought to their attention, however, neither Lord Rufus nor Prince Cantrol seemed in the slightest bit interested.
As they approached the Broken Stone, the silvery moon peeked out from a skidding cloud. The wan light it cast only made the scene before them all the more ominous. The stone loomed as a dark specter above the hilltop, easily five times the height of a man. Around its base, a blood red soil stood out stark from the surrounding grassy terrain. Nothing grew in that patch of ground, as if nature itself had rejected the unsettling chunk of glistening gray rock.
From afar, the Broken Stone appeared an uneven, jagged outcropping weathered by natural phenomena. In such close proximity, however, its true nature became clear. The ragged outline it presented to the distant eye was not due to actual breakage, but rather to the numerous figures carved in bas relief along its surface. The relentless toll of the elements had worn most of the features from the individual figures, but the general shape was that of a mass of humanoids, writhing about one another in torment or ecstasy, and stretching their arms out in pleading gestures.
Despite the bulk of the figures on the rock being human, there was a certain inhumanity about the shape of the monument as a whole, as if those tortured beings represented over its surface simply concealed some manner of creature beneath. Something which, if it were to scale with the human figures that covered it, would stand well over a hundred feet high. Here and there, the unwholesome glint of a sickly slick looking yellow stone peeked out from the gray facade, like glistening amber eyes peering out from the mass of misery.
It was an unsettling sight, a hideous tribute to some dark god from ages past, and the suffering displayed by the weathered figures spoke of the malevolence of whatever creature had inspired that alien artifact.
"By the gods, what a monstrous memorial." The Prince's whisper was breathless, but so still was the air at that point that he could be heard readily. Rufus hastened to put himself and his horse between the Stone and his lord, as if the object were some mortal threat. A thing that might come alive at any moment.
Hafred fidgeted as he stood near the edge of the red soil, a line upon the ground which he dared not cross. Of all the talk of enchantresses and witches, of all the strange things he had seen at the sage's house, this horrid structure disturbed him most. For the first time, he regretted having the idea he might take up with the King's Men. "I think," he began in a soft tone, "if anyone had known this is what the Stone truly looked like, it might have been torn down long ago."
Rufus nodded grimly, then turned his eyes away from the stone, and toward the shadowy forest which lurked further down the slopes of the hill to all sides, as if too timid to approach the stone properly. "I do not see this Grove which Crow spoke of."
It was dark indeed, and even without the shadows of night, it would be difficult to tell whether any of the surrounding forest was especially thicker than the rest. A certain sense of dread settled over the smith's apprentice. Had they come all that way for nothing?
With a heavy heart and weary sigh, Hafred shook his head. "If only we could get up higher, maybe we could spot something from above."
As soon as the words left his lips, the young man regretted them. A skulking, sidelong glance confirmed he'd earned the stares of both Rufus and Prince Cantrol. Without a word, Hafred turned his eyes back up to the dreadful stone looming above.
The arrow wound at his back gave a twinge of protest just looking up at it.
"I think that's a fine idea," Cantrol started.
"Indeed. It shows initiative, bravery, ingenuity," Rufus continued. "Good luck on your climb, Hafred. Make us proud."
Hafred's shoulders slumped with the weight of resignation. There was no way he could avoid the task the two men he was so looking to impress had set him, when they spoke so directly. He offered a numb nod to the two, before daring to cross the line of red soil surrounding the base of that terrible monument. A deep, unnatural sense of primal dread filled him as he did, though he could not place the source. For a long moment, he stood in the moon-cast shadow of the vilely carved stone, holding his breath and expecting the worst.
After all too many beats of his racing heart, Hafred realized that he hadn't burst into flames. Nothing had reached from the darkness to smite him down, the world kept turning about him. He lifted his gaze and exhaled slowly.
A last glance back confirmed that the others hadn't dared cross the boundary of the red soil circle, leaving him alone to brave whatever the Broken Stone may hold. There was a hint of pity in Lord Rufus's expression, but also a certain scrutiny. It seemed that this was to be a test as surely as anything the prince's bodyguard might have thought up himself.
Hafred turned back toward the grim stone, then made his way around the base with careful steps. Eventually, he came to a more gently sloped side, though it would still be quite a task to haul himself up the face of it. With a shift of that satchel which contained potions and a meal that his belly even then grumbled for, he cleared his arms and began his ascent.
The carved human figures littering the stone made for easy handholds, but the texture of the stone itself was unpleasant. Smooth-worn by the weather of untold centuries, and somewhat slimy to the touch, the carvings were somehow warm, as if still radiating some ghostly remnant of the heat of the day which should have been long quenched by the night's hours.