The road narrowed as it approached the border, flanked by low stone walls and watchtowers every few miles. The air grew thicker with the scent of pine and distant smoke.
By late afternoon, the first checkpoint came into viewâa sturdy timber gatehouse straddling the road, flanked by two tall watchtowers. Solariaâs banner snapped in the wind above the gate: golden sun on blue field. Six armored guards stood at attention, two mages in gray robes beside them, staffs glowing faintly with ward runes.
Adam slowed his pace, raising a hand to signal the others.
"Stay calm," he murmured. "Weâre just travelers."
Seraphina nodded tightly, adjusting her cloak to better conceal her battered armor. Elise pulled her hood lower, though her posture remained regal despite the exhaustion etched into her face. Ignis bounced once on her toes, then forced herself to walk with exaggerated slowness. Lilith simply glided forward, expression serene.
Inside Adamâs head, thoughts churned.
*Veil better work. If it fails here, weâre surrounded by six knights, two battle-mages, and gods-know-what reinforcements in those towers. One wrong aura reading and this turns into a bloodbath.*
His pulse stayed steady, but a faint pressure built behind his eyesâthe same tension heâd felt every time heâd faced a checkpoint in the dungeon depths, only now the stakes were higher. An entire fragile alliance could shatter in seconds.
*Stay sharp. Watch the mages. If they raise their staffsâ*
He cut the thought off as they reached the queue. Only three groups ahead of them: a merchant caravan with laden mules, a family of farmers with a cart of vegetables, and a lone traveler on foot.
The guards worked methodically. Papers checked. Questions asked. A mage passed a glowing crystal over each personâquick, clinical scans.
Adamâs group moved forward one step at a time.
Ignis whispered behind him, voice barely audible.
"My heartâs pounding like I ate too much fire-root."
Lilithâs reply was calm. "Breathe. Youâre human. Remember that."
Seraphina gripped the reins tighter, eyes flicking between the guards and Elise.
Elise herself looked sereneâalmost detachedâbut Adam could see the faint tremor in her fingers. She was betting her life on a spell she hadnât cast in months.
The merchant caravan cleared. The farmers next.
Then the lone travelerâa nervous-looking man in patched cloak, carrying a large satchel.
The lead guardâa grizzled sergeantâheld out his hand.
"Papers."
The man fumbled them out. The mage stepped forward, crystal glowing.
The crystal flared red.
"Contraband," the mage said flatly.
The sergeantâs hand went to his sword.
"Open the bag."
The travelerâs eyes widened. Panic flashed across his face.
In one desperate motion, he shoved the satchel into the nearest guardâs chest and boltedâstraight toward the treeline beyond the checkpoint.
Shouts erupted.
"Stop him!"
"Crossbow!"
The man sprinted, cloak flapping.
Adam reacted before conscious thought finished forming.
He movedâfast, but not too fast. A blur of motion that looked human to the untrained eye. In three strides he closed the distance, grabbed the manâs collar, and yanked him off his feet. The fugitive hit the ground hard, wind knocked out of him.
Adam pinned him with one knee on his back, voice low and calm.
"Running makes you look guilty."
The guards rushed over, swords drawn. The sergeant arrived first, breathing hard.
"Well done, traveler. You just saved us a chase."
Adam stood, hauling the man up by his collar like he weighed nothing.
"Didnât want him causing trouble for everyone else," he said simply, handing the squirming fugitive to the sergeant.
The sergeant clapped Adam on the shoulder.
"Youâve got quick hands. Appreciate it."
Behind Adam, Ignis let out a low whistle.
"Nice catch, boss."
Lilithâs lips curved faintly.
"Efficient."
Elise watched the scene with quiet intensity, gray eyes unreadable. Seraphina exhaled slowly, tension easing from her shoulders.
The sergeant turned back to the line.
"Rightânext group."
Adamâs group stepped forward.
The mage raised his crystal again.
Adam felt the faint brush of magic against his skinâlike cool water sliding over stone. The veil shimmered onceâbarely perceptibleâthen settled.
The crystal stayed blue.
The mage nodded.
"Travel papers."
Elise stepped forward smoothly, handing over the forged documents sheâd prepared earlier that morning.
"Five travelers from Melium," she said, voice calm and practiced. "Myself, my companions, and our escort. Heading to Red Hollow Pass for family business."
The sergeant scanned the papers, then glanced up at Elise.
"Royal seal?"
Elise inclined her head slightly.
"Temporary travel authorization. Issued under my authority."
The sergeantâs eyes widened fractionally as he recognized the seal.
"Princess...?"
Eliseâs smile was small, tired, but genuine.
"Just Elise now. But yes."
The sergeant straightened, suddenly formal.
"Pass through, Your Highness. Safe travels."
He waved them forward.
The group moved past the gateâslowly, deliberately, as though nothing unusual had happened.
Once they were out of earshot, Ignis let out a breath sheâd been holding.
"That... was way too close."
Lilithâs voice was soft.
"But it worked."
Adam glanced back at Elise.
"You okay?"
Elise nodded, though her hand trembled slightly.
"The veil held. And you... you just caught a smuggler like it was nothing."
Adam shrugged.
"Old habit. Trouble runs, you catch it before it makes more trouble."
The group had only just passed through the checkpoint and walked a few dozen paces down the road when Ignis suddenly stopped, spun on her heel, and glared back toward the gatehouse with exaggerated indignation.
"Hey!" she called out, loud enough for the guards to hear but not quite shouting. "Thatâs it? No âthank you, brave travelerâ? No âyouâre a hero, sirâ? Adam just saved your lazy butts from chasing that smuggler, and all you do is wave us through like weâre selling vegetables!"
The sergeant at the gate turned, eyebrows raised, then chuckled despite himself.
"Easy there, miss. Weâre gratefulâtruly. But weâve got a job to do, not a festival to run. Besides," he added with a grin, "if we started handing out medals to every quick-handed stranger, weâd run out of metal in a week."
One of the younger guards laughed, and even the mage cracked a small smile.
Ignis crossed her arms, still pouting dramatically.
"Hmph. Ungrateful. Next time Iâll let the smuggler run circles around you!"
Adam sighed and tugged her sleeve.
"Ignis. Come on. Weâre trying to stay low-profile."
Ignis grumbled but fell back into step, muttering under her breath.
"They couldâve at least clapped or something..."
Seraphina, walking beside Elise, shook her head with a faint, reluctant smile.
"Sheâs got spirit, Iâll give her that."
But the smile faded quickly as Seraphinaâs gaze shifted to Elise. The princess had kept her hood down the entire time at the checkpointâher golden hair and delicate features fully visible under the afternoon sun. No disguise. No attempt to hide her identity.
Seraphinaâs voice dropped to a tense whisper.
"Highness... you didnât even try to conceal yourself back there. The sergeant recognized the sealâand your face. Word will spread. If Cassian or Liora have spies in Arkwrightâs territory, theyâll know exactly where we crossed. And who weâre traveling with."
Elise didnât slow her pace, but her expression tightened.
"I know."
Seraphina pressed, voice low and urgent.
"Then why? You couldâve pulled the hood lower. Used an illusion charm. Anything. If they start hunting us in earnestâ"
"Because hiding only works if youâre not already marked," Elise interrupted gently. "The border guards log every royal seal they see. If Iâd tried to pass anonymously, theyâd have flagged it as suspiciousâpossible forgery, possible impostor. That wouldâve drawn more attention than simply being honest."
She glanced sideways at Seraphina, eyes softening.
"But more than that... Iâm tired of hiding who I am. Iâve spent years pretending to be less than I amâless visible, less dangerous, less of a threat. I wonât do it anymore. Not even for a day."
Seraphinaâs jaw clenched.
"Youâre putting a target on your back. On all our backs."
Elise reached over and touched her knightâs armâlight, reassuring.
"Iâm putting a target on the curse, Sera. Not on us. If Cassian or Liora want to come for me, let them. Iâm not running anymore. Iâm walking forward."
Seraphina exhaled sharply, frustration warring with loyalty.
"Youâre impossible."
Eliseâs smile was small but genuine.
"Youâve known that since we were children."
Ahead of them, Ignis had caught up to the conversation and turned, walking backward again with a grin.
"So youâre basically saying âcome and get meâ to your evil siblings? Thatâs kinda badass."
Seraphina shot her a look.
"Itâs reckless."
Ignis shrugged.
"Reckless got us out of the dungeon. Sometimes it works."
Adam slowed his pace until he walked beside Elise and Seraphina. His voice was low but firm, carrying just enough for the others to hear.
"We got lucky back there," he said. "The guards were distracted. The smuggler gave us an opening. But we canât count on luck every time."
He glanced at Elise, then Seraphina.
"From now on, be more careful. Donât act rashly. We donât know whenâor howâmisfortune might hit us. One wrong word, one careless move, and everything unravels. Weâre not invincible. None of us."
Seraphina nodded immediately, her expression grim but approving.
"Heâs right, Highness. Weâve been running on desperation and adrenaline too long. We need to think before we move."
Elise looked at Adam for a long moment, gray eyes thoughtful. Then she gave a small, genuine nod.
"I accept your advice," she said quietly.
She exhaled slowly, a faint smile touching her lips.
"Thank you for reminding me. Sometimes... I forget how fragile this all is."
Adam gave a short nod.
"Good. Letâs keep it that way."
Ignis, who had been listening while kicking a pebble along the road, piped up cheerfully.
"So no more âIâm a princess, bow downâ energy?"
Elise actually laughedâsoft, tired, but real.
"No more of that. At least not until we reach the Archivist."
Lilithâs quiet voice came from beside Adam.
"Prudent. We survive longer when we move like shadows, not torches."
The conversation shifted as the road crested a gentle rise. Below them lay the first proper town since Elden Hollow: a medium-sized settlement called Oakrest, nestled in a shallow valley where two rivers met. Stone walls encircled it, not high but solid. Smoke rose from dozens of chimneys. The market square was visible even from hereâcolorful awnings, the glint of goods, the murmur of voices carrying on the wind.
Seraphina pointed toward the town.
"Thatâs Oakrest. Last major stop before Duke Arkwrightâs inner lands. We should resupply hereâfood, water, maybe new cloaks. And rest properly tonight. Weâve been pushing too hard."
Elise nodded, already calculating.
"We need dried meat, hard bread, cheeseâthings that travel well. Healing herbs if we can find them. And..." She glanced at Adamâs group. "Clothing that makes us look less... conspicuous. Simple traveler garb."
Ignis perked up immediately.
"Market! Yes! I want to see everything! Spices, sweets, shiny stuffâmaybe they have fire-roasted nuts!"
Lilithâs lips curved faintly.
"And perhaps a quiet inn. I would like to sit still for once without something trying to kill us."