Ignisâs golden eyes widened with alarm as she saw Adam wince and press a hand to his temple.
"Adam! Youâre in painâare you okay?!"
Lilith was already there, silk handkerchief still gently dabbing the last traces of blood from beneath his nose. Her voice, though calm, carried a rare edge of worry.
"Is it the curseâs backlash? Did touching her soul affect you?"
Adam forced a small, reassuring smile, waving off their concern even as the lingering throb pulsed behind his eyes.
"Iâm fine. Just a little dizzy. Nothing serious." He straightened, rolling his shoulders. "Come onâletâs all get some rest. Weâve earned it."
Philip, still catching his breath from the nightâs chaos, let out a tired chuckle. "Iâm about ready to drop myself. Bedâs calling louder than any alarm bell right now."
They walked back to the cottage in quiet companionship, the village slowly settling into uneasy peace. Doors closed softly behind them. Torches guttered out. Only the moon and the faint glow of hearth fires remained.
Inside the warm house, Aish had already prepared extra blankets and pillows. No one spoke muchâexhaustion did the talking. They collapsed into their beds, the nightâs violence fading into heavy, dreamless sleep.
Morning arrived with soft sunlight filtering through the windows and the smell of fresh bread and porridge.
Breakfast was quiet but warm. Aish bustled about, insisting they eat well before the road. Philip watched them with a fatherly fondness that hadnât been there when they first arrived.
As they finished and began gathering their few belongings, Ignis leaned toward Adam, voice low.
"Those twoâthe princess and the knightâtheyâre going to want to talk to you. They kept staring last night."
Adam nodded, expression firm. "We donât have time. Alice is still fading inside me. Every hour counts. We canât get dragged into royal problems."
Philip overheard and smiled sadly. "Youâre good people. Better than most. Thank youâfor everything. For saving the village... and for giving my Aish back her strength."
Aish stepped forward, eyes shining. She took Adamâs hand, then Ignisâs and Lilithâs in turn.
"You will always have a home here. Whenever the road brings you west again... the door is open."
Adam bowed slightly. "Thank youâfor the hospitality, the food, the kindness. We wonât forget it."
Ignis grinned, though her eyes were a little misty. "Best breakfast ever. And the beds! So soft!"
Lilith inclined her head with quiet grace. "Your home carried warmth we rarely find. We are grateful."
They stepped outside into the crisp morning air, cloaks adjusted, packs light. The village was already stirringâchildren peeking from windows, farmers heading to fieldsâbut the trio moved toward the eastern road with purpose.
They had barely taken ten steps when hurried footsteps pounded behind them.
"Wait! Pleaseâwait!"
The armored knight came running, helmet off, short blonde hair disheveled, face pale with desperation. She skidded to a stop in front of them, breathing hard.
"Her Highness... Princess Elise... she wishes to speak with you. Please. Just for a moment."
Adam stopped, expression flat. "We have more important matters to attend to. Iâm sorry."
The knightâs shoulders sagged, but she didnât back down. She dropped to one kneeâarmor clanking against the dirt roadâhead bowed.
"I beg you. Sheâs awake now, barely, but she insists. She says she owes you her life twice over. Please... just hear her out."
Her voice cracked on the last word.
Ignis shifted uncomfortably. Lilithâs gaze flicked to Adam, waiting.
Adam exhaled through his nose, irritation warring with reluctant pity.
"Fine," he muttered. "But only for a moment."
The knightâs face lit with desperate gratitude. She rose quickly, almost stumbling in her haste.
"Thank you. This wayâplease."
She led them back toward the village hall, where the princess waited.
The village hall had been hastily converted into a makeshift sickroom. Sunlight streamed through narrow windows, catching motes of dust above the simple cot where Princess Elise lay propped against pillows. Her golden hair had been gently brushed and braided by village women, but the pallor of her skin and the faint dark veins still visible beneath it spoke of the curseâs lingering grip.
She looked up as Adam entered, followed closely by the knightâwhose name, Adam now knew from Philipâs quiet explanation, was Seraphinaâand then Ignis and Lilith at a respectful distance.
Eliseâs eyes were a soft storm-gray, sharp despite her weakness. They studied Adam with quiet intensityânot fear, not awe, but something in between: recognition, perhaps, of one predator sizing up another.
Seraphina bowed stiffly. "Your Highness... he came."
Elise inclined her head slightly, the movement graceful even in exhaustion. Her voice, when she spoke, was soft but carried the weight of someone accustomed to being heard.
"Adam," she began, testing the name as though it might reveal more than letters. "Thank you... for last night. And for this morning. I felt the moment the curse recoiled. It was... your presence, wasnât it?"
Adam stood near the foot of the cot, arms loosely crossed. He didnât bowâdidnât feel the need toâbut he met her gaze directly.
"Youâre welcome. But if youâre going to thank me, save it for when the curse is actually gone. What happened last night was temporary."
Eliseâs lips curvedâjust the barest hint of a smile, tinged with something bitter.
"Temporary is all Iâve known for years." She paused, studying him again. "You are not human. Not entirely."
It wasnât a question.
Adam didnât flinch. "Perceptive."
"I have to be," she said quietly. "The curse makes me... sensitive. To things that donât belong. Your aura is wrong. Like something ancient wearing a human skin."
Seraphina tensed, hand twitching toward her sword, but Elise raised a weak hand to stop her.
"Peace, Sera. If he wanted us dead, we would be."
She turned back to Adam, gray eyes steady despite the tremor in her voice.
"I did not call you here for gratitude alone. I called you because... I believe you might be the only one who can truly understand what this feels like."
Adam raised an eyebrow. "What what feels like?"
"Losing yourself," she answered simply. "Piece by piece. Every day waking up and wondering how much of the person you were is still left. Knowing the thing that hunts you isnât just an enemyâitâs become part of you. A parasite you carry in your blood, in your soul. Something that makes people look at you with pity... or fear."
The room grew very quiet.
Adam felt the words strike something buried deep. Memories of waking up as a hatchling viper. Of losing hands, legs, voice. Of becoming something monstrous and telling himself it was necessary for survival.
He exhaled slowly.
"I understand," he said, voice low. "More than you know."
Eliseâs gaze softenedânot with pity, but with the quiet relief of someone who had finally found another person who spoke the same language of loss.
"I donât want your pity," she continued. "And I wonât beg for your help. But if there is even a chance you can break this curseâtruly break it, not just suppress itâI would owe you my life. Not as a princess. As a person who refuses to be prey forever."
Adam studied her for a long moment. The defiance in her eyes. The guarded kindness. The cold anger she kept locked behind perfect poise.
"Youâre awfully quick to trust a stranger who just fought off a lich," he said, voice calm but edged. "Before we talk about anything... I have a few questions. "
Eliseâs gray eyes didnât waver. If anything, they sharpenedârespectful, but not intimidated.
"Ask," she said simply.
Adamâs first question came without hesitation.
"Why is the Deathless King suddenly chasing you in Solariaâs territory? Last I heard, Melium is half a continent away. And why only one guard? A princess should have a whole retinue."
Seraphina stiffened, hand twitching toward her sword hilt, but Elise raised a pale hand to stop her. The princessâs voice remained soft, yet carried a quiet steel.
"I will answer," she said. "Both of you deserve that much."
She took a slow breath, as though gathering the weight of years.
"I am the legitimate heirâfirstborn of the true bloodline. My younger siblings... do not share that legitimacy. The throne has always been contested, but my existence makes it impossible for them. As long as I live, uncursed or not, I am the lawful successor. That makes me inconvenient."
Her gaze dropped to her hands, fingers curling slightly.
"The curse was never meant for me alone. It was passed down the royal lineâpunishment from the Deathless King for the ancient sealing. When I was born, it claimed me fully. My siblings saw opportunity. They... encouraged the lichâs pursuit. Made sure I was isolated. My retinue was stripped away piece by pieceââaccidents,â âdesertions,â ânecessary reallocations.â Seraphina is the only one who refused to abandon me."
Seraphinaâs jaw clenched, eyes burning, but she remained silent.
Elise continued, voice steady despite the tremor beneath it.
"We fled west, toward Solaria. There is a wanderer hereâa man known as the
Archivist of Lost Tomes.
He has no title, no court, no allegiance. But his knowledge of ancient curses, forbidden magics, and soul-binding rituals is unmatched. If anyone can tell me how to truly break this curseânot suppress it, but end itâI believe it is him."
Adamâs expression didnât change, but inside, a quiet spark ignited.
âThe Archivist of Lost Tomes...â
âIf he knows curses, soul bindings... maybe he knows something about void corruption. Maybe he can help Alice.â
He kept the thought to himself, face impassive.
Lilith spoke next, voice cool and precise.
"Then why this route? The main trade road from Melium to Solaria is faster and better guarded. Why stray into these backwoods?"
Seraphina answered this time, voice thick with barely-contained rage.
"Because of
him
." She spat the word like poison. "The lich. Heâs been hunting us for months. Every time we took the main roads, his forces ambushed usâundead, mercenaries he paid, even traitors in our own ranks. We lost everyone. One by one. We were forced off the path, deeper into the wilds, running blind. Last night was the closest heâs ever come. If not for you..."
She trailed off, fists clenched.
Elise looked at Adam again, gray eyes clear and unflinching.
"I did not choose to bring this danger to Elden Hollow. I never would have. But when the lich forces you off every safe road... there is no clean path left. We ran here because there was nowhere else to run."
Adam exhaled slowly through his nose.
He didnât speak for a long moment.
Then:
"Youâre carrying a walking catastrophe on your back. And you ran straight into a defenseless village with it."
It wasnât an accusationâmore an observation, flat and factual.
Elise didnât flinch.
"I know," she said quietly. "And I hate it. Every day I hate it. But running forever isnât living. Hiding isnât surviving. I want this curse gone."