The group walked steadily eastward, the road rising gently into low hills. The sun climbed higher, warming their backs. The two horses trailed behind, led by Seraphina, their hooves clopping in lazy rhythm against the packed dirt.
Lilithâstill unused to the open sky, the endless horizon, the sheer space of the surface worldâkept glancing at Elise and Seraphina with quiet, unabashed curiosity.
She had spent her life in darkness, confined tunnels and caverns of the dungeon. The concept of kingdoms, borders, and multi-racial societies was as foreign to her as sunlight had once been.
After a particularly long stretch of silence, she finally spoke, voice soft but clear.
"Princess Elise," she began, tilting her head slightly. "Your kingdom... Melium. What is it like?"
Elise looked over her shoulder with a small, surprised smile.
"You want to know about Melium?"
Lilith nodded once.
"I have never seen a kingdom with my own eyes."
Eliseâs expression softened. She adjusted her pace to walk more easily beside Lilith, Seraphina trailing close behind with the horses.
"Melium is... old. Very old. Our cities are built on layers of historyâsome streets still have cobblestones from the time of the First Alliance. And the people..." She paused, choosing her words carefully. "We are many races. Humans, of course. Elves in the northern forests. Dwarves in the mountain holds. Beastkin tribes in the eastern plains. Even halflings and gnomes in the merchant districts."
Lilithâs crimson eyes widened just a fractionâenough to show genuine surprise.
"All living in the same kingdom?"
Elise nodded.
"Not always peacefully. Old grudges die hard. But the Crown has enforced coexistence for generations. Laws protect all citizens equallyâregardless of blood. Markets are mixed. Schools teach children of every race side by side. Festivals blend traditions from a dozen cultures. It isnât perfect... but it works. Mostly."
She glanced toward Seraphina with a faint, wry smile.
"And demons?"
Seraphina answered before Elise could, voice gruff but honest.
"Very few. The wars with Asmodeusâs legions left scars that havenât healed. Most demons who live in Melium are either refugees who fled the Demon Lordâs rule or descendants of those who defected centuries ago. They keep to the border cities, under heavy watch. Trust is... thin."
Elise added quietly, "There are still skirmishes. Raids. Old hatreds flare up. But the law holds. A demon citizen has the same rights as a human or elf. Breaking that law brings punishmentâno exceptions."
Ignis, who had been listening intently while kicking small stones along the road, suddenly perked up.
"Thatâs why you two werenât shocked when you found out weâre not human!" she exclaimed, turning to walk backward so she could face them. "Youâre used to seeing all kinds of people! Demons, beastkin, whatever! Weâre just... another weird race to you!"
Seraphina actually chuckledâa short, surprised sound.
"More or less."
Eliseâs smile turned a little wistful.
"Melium has always believed that strength comes from difference, not sameness. Weâve paid dearly for that beliefâwars, betrayals, purges. But we still hold to it."
Lilith walked in silence for several steps, processing.
"Then your kingdom... allows monsters to live among you?" she asked, almost hesitantly.
"Not monsters," Elise corrected gently. "People. With rights. With names. With lives."
She looked at Lilith directly.
"And if you ever set foot in Melium... you would be people too."
Lilithâs expression didnât change muchâstill cool, still composedâbut her crimson eyes flickered with something very close to wonder.
Ignis grinned wide.
"That sounds kinda nice. Way better than âkill it before it kills us.â"
Adam, who had been listening quietly from the front, finally spoke without turning.
"Itâs a nice idea. But ideas donât always survive contact with reality."
Elise nodded slowly.
"I know. Thatâs why Iâm still running. Because even in Melium... some ideas are too dangerous for certain people to accept."
She looked ahead, toward the distant haze where the border lay.
"But maybe... one day... we can change that."
The road continued to wind gently upward, the hills rolling like soft green waves under the midday sun.
Adam had been quiet for a long stretch, turning something over in his mind. Finally, he slowed his pace until he walked level with Elise and Seraphina. His voice, when he spoke, was lowâalmost reluctant.
"Elise. Thereâs something I still donât understand."
She looked up at him, gray eyes curious but already bracing.
"Ask."
Adam exhaled slowly, as though the question itself carried weight.
"You said the curse passes down the royal bloodline. Every legitimate heir carries it. That means every rightful ruler of Melium has lived with this... thing inside them. Yet the kingdom still stands. Kings and queens have ruled, fought wars, raised familiesâall while cursed."
He paused, searching her face.
"So why risk everythingâyour life, Seraphinaâs life, an entire villageâjust to break it? If previous rulers managed to lead despite the curse... why canât you?"
Seraphinaâs reaction was immediate and fierce. She stepped forward, hand snapping to her sword hilt, voice cracking with barely-contained fury.
"Thatâs enough!" she snarled. "You have no idea what sheâs carriedâwhat sheâs endured. You donât get to stand there and question her sacrifice like itâs some puzzle for you to solve. You donât knowâ"
"Sera."
Eliseâs voice was quiet, but it sliced through her knightâs anger like cold water on fire. Seraphina stopped mid-sentence, chest heaving, eyes blazing with protective rage.
Elise reached out and gently touched Seraphinaâs gauntleted forearm.
"Peace," she murmured. "Heâs not accusing. Heâs asking. And he has every right to know why Iâm dragging himâand youâinto this."
Seraphinaâs jaw worked, but she stepped back, though her glare never left Adam.
Elise turned to him fully, gray eyes steady despite the tremor that passed through her voice.
"Youâre right," she said softly. "The curse does not stop a coronation. It weakens. It torments. It shortens life. But it does not stop a ruler from ruling. Every legitimate heir before me has worn the crown while carrying it. And every one of them had... protection."
She looked away for a moment, toward the distant horizon where the border lay hidden.
"In the deepest vaults beneath the royal palace lies the
Aegis Sanctum
âan ancient relic forged during the sealing of the Deathless King. It creates a field that suppresses the curseâs worst effects within Meliumâs borders. Pain becomes bearable. Progression slows. Lifespan extendsâenough to rule for decades, sometimes."
Her voice dropped lower, almost a whisper.
"But the Aegis only protects the one who wears the crown."
She closed her eyes briefly, as though the next words physically hurt.
"When I dieâand the curse will kill me long before old age doesâthe curse will pass fully to my successor. And if that successor is one of my younger siblings..."
She opened her eyes again, and for the first time since theyâd met, raw pain flickered across her composed features.
"They are not fit to rule. Not yet. Perhaps not ever. They would use the crown to crush opposition, not to lead. They would turn the Sanctum into a weaponâextend their own lives while letting the kingdom bleed. And the people... the people I swore to protect... would suffer for it."
Her voice crackedâjust once, barely audible.
"I cannot allow that. Not while I still breathe. If I can break the curse before I die, the Sanctumâs protection becomes unnecessary. The next rulerâlegitimate or notâwill inherit a throne free of this shadow. And maybeâjust maybeâMelium can finally heal from centuries of poisoned succession."
Seraphinaâs shoulders trembled. She looked away, blinking rapidly.
Elise reached out again, squeezing her knightâs arm.
"Thatâs why I ran," she said, voice steadying. "Not just to save myself. To save the kingdom from what my siblings would become if they took the throne while still carrying the curseâs full weight. To give them time to grow into something better... or to give the people a chance to choose someone else entirely."
Adam walked in silence for several steps, letting her words settle into him like stones in deep water.
"Thatâs... heavier than I thought," he said finally, voice rougher than usual.
Eliseâs smile was small, sad, and very tired.
"Royalty always is."
Seraphinaâs voice came out thick when she spoke again.
"Sheâs been carrying this alone for years. Every advisor who abandoned her. Every sibling who smiled while sharpening knives behind her back. Every night she woke up choking on her own blood, knowing the Aegis could ease it if she would only go home and claim the throne she was born for."
She looked at Adamâreally looked at him.
"And she still chose to run. To fight. To keep breathing long enough to end it for good."
Elise laughed softlyâalmost self-deprecating.
"Iâm not brave, Sera. Iâm terrified. Every day. But fear is a poor reason to let an entire kingdom fall into the hands of people who would burn it for their own comfort."
Adam met her gaze again.
"Youâre not just trying to survive," he said quietly. "Youâre trying to make sure no one else has to live like you have."
Elise nodded once, tears shimmering at the corners of her eyesâbut she didnât let them fall.
"Yes."