The air in the valley hung thick and still, smelling of pine needles, wet earth, and something else – something sickly sweet and cloying that settled at the back of Geralt’s throat. Flies, fat and sluggish, buzzed around his horse’s ears. He nudged Roach forward, the rhythmic creak of worn leather and the clink of metal against metal the only sounds in the deepening quiet. The sun, a pale smear behind a gauze of clouds, cast long, indistinct shadows through the skeletal trees.
The path, once a well-worn track, was overgrown, brambles snatching at Roach’s legs. Geralt squinted ahead. The village of Lindenvale should have been visible by now, a cluster of thatched roofs and smoke plumes. Instead, only the dense, dark forest stretched on, broken by the occasional, stark glimpse of grey wood that might be a fence post or a decaying cross. A shiver, not of cold, ran down his spine. The air felt heavy, as if the very sound had been sucked out of it, leaving only a vacuum of apprehension.
When he finally broke through the tree line, Lindenvale lay before him, not as a vibrant settlement, but as a tableau of abandonment. Houses stood with sagging roofs, their windows like vacant eyes staring out at a world that had moved on. A broken wagon lay overturned near what must have been the village well, its wooden wheels fractured, spilling its rotted cargo onto the muddy ground. There was no smoke from chimneys, no children’s shouts, no barking dogs. Just the persistent, sickening scent of decay, now laced with something sharper, more metallic – the smell of unwashed bodies and fear.
Geralt dismounted, his joints protesting with a familiar ache. He was no longer the swift, agile wolf of his youth, though the muscle memory remained, a phantom limb of speed. His armor, patched and scuffed, felt heavier these days, each rivet a reminder of countless battles won and lost. He loosened the straps of his swords, the familiar weight a comfort. Roach snorted nervously, pawing at the ground.
"Easy, girl," he murmured, his voice a low rasp.
He moved through the village square, his boots sinking slightly into the churned mud. A scarecrow, its burlap head askew, hung limply from a post, its straw guts spilling onto the ground. A child's wooden doll, missing an arm, lay facedown beside it, forgotten. The silence was profound, broken only by the buzzing of flies and the distant, mournful cry of a crow. This wasn't merely abandonment; it was desolation.
A movement caught his eye – a flicker behind the warped shutters of the largest house, a two-story affair with a sturdy oak door. He approached cautiously, his hand on the hilt of his silver sword.
"Anyone here?" His voice echoed, thin and reedy in the oppressive quiet.
A long pause. Then, a creak as the door opened a crack, revealing a sliver of darkness and a single, rheumy eye.
"Witcher?" a voice rasped, hoarse with disuse and perhaps fear. "You came."
The door opened further, revealing an old man, his face a roadmap of wrinkles, his skin sallow and pitted. His clothes were threadbare, stained, and he leaned heavily on a gnarled walking stick. He looked like a man who had been slowly consumed by grief and illness.
"Geralt of Rivia," the witcher confirmed, his gaze sweeping past the man into the dim interior of the house. He caught the faint, unmistakable aroma of fever, of unwashed linen, of death.
"Elder Bronislaw," the old man introduced himself, his voice barely above a whisper. "We… we sent the boy. Did he reach you?"
Geralt nodded, remembering the half-starved courier who’d found him a week ago, clutching a pouch of coin and a desperate plea. The boy had smelled of the same sickly sweet decay. Geralt had given him some elixirs, but doubted they’d done much good.
"He did. He spoke of a plague. And… a monster."
Bronislaw sagged against the doorframe, his shoulders shaking. "Aye. The plague… it took 'em all. My wife. My sons. My grandchildren. Day by day, they coughed and wasted away. But then…" He swallowed hard, his Adam's apple bobbing. "Then she came."
"She?" Geralt prompted, his voice flat.
"The banshee. Or a ghoul, I don't know what to call it. It comes at night. A woman, tall and pale, wailing. And she… she takes them. The bodies. From their beds. From the graves. We tried to bury them, but she digs them up, rends them apart." His voice broke. "It's a desecration. Even in death, they find no peace."
Geralt’s brows furrowed. A banshee was a spirit of lamentation, not typically a scavenger of corpses. Ghouls, yes, but Bronislaw described a single, distinct entity. "Show me the damage."
Bronislaw led him through the deserted streets, his steps faltering. He pointed to a house with a gaping hole in its side, as if something had ripped through the wall rather than used the door. "My neighbor, Elara. She died two days ago. We left her in her bed, too weak to move her. The next morning… just a torn sheet and blood."
Further on, at the edge of the village, was a small, hastily dug graveyard. Several mounds of earth were disturbed, dirt scattered violently. One wooden marker lay snapped in half. Geralt knelt, examining the soil. Not claw marks, not exactly. More like the impression of bare hands, digging furiously, frantically. The ground was soft, wet, making clear prints difficult. He sniffed. The familiar stench of death was strong here, but underlying it was a fainter scent, metallic and musky, vaguely familiar yet unplaceable in his mental bestiary.
"Did anyone see her clearly?" Geralt asked, rising.
Bronislaw shook his head, clutching his walking stick like a lifeline. "Only glimpses. A pale gown, hair like a black cloud in the moonlight. Her wails… oh, her wails. They freeze the blood."
Geralt activated his Witcher Senses. The world sharpened, colors muted, sounds amplified. He could hear the frantic scuttling of rats under floorboards, the drip of water from a broken gutter, the faint hum of a disturbed insect nest. He saw the faint heat traces of Bronislaw’s frail body, the lingering cold where the plague had touched. He focused on the disturbed grave, searching for residual magical energy. There was a faint resonance, a lingering chill that spoke of necromancy, but also a deep sorrow, an almost palpable despair.
"Has anyone else survived the plague?" Geralt asked.
Bronislaw looked away, his eyes fixed on the empty horizon. "Only me. And little Ania. She’s in the house, hidden away. Her parents… they went last week. I’m all she has left." His voice was choked with unshed tears.
Geralt nodded. He understood. The contract wasn’t just about a monster; it was about the last flicker of hope in a dying place.
He spent the rest of the afternoon making a perimeter, examining the disturbed graves more closely. The damage was consistent: bodies unearthed, often dismembered. Not for consumption, it seemed, but in a frenzy of destruction. The tracks, where they were discernible, were bare human feet, remarkably long and slender. No claws, no beastial gait. Just the hurried, desperate shuffle of a person.
As dusk began to bleed into the sky, painting the clouds in shades of bruised purple and grey, Geralt returned to Bronislaw’s house. Inside, a small girl, no older than six, huddled under a blanket by a cold hearth, her eyes wide and dark in the gloom. She clutched a threadbare rabbit doll. Her breathing was shallow, a faint wheeze in her chest. The plague had touched her too, but she was fighting.
"Are you sure this 'banshee' only takes the dead?" Geralt asked Bronislaw quietly, out of earshot of the girl.
Bronislaw nodded vehemently. "Yes! We keep the living inside. It's only the ones already gone. It's like… like she's trying to erase them. No trace left."
Geralt watched Ania, her small face pale and drawn. He remembered other children, other losses. The familiar ache settled in his chest. "I’ll set a trap tonight. In the graveyard."
He spent the last hour of daylight preparing, coating his silver sword with Specter oil, brewing a potent Black Blood potion, and meditating until his senses were needle-sharp. He chose a spot near the most recently disturbed grave, a shallow trench with a broken headstone. The air grew colder as night fell, the silence deepening, pressing down on him.
Hours passed. The moon, a thin sliver, barely pierced the cloud cover. The wind began to whisper through the empty houses, a mournful sigh that seemed to echo Bronislaw’s descriptions. Geralt remained motionless, a statue carved from shadow and steel, his heart beating a slow, steady rhythm.
Then, he heard it. Not a wail, not yet. A low, guttural moan, a sound of profound anguish that seemed to tear at the very fabric of the night. It came from the direction of the graveyard.
He moved silently, his steps light despite his age. As he neared the burial ground, the sound intensified, evolving into a keening lament that scraped against his ear drums. And then he saw her.
She was tall, indeed, and slender, dressed in what appeared to be a tattered, pale shift that clung to her emaciated frame. Her hair, long and black, obscured much of her face as she bent over a fresh grave, digging with frantic, bare hands. Her movements were jerky, desperate, like a marionette with tangled strings. The wails tore from her throat, raw and full of an unbearable sorrow.
Geralt drew his silver sword. The moonlight, breaking through a rift in the clouds, illuminated her just as she lifted a skull from the loosened earth, cradling it gently before letting out a shriek that ripped through the quiet village. She turned, her head snapping towards him.
Her eyes were wide, bloodshot, and utterly vacant, staring through him as if he were merely another shadow. But it wasn't the vacant stare that froze Geralt’s breath in his chest, nor the skeletal frame, or the tattered dress. It was the face.
The thin, sharp nose. The high cheekbones. The faint scar above the left eyebrow, almost imperceptible. The cascade of raven hair, now wild and matted.
It was Yennefer.
Not quite, not really. This woman was gaunt, distorted by suffering, consumed by a feral grief that had twisted her features into a macabre parody. But the resemblance was undeniable, an echo of the woman he had loved, a ghost in the flesh. His hand, gripping the hilt of his sword, trembled almost imperceptibly.
The banshee let out another shriek, not of rage, but of utter despair, and lunged. Not towards him, but past him, towards the village, towards the house where Ania slept. Her movements were unnaturally swift, a blur of pale linen and dark hair.
Geralt reacted instantly, his training overriding the sudden, sickening lurch in his gut. He intercepted her, his sword a silver blur. She twisted, surprisingly strong, striking at him with bony hands that felt like iron. Her touch burned, a cold fire that tried to sap his strength. He could feel the residual magic, but it was raw, untamed, more like a burst blood vessel than a controlled spell.
"Yennefer?" he whispered, his voice rough. He knew it wasn’t her, not truly. But the name escaped him anyway, a desperate plea for recognition.
The creature paused, her wailing dying to a choked sob. Her head cocked, as if the sound had registered somewhere in the depths of her madness. For a fleeting moment, a flicker of something almost human crossed her eyes – a flash of recognition, perhaps, or just the reflected agony of a soul trapped in torment. Then, the vacant stare returned, and she let out a piercing shriek, pushing past him with renewed, frenzied strength.
This wasn't a monster to be slain with steel, or even silver, not in the way he was used to. This was grief, made manifest, clawing its way through the remnants of a beloved face. And for the first time in decades, Geralt found himself hesitating, his blade poised, caught between duty and the echoes of a love that refused to die.
The shriek tore through the silence of Lindenvale, a sound of such raw, unbridled agony that it felt like a physical blow. Geralt saw the creature’s trajectory: not a direct assault on him, but a desperate, frenzied dash towards the village, towards Bronislaw’s house. Towards Ania.
His blade, already drawn, glinted in the sparse moonlight. He was a whisper of motion, moving to intercept, a silver blur against the pale figure. She was fast, impossibly so, a blur of tattered linen and wild, dark hair. As she tried to surge past, Geralt shifted, bringing the flat of his silver sword across her back, a sharp, resounding thwack designed to stun, not to sever.
She staggered, a choked gasp escaping her, the sound more human than monstrous. She spun, bony hands lashing out. Her nails, though not sharpened like a ghoul's, raked his arm, leaving behind trails of cold fire that burned like frostbite. A surge of raw, untamed magic pulsed from her, a chaotic energy that buffeted him, threatening to disorient. It wasn't a controlled spell, but a desperate, sorrowful explosion of grief.
"Yennefer!" he rasped again, forcing the name past his suddenly tight throat. The sound felt wrong, a betrayal of the truth, yet he couldn’t stop it. This wasn't her, not his Yennefer, not the woman of sharp wit and potent magic, but a grotesque, agonizing echo. Still, the resemblance, the *possibility*, hammered at him, making his movements fractionally slower, his guard less absolute.
Her head snapped again, a violent, bird-like motion. Her wide, bloodshot eyes, still vacant, seemed to flicker, a momentary spark of something unreadable – recognition, or perhaps just a deeper plunge into her despair. A fresh wail tore from her, a sound that seemed to scrape the very air from his lungs, stripping away his focus. It was a lament for everything lost, a primal scream for the dead.
She lunged again, not with malice, but with a desperate, flailing energy, trying to bypass him, to reach the houses. Her goal wasn't to harm him, but to continue her desecration, her frantic, destructive ritual. It was as if she sought to undo the very fact of death, to unmake the bodies, to erase their presence from the world.
Geralt knew he couldn’t kill her. Not like this. Not while she wore that face, not while her movements spoke of such profound, broken grief. He needed to incapacitate her, to contain whatever torment had seized her. He raised his left hand, a quick, almost unconscious gesture, and a shimmering shield of Quen flared into existence around him. Her next frantic blow, a desperate attempt to scratch and push past, glanced off the golden energy, sending shivers up his arm.
He used the momentary distraction to circle, moving with a predator’s grace, searching for an opening, a weakness that wasn’t a vital point. He saw the desperation in her movements, the raw, unthinking drive. This wasn’t a fight; it was an intervention. He waited until she spun again, disoriented by the shield, her wails momentarily choked off by a spasm of what looked like pure anguish. As she turned, her back briefly exposed, Geralt struck. Not with the blade, but with the heavy, rounded pommel of his silver sword. A precise, controlled blow to the back of her head, just below the occipital bone.
There was a soft, sickening thud. The banshee stiffened, her body going rigid for a beat, before collapsing forward, a tangled heap of pale linen and dark hair. The wailing stopped, replaced by a low, shuddering moan that quickly faded into silence. The graveyard fell still, the only sound the frantic thrumming of Geralt’s own heart, and the distant, unseen rustling of leaves in the wind.
He stood over her, sword still in hand, his breath coming in ragged gasps. The cold fire on his arm still burned, a phantom pain. He reached out, his hand hovering, then gently nudged her shoulder with the toe of his boot. She didn’t stir. Her face, half-buried in the disturbed earth, was still Yennefer’s, albeit a gaunt, broken caricature. The scar above her eyebrow was unmistakable. How could this be?
A low cough broke the oppressive silence. Geralt straightened, turning to see Bronislaw emerging from the gloom, clutching his walking stick like a weapon, his sallow face etched with a mixture of fear and grim satisfaction. His eyes, wide and rheumy, darted from Geralt to the fallen figure.
"You… you killed it," the old man whispered, his voice hoarse, but with a thread of relief. He shuffled closer, his breath hitched. "It’s gone, then? The terror?"
Geralt lowered his sword, the silver blade gleaming dully. "She’s not dead. Just… incapacitated." He knelt beside the body, careful not to touch her, studying her still form. There was no pulse, no breath, yet a faint, chilling current of magic still emanated from her, like static electricity in the cold air. This wasn't a living woman, nor a simple undead ghoul. This was something else entirely.
Bronislaw’s face crumpled, the relief draining away, replaced by a fresh wave of despair. "Not dead? But… but what is it, then? It must be killed! It desecrates the graves! It torments us!" He gestured wildly at the disturbed earth. "It must be put down, Witcher! For the sake of our lost ones!"
Geralt stood, turning to face the old man. The moonlight caught the lines of weariness on his face, the set of his jaw. "Bronislaw, this isn’t a beast. It's… a spirit bound by grief. A powerful one. Killing the body won’t solve anything if the spirit is the root of the torment." He looked back at the prone form. "And I cannot just kill it. Not when it looks like…" He trailed off, the words catching in his throat.
"Looks like what?" Bronislaw croaked, his gaze suspicious. "A demon? A devil?"
"Like someone I knew," Geralt finished, his voice rough. "Someone I cared for." He knew it was a lie, and yet, it was the truth. It *was* Yennefer, in some twisted, broken form.
He needed to understand. He knelt again, examining the tattered shift she wore. It was ancient, faded linen, the kind common folk might wear for burial. He glanced at her hands, still stained with earth, and then at her feet. Bare, long, slender, just as he'd surmised from the tracks. He leaned closer to her face, ignoring the sickening lurch in his gut. The skin was cold, waxy, but undeniably human. There was a faint, lingering scent of lilacs and gooseberries, almost imperceptible beneath the stench of death and damp earth, a ghost of a perfume that hit him like a physical blow. His Yennefer.
"I need to know what happened here, Bronislaw," Geralt said, his voice quiet but firm. "Before the plague. Before this… thing. Anything unusual? Any visitors? Any strange magic?"
Bronislaw wrung his hands, his eyes still fixed on the figure. "Nothing, Witcher. Just the plague. It came, and it took us. One by one. Then the wailing started, and she came. We thought it was a punishment, a curse for our sins."
"And the bodies she takes?" Geralt pressed. "Are they all from the village?"
"Aye. Everyone. My wife, Elara, the children…" Bronislaw's voice broke. "She digs them up, rends them, scatters their bones. Leaves nothing."
"She leaves nothing," Geralt repeated, the words clicking into place. "Not for consumption, but for obliteration. She's not feeding; she's *erasing*."
He needed more information. He needed to search the houses again, but this time, he wasn't looking for a monster's trail. He was looking for a person's story.
"We can’t leave her here," Geralt decided, glancing around the desolate graveyard. "She’ll wake. We need to secure her."
Bronislaw stared at him, aghast. "Secure it? Witcher, you bring it into my house, where Ania sleeps?"
"No," Geralt said, his gaze sweeping the village, settling on the sturdiest-looking structure: the old mill, its wheel long since stilled, a heavy wooden door. "The mill. It’s sturdy. We can bind her there until I understand what she is."
He could feel Bronislaw’s fear and distrust radiating off him, but Geralt’s voice left no room for argument. "Help me move her."
The old man hesitated, then slowly shuffled forward. Together, with great effort, they managed to drag the unnaturally stiff body across the graveyard, through the muddy village square, and into the derelict mill. Inside, it smelled of dust, damp wood, and faint, long-dead grain. Geralt found a length of thick, rotting rope and, ignoring Bronislaw’s shuddering protests, secured the "banshee" to one of the ancient, immovable wooden beams. He didn't tie her tightly enough to cause harm, but enough to prevent her from escaping if she woke.
"Stay here," Geralt instructed Bronislaw, his voice grave. "Watch her. If she stirs, yell."
The old man, pale as death, nodded mutely, gripping his stick. He kept his distance from the prone figure, his eyes wide with terror.
Geralt left him there and returned to the graveyard. The wind had picked up, carrying the faint, sweet-sick smell of decay more strongly now. He didn’t draw his sword, not yet. He needed to think, to understand. This wasn't a simple contract. This was a tragedy, a perversion of life and death, and it wore the face of his past.
He focused his Witcher senses, not on the monster, but on the environment. The faint magical resonance he’d felt earlier near the graves was stronger now, a chilling aura of despair and a strange, almost sterile cold. He knelt by the most recently disturbed grave again. He noticed something he hadn't before: a small, tarnished silver locket half-buried in the churned earth, missed by the creature's frantic digging. He picked it up. It was cold to the touch. Inside, a faded, blurry image of a young woman, smiling, with dark hair and bright eyes. A village woman, perhaps.
And then, his gaze fell on a small, dark patch of earth, away from the graves, near the edge of the forest. He walked towards it. It looked like a fire pit, but it was too small, too contained. He knelt, brushing away loose soil. Beneath it, he found charred wood, and something else, something metallic. He dug with his fingers. It was a small, ornate silver box, blackened by fire, but still recognizable. It was a phylactery, the kind used by certain mages to store powerful, often dark, magic, or even to contain a fragment of a soul. The box felt strangely cold, yet faintly thrummed with residual energy.
The pieces began to fall into place, chillingly. The necromancy, the profound sorrow, the specific act of obliteration, the face…
He remembered Yennefer's insatiable drive for power, for knowledge, her flirtations with dangerous magic, her desperate attempts to regain what she’d lost. He remembered her fierce love, her equally fierce grief.
This wasn't a banshee. This was a revenant, or something akin to it, a soul trapped, perhaps even self-imprisoned, in a distorted physical form, driven by a powerful, desperate intent. The plague had killed the villagers. And then, in a desperate, misguided attempt to undo the loss, someone had performed a ritual. Perhaps to resurrect a loved one. Perhaps to prevent death from claiming another. A ritual that had gone horribly, tragically wrong.
And the face… was it Yennefer’s soul, somehow drawn here, twisted by the ritual and the overwhelming grief? Or was it merely a physical resemblance, a cruel trick of fate, of a desperate mage trying to reclaim what was lost, and instead, creating a vessel for the accumulated sorrow of the dead?
He looked back towards the mill, towards the silent, prone figure, the echoes of Yennefer’s perfume still clinging faintly to him. Killing her wouldn’t free her. It would only destroy the vessel, leaving the torment to fester, or worse, to find another form.
Bronislaw wanted death. The village wanted an end to the terror. But Geralt knew, with a certainty that settled deep in his bones, that this wasn’t about killing. This was about understanding, about untangling a knot of grief and misguided magic, and perhaps, about finding a way to forgive the desperate act that had led to such profound suffering. It was about finding peace, not just for the dead, but for the tormented soul that looked so terribly like Yennefer.
He had a long night ahead.
The wind, now a persistent, biting presence, tugged at Geralt’s hair and clothes, carrying with it the mournful scent of decay and damp earth. He stood in the graveyard, the small silver locket clutched in one hand, the charred phylactery in the other. The moon, a mere sliver, offered scant illumination, but the objects felt heavy and cold, anchors in the swirling uncertainty. The blurry image in the locket – a young woman with dark hair – seemed to mock him with its faded familiarity. It wasn’t Yennefer, not truly, but the echo was there, a shadow in the periphery of his memory.
The phylactery hummed with a faint, malevolent energy, a whisper of dark magic that prickled his senses. This wasn’t some forgotten relic; it was potent, recently used, and deeply corrupted. It solidified his growing theory: this wasn’t a random haunting. This was a deliberate act, a ritual gone awry, its consequences manifesting in a form that tore at his soul. He looked towards the mill, its silhouette a dark, heavy mass against the bruised sky. Inside, the tormented echo of Yennefer lay bound.
He returned to the mill, the heavy wooden door creaking mournfully as he pushed it open. Bronislaw huddled in a corner, his face ashen, his eyes fixed on the bound figure. The banshee, or whatever she was, remained motionless, a still, pale heap against the rough timber. Even unconscious, a faint chill seemed to emanate from her, a cold that seeped into the very air.
"Anything?" Geralt asked, his voice low.
Bronislaw flinched, startled. "No. Not a peep. Just… still." He swallowed hard, his gaze darting to Geralt’s hands. "What have you found, Witcher?"
Geralt held up the phylactery. "This. And a locket. They were buried near the disturbed graves." He paused, letting his gaze sweep over the old man. "This isn’t a natural occurrence, Bronislaw. Someone performed a ritual here. A necromantic one."
Bronislaw’s eyes widened, then narrowed with dawning horror. "A ritual? But… who? Why? We are simple folk, Witcher. We have no mages here."
"Not anymore, perhaps," Geralt countered, his voice flat. "But someone did. This phylactery is a vessel for powerful magic. And the way she’s been acting… it’s not to feed. It’s to obliterate. To erase the dead. Why would someone want to do that?"
The old man’s face was a mask of confusion, then a flicker of something else, something akin to reluctant memory. "Erase… the dead? There was talk, years ago. Before my time, mostly. Of a small chapel, out past the village. Burned down, it was. And a madwoman, they called her. A healer, some said, but others whispered she tried to… speak to the dead." He trailed off, shaking his head. "Old wives' tales, Witcher. Nonsense."
"No," Geralt said, a cold certainty settling in his gut. "Not nonsense. Where is this chapel?"
Bronislaw pointed a trembling finger towards the far edge of the village, past the last rows of abandoned houses, where the forest began to reclaim the land. "That way. Beyond the old mill pond. But it’s nothing now. Just ruins. Burnt to the ground decades ago."
Geralt didn’t need to be told twice. He secured the mill door as best he could, leaving Bronislaw to his vigil. He took his steel sword this time, leaving the silver on his back. Whatever he was facing now, it wasn't a simple monster, but a human hand behind the haunting.
The path to the chapel was even more overgrown than the village roads, brambles and thorny bushes grasping at his trousers. The air grew heavier here, the smell of burnt wood mingling with the omnipresent decay. He could feel the residual magic, stronger now, a dark, oppressive presence that made the hairs on his arms prickle.
The chapel ruins stood stark against the moon-dimmed sky, a skeletal outline of a building. Charred timbers jutted like broken bones, and the roof had long since collapsed, leaving only a gaping maw open to the elements. The stone walls were blackened, stained by generations of soot and rain. A single, broken bell lay on its side in the overgrown weeds, half-buried, its silence more profound than any chime.
As he stepped over the threshold, a wave of cold dread washed over him, a sense of profound sorrow and desperate clinging. The magic here was thick, almost suffocating. It hummed in the air, a low thrumming that resonated in his teeth. He activated his Witcher Senses, and the world sharpened. The residual energy of countless lives, of prayers and laments, was almost visible, shimmering like heat haze. But beneath it, a deeper, colder current pulsed – the unmistakable signature of necromancy.
He saw faint, ghostly trails of energy, like lingering footsteps, leading towards what would have been the altar. The ground there was disturbed, not by frantic digging, but by something more deliberate. He knelt, examining the soil. It was loose, recently turned, and bore the faint impression of a small, gnarled boot. He sniffed. The scent was faint, masked by the pervasive smoke and damp earth, but it was there: old parchment, faint incense, and a cloying, sickly sweetness that reminded him of the smell that had clung to the courier boy. And something else, something he hadn’t noticed before. The sharp, acrid tang of burned herbs, of dried blood.
"I know you’re here," Geralt said, his voice cutting through the oppressive silence, flat and devoid of inflection. "Stop hiding."
A long pause. Then, a soft rustle from behind a collapsed section of wall, near where the sacristy might have been. A figure emerged, slowly, reluctantly.
It was a woman, old and stooped, her frame frail beneath layers of faded, patched robes. Her hair, thin and white, escaped from a coarse hood, framing a face that was a roadmap of wrinkles, her skin like ancient parchment. Her eyes, however, were startlingly bright, burning with an almost feverish intensity. She clutched a gnarled wooden staff, its tip carved with crude, pagan symbols. Her presence filled the burned chapel with a faint, unsettling aura, a mix of arcane power and profound weariness.
"The Witcher," she rasped, her voice thin and reedy, but with an underlying current of steel. "I knew you’d come. I felt your presence, like a stone dropped in still water."
"You summoned the boy. You sent him to me," Geralt stated, his gaze unwavering. "And you performed the ritual. The banshee… she wears a familiar face. Tell me why."
The old woman let out a dry, rattling cough, a sound like autumn leaves skittering across stone. "Familiar, you say? Ah, yes. The Lady of Vengerberg. A powerful mage. And a fool." Her eyes, sharp as a hawk’s, studied him. "You loved her, didn’t you?"
Geralt ignored the barb, his hand resting on the hilt of his steel sword. "What did you do?"
"What I had to do," she retorted, her voice gaining strength, a spark of defiance in her ancient eyes. "My name is Morwen. I am the last of my line. This village… it was once alive. Full of laughter, of children. Then the plague came. A vile, creeping death. It took them all. My daughter. My grandchildren. My husband. Everyone." Her voice cracked, a raw edge of grief piercing through her stoicism.
"They were all dying," she continued, her gaze sweeping over the charred ruins as if seeing ghosts. "One by one, they wasted away. And the bodies… the bodies piled up. I tried to save them. I am a healer, not a mage of your kind, Witcher, but I have always felt the currents. The whispers. The pull of what lies beyond." She gestured to the disturbed earth near the altar. "I buried my family here. I saw the fear in their eyes. The terror of being forgotten, of their very existence being swallowed by the earth."
"So you bound a spirit to a corpse," Geralt prompted, his voice flat, already piecing together the grim tableau.
"No!" Morwen’s voice rose, sharp with indignation. "Not a corpse. Not exactly. I sought to protect them. To stop the plague, to keep them safe, even in death. I sought to give them peace. But the plague… it was too strong. It poisoned the very ground. It twisted everything." She clutched her staff tighter. "I found a vessel. A powerful one. A phylactery, yes. But it was empty. A shell. I sought to imbue it with protection, with a ward against the plague’s creeping corruption, against the finality of their decay."
"And the face?" Geralt pressed, his voice taut. "Why her face?"
Morwen flinched, her bright eyes flickering with a mixture of fear and shame. "I… I made a mistake. A terrible mistake. I sought a strong spirit, one of powerful will, to imbue the phylactery. To act as a guardian. I performed a ritual of calling, a desperation born of grief. I thought… I thought I was calling upon the essence of a protector, a ward. I called upon the Lady of Vengerberg. Her legend, her power, her fierce will. I thought to draw her essence, a fragment of her strength, to protect my people."
A gasp caught in her throat. "But the plague… it had seeped into everything. The very essence of death was strong here. The ritual twisted. Instead of a protective ward, it drew forth… a lament. A powerful, grieving spirit, bound to the very act of obliteration. And the body… the body it animated was the last of my daughter’s friends, a woman who had died just before the ritual, whose features… whose features were coincidentally similar to the image I held in my mind’s eye of the sorceress."
Geralt absorbed her words, the truth a cold, bitter taste in his mouth. Not Yennefer, not truly. But a ritual of desperation, invoking Yennefer’s name and power, had twisted a local woman’s corpse into a vessel for profound, annihilating grief. The resemblance wasn't a cruel trick of fate, but a tragic echo, a side effect of Morwen’s misguided magic.
"She’s not trying to harm anyone," Morwen whispered, her voice barely audible. "She’s trying to unmake them. To erase them from the grip of the plague. To free them from suffering. To make it as if they never died, never suffered." Tears welled in her bright eyes, tracing clean paths down her grimy cheeks. "But it’s a madness. It’s a torment. It gives them no peace. Only destruction."
"You created a monster of grief," Geralt stated, his voice devoid of judgment, only a grim understanding. "And you sent for me to clean up your mess."
Morwen straightened, despite her frailness. "Yes! Because I cannot undo it! The magic is too strong, too corrupted. It’s not just her spirit, Witcher. It’s the collective sorrow of all those lost to the plague, funneled into that vessel. And the image I called forth… it gave it a focus, a terrible, destructive purpose." She looked at him, her gaze pleading. "You are a Witcher. You understand these things. You must find a way to give them peace. All of them. Not just the one in the mill, but the dead."
Geralt ran a hand over his tired face. The contract was clear: stop the monster. But this wasn’t a beast. This was a tragedy, born of love and loss, twisted by desperation and dark magic. And the face in the mill… it haunted him still.
"The phylactery," he said, holding it up. "This is the anchor, isn’t it? The source of the binding."
Morwen nodded, her gaze fixed on the blackened box. "It holds the core of the ritual. The corrupted essence. But it is sealed. I couldn’t break it. And now… it pulses with a life of its own. A dead life."
Geralt felt the faint thrumming of the phylactery in his hand. It wasn’t just an anchor; it was a conduit, channeling the raw grief and the botched invocation. To free the tormented spirit, to give peace to the desecrated dead, he would have to sever that connection. But simply destroying the phylactery might unleash an even greater, more chaotic wave of destructive magic.
He thought of Ania, huddled in Bronislaw’s house, touched by the plague, her small life hanging by a thread. He thought of the villagers, already robbed of peace in death. And he thought of Yennefer, the real Yennefer, and the terrible parody of her grief-stricken face.
"There’s a child in the village," Geralt said, his voice quiet. "Ania. She’s sick. Did you try to heal her?"
Morwen looked away, her ancient face contorting with fresh anguish. "I tried. I gave her what poultices I had, what herbs I knew. But the plague… it is beyond my healing. It leaves no one."
Geralt felt a familiar knot of determination tighten in his gut. This wasn't just about fighting a monster anymore. It was about restoring a semblance of order, of peace, to a place utterly consumed by despair. And perhaps, a small measure of atonement for the well-meaning, but catastrophic, actions of an old woman.
"I need to break the binding," Geralt said, turning the phylactery over in his hand. "And put the spirits to rest. All of them." He looked at Morwen, his yellow eyes unwavering. "But it will be dangerous. And I will need your help. You started this, Morwen. You will help me finish it."
Morwen met his gaze, her fierce eyes betraying a flicker of hope amidst the profound sorrow. She nodded slowly, a single tear escaping the corner of her eye. "Whatever you need, Witcher. For them. For all of them."
Geralt looked around the burned chapel, the air heavy with the ghosts of prayers and screams. The night was far from over. He had a powerful binding to break, a tormented spirit to free, and a village to cleanse, not just of a monster, but of the lingering tendrils of death and despair. And he had to do it all while staring into a face that threatened to break his own resolve.
He had a long, long night ahead.
The wind, now a persistent, biting presence, tugged at Geralt’s hair and clothes, carrying with it the mournful scent of decay and damp earth. He stood in the graveyard, the small silver locket clutched in one hand, the charred phylactery in the other. The moon, a mere sliver, offered scant illumination, but the objects felt heavy and cold, anchors in the swirling uncertainty. The blurry image in the locket – a young woman with dark hair – seemed to mock him with its faded familiarity. It wasn’t Yennefer, not truly, but the echo was there, a shadow in the periphery of his memory.
The phylactery hummed with a faint, malevolent energy, a whisper of dark magic that prickled his senses. This wasn’t some forgotten relic; it was potent, recently used, and deeply corrupted. It solidified his growing theory: this wasn’t a random haunting. This was a deliberate act, a ritual gone awry, its consequences manifesting in a form that tore at his soul. He looked towards the mill, its silhouette a dark, heavy mass against the bruised sky. Inside, the tormented echo of Yennefer lay bound.
He returned to the mill, the heavy wooden door creaking mournfully as he pushed it open. Bronislaw huddled in a corner, his face ashen, his eyes fixed on the bound figure. The banshee, or whatever she was, remained motionless, a still, pale heap against the rough timber. Even unconscious, a faint chill seemed to emanate from her, a cold that seeped into the very air.
"Anything?" Geralt asked, his voice low.
Bronislaw flinched, startled. "No. Not a peep. Just… still." He swallowed hard, his gaze darting to Geralt’s hands. "What have you found, Witcher?"
Geralt held up the phylactery. "This. And a locket. They were buried near the disturbed graves." He paused, letting his gaze sweep over the old man. "This isn’t a natural occurrence, Bronislaw. Someone performed a ritual here. A necromantic one."
Bronislaw’s eyes widened, then narrowed with dawning horror. "A ritual? But… who? Why? We are simple folk, Witcher. We have no mages here."
"Not anymore, perhaps," Geralt countered, his voice flat. "But someone did. This phylactery is a vessel for powerful magic. And the way she’s been acting… it’s not to feed. It’s to obliterate. To erase the dead. Why would someone want to do that?"
The old man’s face was a mask of confusion, then a flicker of something else, something akin to reluctant memory. "Erase… the dead? There was talk, years ago. Before my time, mostly. Of a small chapel, out past the village. Burned down, it was. And a madwoman, they called her. A healer, some said, but others whispered she tried to… speak to the dead." He trailed off, shaking his head. "Old wives' tales, Witcher. Nonsense."
"No," Geralt said, a cold certainty settling in his gut. "Not nonsense. Where is this chapel?"
Bronislaw pointed a trembling finger towards the far edge of the village, past the last rows of abandoned houses, where the forest began to reclaim the land. "That way. Beyond the old mill pond. But it’s nothing now. Just ruins. Burnt to the ground decades ago."
Geralt didn’t need to be told twice. He secured the mill door as best he could, leaving Bronislaw to his vigil. He took his steel sword this time, leaving the silver on his back. Whatever he was facing now, it wasn't a simple monster, but a human hand behind the haunting.
The path to the chapel was even more overgrown than the village roads, brambles and thorny bushes grasping at his trousers. The air grew heavier here, the smell of burnt wood mingling with the omnipresent decay. He could feel the residual magic, stronger now, a dark, oppressive presence that made the hairs on his arms prickle.
The chapel ruins stood stark against the moon-dimmed sky, a skeletal outline of a building. Charred timbers jutted like broken bones, and the roof had long since collapsed, leaving only a gaping maw open to the elements. The stone walls were blackened, stained by generations of soot and rain. A single, broken bell lay on its side in the overgrown weeds, half-buried, its silence more profound than any chime.
As he stepped over the threshold, a wave of cold dread washed over him, a sense of profound sorrow and desperate clinging. The magic here was thick, almost suffocating. It hummed in the air, a low thrumming that resonated in his teeth. He activated his Witcher Senses, and the world sharpened. The residual energy of countless lives, of prayers and laments, was almost visible, shimmering like heat haze. But beneath it, a deeper, colder current pulsed – the unmistakable signature of necromancy.
He saw faint, ghostly trails of energy, like lingering footsteps, leading towards what would have been the altar. The ground there was disturbed, not by frantic digging, but by something more deliberate. He knelt, examining the soil. It was loose, recently turned, and bore the faint impression of a small, gnarled boot. He sniffed. The scent was faint, masked by the pervasive smoke and damp earth, but it was there: old parchment, faint incense, and a cloying, sickly sweetness that reminded him of the smell that had clung to the courier boy. And something else, something he hadn’t noticed before. The sharp, acrid tang of burned herbs, of dried blood.
"I know you’re here," Geralt said, his voice cutting through the oppressive silence, flat and devoid of inflection. "Stop hiding."
A long pause. Then, a soft rustle from behind a collapsed section of wall, near where the sacristy might have been. A figure emerged, slowly, reluctantly.
It was a woman, old and stooped, her frame frail beneath layers of faded, patched robes. Her hair, thin and white, escaped from a coarse hood, framing a face that was a roadmap of wrinkles, her skin like ancient parchment. Her eyes, however, were startlingly bright, burning with an almost feverish intensity. She clutched a gnarled wooden staff, its tip carved with crude, pagan symbols. Her presence filled the burned chapel with a faint, unsettling aura, a mix of arcane power and profound weariness.
"The Witcher," she rasped, her voice thin and reedy, but with an underlying current of steel. "I knew you’d come. I felt your presence, like a stone dropped in still water."
"You summoned the boy. You sent him to me," Geralt stated, his gaze unwavering. "And you performed the ritual. The banshee… she wears a familiar face. Tell me why."
The old woman let out a dry, rattling cough, a sound like autumn leaves skittering across stone. "Familiar, you say? Ah, yes. The Lady of Vengerberg. A powerful mage. And a fool." Her eyes, sharp as a hawk’s, studied him. "You loved her, didn’t you?"
Geralt ignored the barb, his hand resting on the hilt of his steel sword. "What did you do?"
"What I had to do," she retorted, her voice gaining strength, a spark of defiance in her ancient eyes. "My name is Morwen. I am the last of my line. This village… it was once alive. Full of laughter, of children. Then the plague came. A vile, creeping death. It took them all. My daughter. My grandchildren. My husband. Everyone." Her voice cracked, a raw edge of grief piercing through her stoicism.
"They were all dying," she continued, her gaze sweeping over the charred ruins as if seeing ghosts. "One by one, they wasted away. And the bodies… the bodies piled up. I tried to save them. I am a healer, not a mage of your kind, Witcher, but I have always felt the currents. The whispers. The pull of what lies beyond." She gestured to the disturbed earth near the altar. "I buried my family here. I saw the fear in their eyes. The terror of being forgotten, of their very existence being swallowed by the earth."
"So you bound a spirit to a corpse," Geralt prompted, his voice flat, already piecing together the grim tableau.
"No!" Morwen’s voice rose, sharp with indignation. "Not a corpse. Not exactly. I sought to protect them. To stop the plague, to keep them safe, even in death. I sought to give them peace. But the plague… it was too strong. It poisoned the very ground. It twisted everything." She clutched her staff tighter. "I found a vessel. A powerful one. A phylactery, yes. But it was empty. A shell. I sought to imbue it with protection, with a ward against the plague’s creeping corruption, against the finality of their decay."
"And the face?" Geralt pressed, his voice taut. "Why her face?"
Morwen flinched, her bright eyes flickering with a mixture of fear and shame. "I… I made a mistake. A terrible mistake. I sought a strong spirit, one of powerful will, to imbue the phylactery. To act as a guardian. I performed a ritual of calling, a desperation born of grief. I thought… I thought I was calling upon the essence of a protector, a ward. I called upon the Lady of Vengerberg. Her legend, her power, her fierce will. I thought to draw her essence, a fragment of her strength, to protect my people."
A gasp caught in her throat. "But the plague… it had seeped into everything. The very essence of death was strong here. The ritual twisted. Instead of a protective ward, it drew forth… a lament. A powerful, grieving spirit, bound to the very act of obliteration. And the body… the body it animated was the last of my daughter’s friends, a woman who had died just before the ritual, whose features… whose features were coincidentally similar to the image I held in my mind’s eye of the sorceress."
Geralt absorbed her words, the truth a cold, bitter taste in his mouth. Not Yennefer, not truly. But a ritual of desperation, invoking Yennefer’s name and power, had twisted a local woman’s corpse into a vessel for profound, annihilating grief. The resemblance wasn't a cruel trick of fate, but a tragic echo, a side effect of Morwen’s misguided magic.
"She’s not trying to harm anyone," Morwen whispered, her voice barely audible. "She’s trying to unmake them. To erase them from the grip of the plague. To free them from suffering. To make it as if they never died, never suffered." Tears welled in her bright eyes, tracing clean paths down her grimy cheeks. "But it’s a madness. It’s a torment. It gives them no peace. Only destruction."
"You created a monster of grief," Geralt stated, his voice devoid of judgment, only a grim understanding. "And you sent for me to clean up your mess."
Morwen straightened, despite her frailness. "Yes! Because I cannot undo it! The magic is too strong, too corrupted. It’s not just her spirit, Witcher. It’s the collective sorrow of all those lost to the plague, funneled into that vessel. And the image I called forth… it gave it a focus, a terrible, destructive purpose." She looked at him, her gaze pleading. "You are a Witcher. You understand these things. You must find a way to give them peace. All of them. Not just the one in the mill, but the dead."
Geralt ran a hand over his tired face. The contract was clear: stop the monster. But this wasn’t a beast. This was a tragedy, born of love and loss, twisted by desperation and dark magic. And the face in the mill… it haunted him still.
"The phylactery," he said, holding it up. "This is the anchor, isn’t it? The source of the binding."
Morwen nodded, her gaze fixed on the blackened box. "It holds the core of the ritual. The corrupted essence. But it is sealed. I couldn’t break it. And now… it pulses with a life of its own. A dead life."
Geralt felt the faint thrumming of the phylactery in his hand. It wasn’t just an anchor; it was a conduit, channeling the raw grief and the botched invocation. To free the tormented spirit, to give peace to the desecrated dead, he would have to sever that connection. But simply destroying the phylactery might unleash an even greater, more chaotic wave of destructive magic.
He thought of Ania, huddled in Bronislaw’s house, touched by the plague, her small life hanging by a thread. He thought of the villagers, already robbed of peace in death. And he thought of Yennefer, the real Yennefer, and the terrible parody of her grief-stricken face.
"There’s a child in the village," Geralt said, his voice quiet. "Ania. She’s sick. Did you try to heal her?"
Morwen looked away, her ancient face contorting with fresh anguish. "I tried. I gave her what poultices I had, what herbs I knew. But the plague… it is beyond my healing. It leaves no one."
Geralt felt a familiar knot of determination tighten in his gut. This wasn't just about fighting a monster anymore. It was about restoring a semblance of order, of peace, to a place utterly consumed by despair. And perhaps, a small measure of atonement for the well-meaning, but catastrophic, actions of an old woman.
"I need to break the binding," Geralt said, turning the phylactery over in his hand. "And put the spirits to rest. All of them." He looked at Morwen, his yellow eyes unwavering. "But it will be dangerous. And I will need your help. You started this, Morwen. You will help me finish it."
Morwen met his gaze, her fierce eyes betraying a flicker of hope amidst the profound sorrow. She nodded slowly, a single tear escaping the corner of her eye. "Whatever you need, Witcher. For them. For all of them."
Geralt looked around the burned chapel, the air heavy with the ghosts of prayers and screams. The night was far from over. He had a powerful binding to break, a tormented spirit to free, and a village to cleanse, not just of a monster, but of the lingering tendrils of death and despair. And he had to do it all while staring into a face that threatened to break his own resolve.
He had a long, long night ahead.
The cold, precise logic of a Witcher’s mind warred with the raw, visceral ache in Geralt’s chest. The resemblance to Yennefer, even in its grotesque distortion, was a phantom limb of pain, reminding him of what he’d loved, and what he’d lost. But Morwen’s confession had given him a path, a purpose beyond mere slaying.
"We need a counter-ritual," Geralt stated, his voice a low rasp. "To sever the phylactery's connection, not destroy it outright. Destroying it could release uncontrolled chaos." He looked at Morwen. "What materials did you use for the original binding? What incantations?"
Morwen seemed to visibly age further under the question, her shoulders slumping. "Dried mandrake root, grave dust from the first plague victims, my own blood… and a shard of obsidian I’d kept since I was a girl. It was meant to draw power, to focus the will." Her voice was a dry whisper. "The incantation was from an old folk grimoire, twisted with my own desperate pleas. It was meant to bind a guardian, not a sorrow."
"And the shard of obsidian?"
"It’s still here. Buried beneath the altar, where the ritual was performed." She pointed a trembling finger to a patch of still-disturbed earth. "It was supposed to anchor the protection."
Geralt nodded, already moving. He retrieved the obsidian, a jagged, dark piece of rock that felt unnaturally cold. It pulsed with a faint, corrupted energy, a mirror to the phylactery. "Good. We’ll need to use these to reverse the flow. Not to destroy, but to unravel."
He gathered what he could from the chapel ruins: loose stones, dry, brittle branches, remnants of sacred texts – anything to form a makeshift circle. Morwen, surprisingly agile for her age, helped him, her movements driven by a desperate need for atonement. He placed the phylactery at the center of the crude circle, the obsidian shard beside it.
"We need to go back to the mill," Geralt said, straightening. "The body is the vessel. The spirit is bound to it. We need to perform the counter-ritual in its presence."
The return journey to the mill was quicker, though the oppressive silence of the village still gnawed at the edges of his calm. Bronislaw still huddled in the corner, a figure of frozen terror. The bound 'banshee' lay as they’d left her, but as they entered, a low, guttural moan escaped her lips, a sound of awakening torment. Her body twitched, the ropes straining.
"She’s stirring," Bronislaw whispered, his voice barely audible.
"She feels the change in the air," Geralt replied, his hand resting on the hilt of his silver sword. He still wouldn't use it on her, not like this. But he needed it ready.
Morwen moved to the center of the mill, her ancient staff thudding softly on the wooden floor. Geralt placed the phylactery and the obsidian shard on a flat stone near the bound figure, just within reach. He began to draw Igni signs in the air, small, controlled bursts of flame, not for attack, but to purify, to channel. The air in the mill grew thick, charged with the clashing energies of the binding and the unraveling.
The 'banshee' let out a piercing shriek, her head thrashing. Her eyes, still vacant and bloodshot, fixed on Morwen, then on Geralt, a terrible accusation in their depths. The ropes groaned, threatening to give.
"Now, Morwen!" Geralt commanded, his voice a low growl. "The incantation. Reverse it. Focus on release, on peace."
Morwen closed her eyes, her lips moving, chanting in a reedy, tremulous voice. It was a language Geralt didn’t recognize, ancient and forgotten, but the intent was clear: a plea, a supplication for release. As she chanted, Geralt focused his own energy, channeling it into the phylactery, guiding the raw power of the obsidian. He visualized the threads of magic, the dark, twisted tendrils binding the grief-stricken spirit to the corpse, to the village, to the collective sorrow. He would sever them.
The phylactery began to glow, a faint, sickly green light emanating from its charred surface. The obsidian shard pulsed in response, a dull, angry red. The bound figure screamed, a sound that was no longer just wailing, but a cacophony of voices, a chorus of despair, the collective agony of Lindenvale's dead. The mill timbers groaned, dust showering down from the rafters.
Geralt pressed harder, his teeth clenched. He could feel the resistance, the raw, clinging grief fighting back, threatening to overwhelm him. The face of Yennefer, twisted in torment, flashed before his eyes, almost derailing him. He pushed it away, focusing on the true task: peace.
With a final, desperate surge of will, he pushed his energy into the phylactery, Morwen’s chant reaching a crescendo. There was a blinding flash of white light, an explosion of energy that threw Geralt back against the wall, rattling his bones. The sound that followed was not a scream, but a sigh – a profound, collective exhalation of sorrow, a whisper of countless voices fading into the night.
When the light faded, the mill was silent. The air felt lighter, cleansed, though the smell of damp wood and decay still lingered. The ropes lay slack on the floor. The phylactery was cold, inert, its malevolent hum gone. The obsidian shard was a dull, lifeless rock.
And the body… the 'banshee' lay still, no longer bound. Her face, though still gaunt, had softened. The vacant, bloodshot eyes were closed. The resemblance to Yennefer was still there, but it was no longer a tormenting parody. It was simply the face of a dead woman, peaceful in repose.
Bronislaw, still huddled in the corner, let out a shaky, half-choked sob. Morwen, her face streaked with tears, collapsed to her knees, her staff clattering to the floor.
Geralt pushed himself up, his muscles aching, his head throbbing. He walked over to the body. No cold fire, no magic. Just a corpse. He closed her eyelids, a small gesture of respect. This was the friend of Morwen’s daughter, the last to die before the ritual, the vessel of a grief-stricken village.
"She’s at peace," Geralt said, his voice rough. "All of them are, now."
Morwen looked up, her bright eyes now softened by exhaustion and a fragile hope. "The terror… it’s gone?"
"It’s gone." He turned to Bronislaw. "We need to give her a proper burial. And then, we need to cleanse the village."
Bronislaw slowly unfolded himself, his steps still faltering, but a flicker of something new in his rheumy eyes – relief, perhaps, or a nascent hope. He looked at the body, then at Geralt, a silent understanding passing between them.
The rest of the night was spent in grim work. Geralt and Bronislaw, aided by a surprisingly resilient Morwen, carried the body to the graveyard. This time, the grave was dug with reverence, not haste. Geralt used a small Igni sign to cleanse the disturbed earth around the other graves, whispering a few words in Elder Speech, an ancient blessing for the dead. The air, though still cold, no longer held the cloying sweetness of decay, nor the suffocating presence of despair. The faint scent of lilacs and gooseberries, a ghost of Yennefer’s perfume, was gone.
As dawn began to paint the eastern sky with hues of rose and lavender, Geralt returned to Bronislaw’s house. Ania was still sleeping, her breathing still shallow, but there was a faint, almost imperceptible lessening of the wheeze. Geralt knelt beside her, placing a hand on her forehead. The fever was still there, but it felt less virulent, less absolute. He slipped a small, healing elixir he had left into her mouth. It wouldn't cure the plague, but it might give her a chance.
"The girl," Morwen said, her voice soft, appearing in the doorway. "She’s still sick."
"She has a chance now," Geralt replied, rising. "The plague’s magic has receded. She still needs care."
Morwen nodded, her gaze fixed on Ania’s pale face. "I will stay. I will do what I can. It is the least I owe this place. My penance."
Geralt watched her, then turned to Bronislaw, who stood by the cold hearth, looking out at the awakening village. The houses still stood abandoned, but the profound desolation had lifted, replaced by a quiet emptiness.
"The contract is fulfilled," Geralt said, his voice quiet. "The monster is gone. The spirits are at peace."
Bronislaw reached into his pocket, pulling out a small, heavy pouch of coin. "Witcher… thank you. You saved us. You gave them peace."
Geralt took the pouch, weighing it in his hand. It was more than he’d been promised, a gesture of profound gratitude. He nodded, then walked to Roach, who had been patiently waiting, snorting softly as he approached.
As he mounted, he looked back at Lindenvale. Morwen was already fussing over Ania, her movements slow but purposeful. Bronislaw stood at his doorway, a solitary figure in the rising sun, watching him. The village was still broken, still scarred, but the pervasive terror was gone.
He rode out, the rhythmic creak of worn leather and the clink of metal against metal now a familiar, comforting sound. The air smelled of pine needles and wet earth, clean and sharp. The sickly sweetness was gone. He was still Geralt, the Witcher, but something in him had shifted. He hadn’t killed a monster; he had untangled a tragedy. He had faced a ghost of his past and found a way to bring peace, not with a blade, but with understanding. The ache in his chest remained, a dull echo of Yennefer’s lost face, but it was no longer a wound that festered. It was a scar, a reminder of the complex, often heartbreaking, nature of his calling. He rode on, carrying the weight of Lindenvale’s sorrow, and a quiet, weary resolve. The path ahead was still long, but for now, the world felt a little less cruel.