Page 4
Story: Lady's Steed
As Avera debated returning to the castle, a cadre of soldiers came galloping into the marketplace, their tunics of blue and gold layered over their metallic armor identifying them as palace guards. And they’d come for one reason only.
Sir Gustav, the Grand Rook in charge of the Queen’s security—and the only positive influence in Avera’s life—held his stallion in place as he pointed at Avera. “There’s the First Princess. Protect her.”
First Princess? The words turned her blood cold. Gustav always called her by name not by title, and she’d never imagined that she’d be calledfirstanything.
This can’t be happening.
An urge to flee struck Avera, and she eyed possible escape routes.
None existed as the people in the marketplace packed in tightly around her, drawn by the morbid news, although they did part to allow passage to the knights with the Grand Rook at their head.
Sir Gustav eyed her through the holes slotted in his helmet. “First Princess, there’s been an incident.”
Why so formal? Then again, they had an audience.
“Is it true my family is dead?” Avera asked.
“The queen yet lives, however, the assassins were thorough. Everyone else is dead.”
“All of them? Even baby Kona?” A sweet, chubby-cheeked girl who was always smiling.
“It was a massacre,” Sir Gustav rumbled in a low tone. “And very well planned. You’d have been dead too, had you told anyone where you went. The assassins tried your room only to find you gone.”
Because Avera had slipped away just before dawn, dressed in simple clothes because she preferred anonymity.
“You knew where to find me,” Avera pointed out.
The grizzled soldier’s lips twisted beneath the nose guard of his helmet. “Because you are predictable. A new shipment for the market always draws you in search of something interesting.”
A curiosity that saved her life.
“Am I in danger?” Avera asked as the soldiers spread out to form a circle around her and Luna.
“The assassins are still at large.” An answer of sorts. “Quickly now. Mount up and let’s return to the castle.”
Despite her annoying skirts, Avera required no help into her saddle and soon they trotted away from the marketplace, Avera boxed in on all sides by soldiers. She did her best to ignore the stares and whispers of the townsfolk they passed. Not easy since she heard someone exclaim, “That’s the First Princess? Does she not know how to dress?”
More like Avera preferred simple and comfortable garments to the intricate ruffles and layers the other ladies of court tortured themselves with.
The Grand Rook sat stiffly in his saddle as he kept pace with Luna’s quick step. He said nothing and so Avera murmured, “You said my mother lives?”
“For the moment,” Gustav stated. “The wound she took to the belly is a bad one. She only survived because she cut the assassin’s throat before he could stab her again.”
“Mother killed her attacker?” It shouldn’t have surprised. The woman had ice in her veins, but since when did she carry a weapon? Avera had never seen her mother armed and wasn’t even aware she could fight. It has always been odd to Avera that she’d received lessons in combat, but her sisters hadn’t. She could even say without lying that she’d become quite proficient with a blade, probably because she’d spent a lot of time practicing, given she had little else to do.
“Your mother has always been adept with a dagger. Once she killed her assassin, she sounded the alarm, but it was too late. The rest of the royal family had already been slain.”
“What happened to the soldiers guarding them?” The heirs had their own personal cadre of protectors and never went anywhere without them.
“Their guards were slaughtered. The assassins hit just before dawn as everyone slept.”
“I must have just missed them,” Avera mused aloud. She’d risen well before the sun and hit the kitchen for a fresh baked roll with jam as well as some carrots for Luna before heading to the market to be there when it opened.
“The killers were well coordinated. They came in unseen by any, killed everyone, and fled as quickly as they arrived. If it weren’t for your mother taking one down, we’d have never known who was responsible.”
“Who?” Avera asked, expecting him to blame the marauders to the west. The Okkilamian had a thing for attacking their ships, although they’d never been brazen enough to cause trouble in Daerva.
To her surprise, Gustav said, “Judging by the appearance of the one your mother killed, Verlorian.”
Sir Gustav, the Grand Rook in charge of the Queen’s security—and the only positive influence in Avera’s life—held his stallion in place as he pointed at Avera. “There’s the First Princess. Protect her.”
First Princess? The words turned her blood cold. Gustav always called her by name not by title, and she’d never imagined that she’d be calledfirstanything.
This can’t be happening.
An urge to flee struck Avera, and she eyed possible escape routes.
None existed as the people in the marketplace packed in tightly around her, drawn by the morbid news, although they did part to allow passage to the knights with the Grand Rook at their head.
Sir Gustav eyed her through the holes slotted in his helmet. “First Princess, there’s been an incident.”
Why so formal? Then again, they had an audience.
“Is it true my family is dead?” Avera asked.
“The queen yet lives, however, the assassins were thorough. Everyone else is dead.”
“All of them? Even baby Kona?” A sweet, chubby-cheeked girl who was always smiling.
“It was a massacre,” Sir Gustav rumbled in a low tone. “And very well planned. You’d have been dead too, had you told anyone where you went. The assassins tried your room only to find you gone.”
Because Avera had slipped away just before dawn, dressed in simple clothes because she preferred anonymity.
“You knew where to find me,” Avera pointed out.
The grizzled soldier’s lips twisted beneath the nose guard of his helmet. “Because you are predictable. A new shipment for the market always draws you in search of something interesting.”
A curiosity that saved her life.
“Am I in danger?” Avera asked as the soldiers spread out to form a circle around her and Luna.
“The assassins are still at large.” An answer of sorts. “Quickly now. Mount up and let’s return to the castle.”
Despite her annoying skirts, Avera required no help into her saddle and soon they trotted away from the marketplace, Avera boxed in on all sides by soldiers. She did her best to ignore the stares and whispers of the townsfolk they passed. Not easy since she heard someone exclaim, “That’s the First Princess? Does she not know how to dress?”
More like Avera preferred simple and comfortable garments to the intricate ruffles and layers the other ladies of court tortured themselves with.
The Grand Rook sat stiffly in his saddle as he kept pace with Luna’s quick step. He said nothing and so Avera murmured, “You said my mother lives?”
“For the moment,” Gustav stated. “The wound she took to the belly is a bad one. She only survived because she cut the assassin’s throat before he could stab her again.”
“Mother killed her attacker?” It shouldn’t have surprised. The woman had ice in her veins, but since when did she carry a weapon? Avera had never seen her mother armed and wasn’t even aware she could fight. It has always been odd to Avera that she’d received lessons in combat, but her sisters hadn’t. She could even say without lying that she’d become quite proficient with a blade, probably because she’d spent a lot of time practicing, given she had little else to do.
“Your mother has always been adept with a dagger. Once she killed her assassin, she sounded the alarm, but it was too late. The rest of the royal family had already been slain.”
“What happened to the soldiers guarding them?” The heirs had their own personal cadre of protectors and never went anywhere without them.
“Their guards were slaughtered. The assassins hit just before dawn as everyone slept.”
“I must have just missed them,” Avera mused aloud. She’d risen well before the sun and hit the kitchen for a fresh baked roll with jam as well as some carrots for Luna before heading to the market to be there when it opened.
“The killers were well coordinated. They came in unseen by any, killed everyone, and fled as quickly as they arrived. If it weren’t for your mother taking one down, we’d have never known who was responsible.”
“Who?” Avera asked, expecting him to blame the marauders to the west. The Okkilamian had a thing for attacking their ships, although they’d never been brazen enough to cause trouble in Daerva.
To her surprise, Gustav said, “Judging by the appearance of the one your mother killed, Verlorian.”
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