Adam gave Lilith a curt nod. "Good catch."
A faint, pleased smile touched Lilithâs lips before melting back into her usual mask of serene observation.
âThey lied,â Adamâs mind raced, cold and clear. âThey claimed to be the Dukeâs men, but the Dukeâs own captain is apprehending them. That means theyâre someone elseâs agents, trying to frame the Duke or simply use the confusion as cover. Which means the real threat is still hidden, and their target was never just me and Lilith.â
A cold spike of dread shot through him. âIf this was a diversion... or part of a larger plan... Ignis is back at the inn with Elise and Seraphina.â
"Hey," Adam said, his voice urgent, cutting through the noise as the guards secured the now-gagged assassin. "We need to return to our inn. Immediately."
Gareth turned from his men, his expression stern and unyielding. "Your concern is noted, but it changes nothing. You are both material witnesses and participants in an act of lethal violence within Oakrestâs boundaries. You will accompany us to the garrison for a formal statement and questioning. Now."
Adamâs posture shifted from urgent to dangerously still. The air around him seemed to grow heavier. "No."
The single word, flat and final, hung in the alley. Several guardsâ hands went to their weapons.
Garethâs eyes narrowed. "This is not a request. Refusing a direct order from the Dukeâs Guard is a crime. Do not make this more difficult than it has to be."
"My companion and I were attacked," Adam stated, each word sharp as a blade. "We defended ourselves. We have even helped you preserve a prisoner for your investigation. But we are not suspects, and we are not your subjects. Our party is incomplete, and their safety is my priority. I am leaving. Now."
He took a deliberate step back, his gaze locked on Gareth. It was not a retreat; it was a declaration. Lilith fell in beside him, her movements silent and fluid, a shadow ready to become a storm.
Garethâs hand tightened on the hilt of his greatsword. The guards formed a looser, hesitant half-circle around them. They had seen how easily these two had handled the assassins.
"You would raise arms against the Dukeâs authority in his own town?" Garethâs voice was low, dangerous. "That is a line, once crossed, from which there is no return. Think carefully."
Adamâs crimson eyes glinted in the lantern light. A trace of dark energy, like oily smoke, began to wisp from his free hand. "The only line I care about is between me and my people. Get out of my way, Captain. I wonât ask again."
The standoff was absolute. Violence, this time against the legitimate authority of Oakrest, teetered on a knifeâs edge. Gareth had to decide: enforce the letter of the law and potentially lose men in a bloody fight, or let them go and deal with the political fallout.
The choice was ripped from him a second later when a frantic, panting town guardsman came skidding into the alley from the direction of the main square.
"Captain! Captain Gareth! Fire and a disturbance at The Travelerâs Rest! Reports of a fight, screaming, and then a... a flash of light! The innkeeper says a whole room is emptyâthe guests, his door, everything is just gone!"
All the color drained from Adamâs face.
âIgnis.â
He didnât wait for Garethâs reaction. He didnât say another word. With a speed that blurred perception, he turned and sprinted into the darkness.
In an unknown place.
Ignis panted, sweat mixing with soot on her brow. The restraint was the hardest partâholding back her full draconic strength, limiting her flames to controlled bursts to maintain the human facade, all while protecting two others.
It was exhausting in a way dungeon brawls never were. Beside her, Eliseâs face was pale as parchment, her breathing shallow as she leaned heavily against the wall, her magical reserves clearly drained. Seraphina stood between them and the assassins, but her stance wavered; her sword arm trembled, and the stain on her leg had grown. She was operating on sheer will, her eyes glazed with pain and fatigue.
The two remaining assassins, though showing the sickly pallor of the pillâs backlash, sensed the precipice. Their leader wiped blood from a split lip, his voice a ragged but triumphant rasp. "Lay down your arms. This struggle is pointless. You only prolong the inevitable and make your final moments more pathetic."
Elise lifted her chin, defiance glowing faintly in her eyes despite her weakness. "The only pathetic ones here are mercenaries who must kidnap a âweakâ woman because their master lacks the courage to face her kingdom openly."
Ignis spat to the side, a small ember sizzling on the stone. "And you fight like cowards! Ganging up, using tricks and pills! Is that all you have?"
"Itâs called strategy, little girl," the second assassin sneered, hefting his dagger. "And itâs about to end."
They attacked as one, a final, coordinated surge. The leader went low, aiming for Seraphinaâs injured leg to cripple her completely. The other went high, his blade a silvery streak aimed not at Seraphina, but past herâa throw aimed directly at Eliseâs exposed shoulder.
Seraphina saw it. Her body screamed in protest, her vision swimming. She knew she couldnât move fast enough to block both.
âNo. Not like this. I swore an oath. I will not fail her. NOT AGAIN!â
The thought was a white-hot brand in her soul. And something within herâsomething locked deep behind duty, discipline, and a lifetime of trainingâshattered.
A brilliant, silver-gold light erupted from Seraphinaâs body. It wasnât fire like Ignisâs. It was purer, sharperâthe visible manifestation of a knightâs sworn oath, made tangible by sheer, desperate will. The light formed a concussive wave that blasted outwards.
The assassins were caught mid-lunge. The wave hit them like a physical wall. They were thrown backwards, crashing into the far wall with bone-jarring force, their weapons clattering from their hands.
Elise stared, her exhaustion forgotten for a moment. "Sera...?"
Seraphina stood amidst the fading glow, her breathing harsh but steady. The trembling in her limbs was gone, replaced by a profound, solid certainty. The light had healed nothingâher leg still bled, her fatigue remainedâbut it had ignited something else entirely. Her eyes held a new, piercing intensity.
"I did not expect... to expend it all in one burst," Seraphina said, her voice ringing with a strange, resonant authority. "So I require support. Your Highness, now! An enchantment for piercing and binding!"
Elise, jolted into action, nodded sharply. Her hands flew up, weaving a complex, shimmering pattern of crimson light. "Crimson Sigils of Submission!" she chanted, and the glowing runes shot forward, swirling around the dazed assassins.
Ignis stared at Seraphina, her own fiery aura guttering in surprise. "Whoa... Sera, youâre shining!"
A fierce, competitive grin split Ignisâs soot-streaked face. "If youâre gonna get all flashy... then Iâm not holding back either!"
She stopped suppressing herself. The air around her warped with sudden, intense heat. A soft, glowing pattern of crimson and gold scales shimmered into visibility across her skinânot just on her arms, but tracing her neck and cheeks. Her pupils elongated into fiery slits. When she bared her teeth in a snarl, they seemed sharper. Two small, knobby protrusions at her temples became more pronounced, like the beginnings of horns. An aura of palpable, predatory heat rolled off her, making the very stone groan.
The assassins, struggling against Eliseâs binding sigils, looked up and their eyes widened in genuine, primal terror. The injured knight had become a beacon of formidable will. But the fiery girl... she was no longer just a strong brawler. She was shedding her human skin, revealing something older and far more monstrous beneath.
"W-What are you...?" the leader stammered, his confidence finally cracking.
Ignis cracked her neck, the sound like popping embers. "Tired of playing nice," she growled, her voice layered with a deeper, draconic rumble. She raised a hand, and the fire that coalesced there was no longer just orange and red, but tinged with the blinding white of a starâs core. "Letâs finish this."
With Ignis no longer restraining herself, she became a force of pure, draconic wrath. Her punches carried the weight of falling boulders, shattering the stone floor where they landed. Gouts of white-hot flame, hotter and more intense than before, seared the air, forcing the assassins into a desperate, panicked defense. Seraphina moved with her newfound, oath-forged clarity, her sword a silver blur that seemed to predict their movements, each parry followed by a punishing strike that cracked armor and bone.
The assassins were overwhelmed, their coordination broken. The leader took a glancing hit from Ignis that spun him around, his arm hanging at a sickening angle. "The girl... sheâs some kind of dragon-kin! Damn it, she was holding back this whole time!"
The second assassin, bleeding from a dozen cuts, spat out a tooth. "The plan! We have to move to the contingency! Now!"
"The contingency? Are you insane?" the wounded leader hissed, his face pale. "Thatâs... weâd be dealing with him directly! That lickspittle Lich could just as easily discard us!"
"Do you see another way?!" the other screamed, ducking a slash from Seraphina that took a chunk from his hood. "If we stand here, we die! If we follow the contingency, at least we might survive! He needs us to deliver the package!"
A look of utter resignation and terror crossed the leaderâs face. He gave a sharp, jerky nod. "Do it!"
The less-injured assassin disengaged with a desperate roll, putting distance between himself and Ignisâs flames. From within his ruined tunic, he yanked out a small, obsidian-black crystal, veins of sickly green light pulsing within it.
"Theyâre planning something!" Seraphina yelled, lunging forward to stop him.
She was fast, but the assassin was committed. With a cry of despair and defiance, he smashed the crystal against his own chest.
There was no explosion of light. Instead, a horrible, swallowing silence fell for a split second. Then, a thick, oily black mist erupted from the shattered crystal, not dispersing, but coiling like a living thing before surging directly into the assassinâs open mouth, nose, and eyes.
The manâs back arched violently. A guttural, choking scream was torn from his throat, only to be cut off abruptly. His body went rigid, then slumped for a moment.
When he straightened up, his movements were all wrong. Jerky, then too smooth, as if a new puppeteer was testing the strings. He flexed the assassinâs hands, opening and closing them, a look of profound distaste on the manâs borrowed face.
"Pathetic vessel," a new voice said, layered over the assassinâs own, cold, dry, and echoing with ancient malice. "Brittle, untrained, already damaged. It will hold for a few minutes at best. A waste of a soul-crystal." The possessed assassinâor the entity now wearing himâturned its hollow gaze to the other assassin. "You were supposed to secure a more suitable host. One of strong will, of noble blood. You have failed even in this basic task."
The remaining living assassin fell to his knees, trembling. "M-master! We were overwhelmed! The targetâs protectors are stronger than anticipated! We needed your aid to secure the princess!"
"Needed my aid?" the entity sneered, taking a step forward on unsteady legs. "You needed a crutch. Incompetence should be purged, not rewarded. I should have hired more... professional help."
Elise had been staring, frozen, since the mist had appeared. The aura radiating from the possessed manâcold, hungry, a void that sapped hope and warmthâwas horribly, intimately familiar. It was the same feeling that had haunted her dreams, that had clung to her since the curse was placed. A whisper of despair that lived in her blood.
Her face lost all remaining color. Her body began to tremble violently. "N-no..." she breathed, the word barely audible. "Itâs... itâs him." She clutched her chest, as if in physical pain. "Heâs here. The Deathless King... heâs here."
The entityâs head swiveled towards her, a grotesque smile stretching the assassinâs lips. "Ah. The little princess recognizes me. Good. It saves on introductions. Come along now. This crude flesh is already decaying. Your cooperation will make this less... messy for what remains of your friends."