The road had grown quieter as the afternoon deepened, the group spreading out slightly along the wide dirt path. Ignis walked far ahead, kicking stones and humming to herself, occasionally glancing back to make sure no one had fallen too far behind.
Lilith kept perfect pace with Adam, her steps silent, her crimson eyes constantly scanning the treeline out of old dungeon habit. Behind them, Seraphina led both horses with one hand while her other rested near her swordâever watchful, ever tense. Elise walked beside her knight, cloak pulled tight against the cooling breeze, but her posture was straighter now, the curseâs grip noticeably lighter in Adamâs presence.
It was Elise who finally broke the comfortable silence, her voice carrying just far enough for everyone to hear.
"Youâve all been kind enough not to press me about my family," she said, a small, wry smile touching her lips. "But I think itâs time you knew exactly whoâand whatâweâre running from."
Seraphina immediately stiffened. "Highness, you donât have toâ"
"I do," Elise interrupted gently but firmly. She glanced at Adam, then at Ignis (who had spun around and was now walking backward to listen), and finally at Lilith. "You deserve to know whose shadow is following us."
She took a slow breath, as though the names themselves tasted bitter.
"I have two younger siblings. Half-siblings, technicallyâboth born to my fatherâs second consort after my mother passed. Prince Cassian and Princess Liora."
Ignis tilted her head. "They sound fancy."
"They are," Elise said dryly. "And they hate that I exist."
She continued walking, her voice steady but laced with old, cold anger.
"Cassian is the elder of the two. Twenty-four. Tall, golden-haired, charming in publicâeverything a prince should appear to be. In private..." She paused, lips thinning. "He collects secrets the way some men collect swords. Blackmail, poison, whispers in the right earsâheâs methodical. Patient. Heâs already turned half the court against me without ever raising his voice. Every âaccidentâ that thinned my retinue? Every advisor who suddenly remembered urgent business elsewhere? Cassianâs hand, every time."
Seraphina growled low in her throat. "Heâs a snake wearing a crown. If he takes the throne, the council will become his personal puppet show. Anyone who speaks against him disappears."
Elise nodded once.
"And Liora..." Her voice softened, almost pained. "Sheâs nineteen. Beautiful. Brilliant with magicâespecially illusions and enchantment. She doesnât scheme like Cassian. She simply... convinces people. A smile here, a spell there, and suddenly entire noble houses are convinced Iâm unstable, unfit, dangerous. She cries beautifully when it serves her. The court adores her. They call her âthe gentle princess.â They donât see how her gentle suggestions always end with my allies isolated or disgraced."
Ignis frowned, kicking a pebble hard enough to send it skittering into the grass.
"So they both want you gone so one of them can be king or queen?"
"Exactly," Elise said. "But neither wants the other to win. Cassian would rather see Liora dead than let her wear the crown. Liora would poison Cassianâs wine tomorrow if she thought she could get away with it. Theyâre locked in their own silent warâand Iâm the only thing standing between them and absolute power."
Adam spoke quietly from the front, without turning.
"So they let the lich hunt you. Kept you weak. Isolated. Hoping the curseâor the Deathless King himselfâwould do their dirty work for them."
Eliseâs laugh was short and bitter.
"Yes. They made sure I had no allies left to protect me. No guards loyal enough to die for me. No resources to fight back. They waited for natureâor necromancyâto take its course."
Seraphinaâs voice cracked with fury.
"I stayed," she said fiercely. "I stayed when everyone else ran. And Iâll keep staying until the day I dieâor until sheâs free of this nightmare."
Elise reached over and squeezed her knightâs armâtight, grateful.
"I know, Sera. Iâve always known."
Ignis spun back around to face them, walking backward again.
"Thatâs messed up," she said bluntly. "Your own brother and sister trying to get you killed so they can play king and queen? Humans are weird."
Lilith tilted her head, genuinely curious.
"In the dungeon, we killed each other for food, territory, power. It was honest. This... hiding behind smiles and whispers... it feels more cruel."
Eliseâs smile turned sad.
"It is. Crueler than any blade. Because it wears the face of family."
Adam finally turned his head just enough to glance back at her.
"So youâre not just running from the lich," he said quietly. "Youâre running from your own blood. And youâre willing to die on this road rather than let them win."
Elise met his eyesâgray against crimson.
"Yes. Because if I go home and claim the throne now, I buy peace for a few years at most. Then I die, the curse passes to one of them, and Melium falls into a civil war that will make the Deathless Kingâs old rampages look like a skirmish. I wonât let that happen."
She straightened her shoulders despite the lingering weakness in her limbs.
"I will reach the Archivist. I will break this curse. And if I live long enough... I will return and take back what is mine. Not for power. For the people who still believe in what Melium could be."
A quiet fell over the group, heavy with the weight of what she had just laid bare. Even the wind seemed to pause, as though the hills themselves were listening.
Adam exhaled slowly through his nose, the sound almost lost beneath the soft clop of hooves behind them. He didnât look away from her.
"Then we keep moving," he said simply.
The afternoon sun had begun to slant westward, casting long shadows across the rolling hills. The group had settled into a steady walking pace, boots kicking up small puffs of dust on the dry trade road. Ignis had stopped her constant darting and now walked beside Adam, occasionally stealing glances at the two horses trailing behind Seraphina. Elise kept up remarkably well, her breathing even despite the lingering pallor. Seraphina walked at her side, leading both mounts, eyes scanning the horizon out of habit.
Lilith was the first to break the comfortable quiet, her voice calm and analytical as always.
"According to what Philip told us last night," she began, glancing toward Adam, "the main trade road east leads directly to the border. After crossing the checkpoint, it enters the territory controlled by Duke Arkwright. His lands stretch for several daysâ marchâfortified, heavily patrolled, but the road itself is well-maintained and relatively safe for travelers."
She paused, crimson eyes narrowing slightly in thought.
"If we stay on the road, we will pass through at least two major checkpoints: one at the border proper, and another deeper in Arkwrightâs domain, near the town of Red Hollow Pass. Both are manned by Solariaâs border guard and the Dukeâs personal knights. They check papers, auras, cargo... everything."
Adam nodded once, not breaking stride.
"We stay on the road."
Seraphina looked up sharply.
"Youâre that confident?"
Adam shrugged.
"Elise says her Veil of Kin will mask us. I trust her word on that."
He glanced back at Elise, who met his eyes steadily.
Elise inclined her head.
"I do. The veil rewrites your aura signature completelyâas long as Iâm conscious and within armâs reach when we cross the first ward line, the border mages will read you as human citizens of Melium. Travelers. Nothing more. No draconic essence. No void-touched shadow. Just... ordinary people."
Ignis tilted her head, curious.
"So we just... walk up, smile, and they wave us through?"
Seraphina snorted.
"Not quite that easy. Theyâll ask questions. Where youâre from, why youâre traveling, how long you plan to stay. If your answers donât match your forged papersâ"
"Weâll have papers," Elise interrupted smoothly. "I still carry the royal seal. Even in exile, itâs valid for border passage. I can issue temporary travel documents for all of us. Theyâll hold up under normal scrutiny."
Lilithâs voice came again, thoughtful.
"And the second checkpoint? The one in Arkwrightâs territory?"
Elise answered without hesitation.
"Same veil. Same documents. Arkwright is loyal to the crown, but heâs also practical. As long as we donât look suspicious and our paperwork is in order, they wonât dig deeper. The Dukeâs knights are more concerned with smuggling and demon raiders than random travelers."
Adam rubbed his chin.
"So we play it straight. Walk the road. Answer questions. Donât give them a reason to look twice."
Elise nodded.
"Iâll handle the talking at the checkpoints. I know the protocols. You three just stand behind me and look... human."
Ignis snickered.
"Should be easy for Adam. He already looks like a grumpy merchant who lost his wagon."
Adam shot her a dry look.
"Keep it up and youâre walking behind the horses."
Ignis laughed, but quieted when she saw Eliseâs expression turn serious again.
The princess looked eastward, toward the distant haze where the border waited.
"If we follow this plan," she said softly, "we should reach Red Hollow Pass in four days. From there, itâs another three to the Archivistâs last known locationâan old tower in the foothills beyond Arkwrightâs eastern march. Seven days total... if nothing goes wrong."
Seraphina muttered under her breath.
"When has anything gone right lately?"
Elise squeezed her knightâs arm.
"Weâre still breathing. Thatâs right enough."
Adam glanced back at the groupâfive mismatched souls bound by necessity, desperation, and the faint hope of answers.
"Then we keep walking," he said simply.