The storyteller has to solve increasingly complicated tasks. Kateryna will have to rescue a captive from the forest goblin—stop a minstrel from enchanting people with his voice, who also has plans for a crime; and try to change his story. She must free the Cat of Bayun and the Brown Wolf who got trapped in the fog and fell asleep there; manage to correct her own mistake so that the treacherous enemy doesn’t destroy all her friends. And in our world there are plenty of fairy-tale creatures who don’t really love people—so the storyteller will have to deal with them too. The goblin living in the Botanical Garden and the fairy-tale horse Sukhoviy will be happy to return to Lukomorye—if you talk to them the right way. It’s difficult, but sometimes it isn’t any easier than communicating with Kir and Stepan, who decided to quarrel with Kateryna. And in fairy-tale lands, Katya will also have to ruin the plans of a treacherous queen, help the birds-alkonosts, and wake many forgotten fairy tales from the fog.