A golden Herring
Posted: Tue Dec 30, 2025 4:53 pm
Chapter One — The Golden Herring
Famine arrived on a day when Goetia was loud.
Vaeroth Swamp announced her presence long before the city did. The Asphyxion Veil pressed in like wet cloth over the lungs, thinning the air until breath became an intentional act. Each inhale scraped shallow. Each exhale tasted faintly of metal and rot. Even the swamp’s insects moved sluggishly, conserving what little oxygen remained.
The water beneath her feet was brine-thick and faintly luminous, caustic enough to hiss where it kissed stone. Somewhere nearby, methane pockets ruptured with dull, subterranean thumps—harmless this time, but warning enough. Acid rain fell in brief, spiteful spurts, sizzling as it struck the canopy. Vaeroth was doing what it always did.
Testing.
Famine passed through it untouched.
She crossed the root-markers and entered Gietua Goetia as one might step into a held breath. The city pulsed with mana—dense, transactional, alive. Power moved here the way blood did elsewhere, exchanged in favors, rituals, and measured suffering. This was the meat of Goetia: mana not as abstraction, but economy. A currency regulated by fear, reward, and the slow drip of sacrifice.
Seed had chosen the day well.
At the city’s core, beneath the fused canopy of dead trees, Morveth Kael—the Withering Sentinella— waited. Its roots bulged through broken avenues, drinking deep from rot and memory. Its bark wept a dark secretion that pooled into chalices and gutters alike.
A celebration had formed around it.
Firelight flickered against twisted stone as three elders of Seed were led forward. They were young, their bodies frail, but their faces told three very different stories.
Two of them smiled.
Not nervously. Not bravely.
They smiled as if they were elsewhere—eyes unfocused, mouths slack with contentment. Their steps were steady, their breathing shallow, their awareness… absent. The Withering Fruit had already hollowed them out, replacing fear with compliance. They were no longer fully inside their own bodies.
The third screamed.
He fought the hands guiding him, cursed Aldia by name, spat at the tree, begged the onlookers—anyone—to intervene. His terror cut sharp against the low hum of the crowd.
No one answered.
Around him, Seed members mingled freely. Conversations continued. Laughter rose. Drinks were passed hand to hand—goblets filled with a thick, red liquid drawn directly from Morveth Kael’s bark. It clung to the glass, viscous and warm.
One patron lifted his cup, inhaled deeply, and sighed in satisfaction.
“The Goi is especially ripe today,” he said, smiling to no one in particular. “Ole Karl’s pleas must’ve sweetened the juice.”
The screaming man was dragged closer to the roots.
Aldia stepped forward.
She did not raise her voice. She did not gesture grandly. She simply spoke, and the city listened.
“Thank you,” she said calmly, inclining her head toward the three sacrifices. “For your service. And thank you to those who have sustained today’s mana confluence. Goetia thrives because you understand what power costs.”
Applause followed—measured, respectful.
Then Aldia turned, and the tone shifted.
“Welcome our guests,” she announced.
From the shadows emerged the succubae—their skin glistening with natural oils that caught the firelight, their presence immediately altering the air. Pleasure radiated from them in subtle waves, not forced, not frantic, but intoxicating. They were not viewed as people tonight, but as reward, stewards and most importantly -currency, as indulgence earned.
The ritual begin to take a turn, one of passion and pleasure.
Bodies pressed together. Laughter grew louder, breath heavier. The Goi spilled freely—painted across skin, lips, throats. The city fed itself with sensation as eagerly as it fed the tree with flesh.
And Famine watched.
She stood unseen at the edge of it all, untouched by the Veil, unmoved by the noise. Yet even she felt it—the pull, the low heat curling beneath her ribs. Pleasure brushed against her awareness like a familiar enemy.
“Interesting.”
She noted it, cataloged it, and let it pass.
This was Seed’s mastery: a city sustained by excess, a god-tree fed by loyalty stripped of will, a people who had learned to conflate fulfillment and submission.
Famine had seen hunger take many forms.
This one brought a smile to the sorceress.
Famine arrived on a day when Goetia was loud.
Vaeroth Swamp announced her presence long before the city did. The Asphyxion Veil pressed in like wet cloth over the lungs, thinning the air until breath became an intentional act. Each inhale scraped shallow. Each exhale tasted faintly of metal and rot. Even the swamp’s insects moved sluggishly, conserving what little oxygen remained.
The water beneath her feet was brine-thick and faintly luminous, caustic enough to hiss where it kissed stone. Somewhere nearby, methane pockets ruptured with dull, subterranean thumps—harmless this time, but warning enough. Acid rain fell in brief, spiteful spurts, sizzling as it struck the canopy. Vaeroth was doing what it always did.
Testing.
Famine passed through it untouched.
She crossed the root-markers and entered Gietua Goetia as one might step into a held breath. The city pulsed with mana—dense, transactional, alive. Power moved here the way blood did elsewhere, exchanged in favors, rituals, and measured suffering. This was the meat of Goetia: mana not as abstraction, but economy. A currency regulated by fear, reward, and the slow drip of sacrifice.
Seed had chosen the day well.
At the city’s core, beneath the fused canopy of dead trees, Morveth Kael—the Withering Sentinella— waited. Its roots bulged through broken avenues, drinking deep from rot and memory. Its bark wept a dark secretion that pooled into chalices and gutters alike.
A celebration had formed around it.
Firelight flickered against twisted stone as three elders of Seed were led forward. They were young, their bodies frail, but their faces told three very different stories.
Two of them smiled.
Not nervously. Not bravely.
They smiled as if they were elsewhere—eyes unfocused, mouths slack with contentment. Their steps were steady, their breathing shallow, their awareness… absent. The Withering Fruit had already hollowed them out, replacing fear with compliance. They were no longer fully inside their own bodies.
The third screamed.
He fought the hands guiding him, cursed Aldia by name, spat at the tree, begged the onlookers—anyone—to intervene. His terror cut sharp against the low hum of the crowd.
No one answered.
Around him, Seed members mingled freely. Conversations continued. Laughter rose. Drinks were passed hand to hand—goblets filled with a thick, red liquid drawn directly from Morveth Kael’s bark. It clung to the glass, viscous and warm.
One patron lifted his cup, inhaled deeply, and sighed in satisfaction.
“The Goi is especially ripe today,” he said, smiling to no one in particular. “Ole Karl’s pleas must’ve sweetened the juice.”
The screaming man was dragged closer to the roots.
Aldia stepped forward.
She did not raise her voice. She did not gesture grandly. She simply spoke, and the city listened.
“Thank you,” she said calmly, inclining her head toward the three sacrifices. “For your service. And thank you to those who have sustained today’s mana confluence. Goetia thrives because you understand what power costs.”
Applause followed—measured, respectful.
Then Aldia turned, and the tone shifted.
“Welcome our guests,” she announced.
From the shadows emerged the succubae—their skin glistening with natural oils that caught the firelight, their presence immediately altering the air. Pleasure radiated from them in subtle waves, not forced, not frantic, but intoxicating. They were not viewed as people tonight, but as reward, stewards and most importantly -currency, as indulgence earned.
The ritual begin to take a turn, one of passion and pleasure.
Bodies pressed together. Laughter grew louder, breath heavier. The Goi spilled freely—painted across skin, lips, throats. The city fed itself with sensation as eagerly as it fed the tree with flesh.
And Famine watched.
She stood unseen at the edge of it all, untouched by the Veil, unmoved by the noise. Yet even she felt it—the pull, the low heat curling beneath her ribs. Pleasure brushed against her awareness like a familiar enemy.
“Interesting.”
She noted it, cataloged it, and let it pass.
This was Seed’s mastery: a city sustained by excess, a god-tree fed by loyalty stripped of will, a people who had learned to conflate fulfillment and submission.
Famine had seen hunger take many forms.
This one brought a smile to the sorceress.