Page 8
When the footsteps stopped in front of his cell, Herrick finally cracked his eyes open and stared at the ceiling.
"Good, you're up."
Baldr's voice drifted through the iron bars, wrapping around Herrick's trembling muscles as he tried to remain still, unbothered.
"I trust you've rested," Baldr continued as he unlocked the cell and entered, waving the guards away as he always did. "You've got a long day ahead of you."
Herrick closed his eyes and briefly allowed his strength to fail as he thought of his friends and her . Then, he let the memories of his friends, the memories of her, bolster him as he pulled himself off the floor before Baldr could do it and face his torturer.
"I can take it," Herrick responded, thinking of how she would never bend or break for anyone.
His thoughts of Maude had him straightening his spine as he allowed his hands to be chained once more.
"We'll see," Baldr said with a sly smile, his fingers burning with his golden fire.
Neither confession nor plea sounded from Herrick's lips as he withstood the torture from the General of Flame. Only the sound of Herrick's screams being ripped from his lungs would be heard through the halls of the empty dungeons below the Palace of Wind and Embers.
Maude was ripped from her nightmares as she gasped for breath.
Her fatemark was blistering on her skin, the branches of Yggdrasil pulsing with each of her rapid heartbeats.
An icy wind swept in through the open windows of her room in the Midnight Palace, cooling her scorched skin as dread washed through her.
She had dreamt of Herrick screaming, his voice guttural as if he had been shouting for hours. She could still hear his pain echoing in her skull.
Pooled around her waist, the deep purple silk sheets felt wrong compared to the darkness of the dungeon Maude had just dreamt of. She knew it had only been a dream, but it had to be similar to the conditions Herrick must be in… if he was even still alive.
Immediately banishing that option from her mind, she focused on calming her roaring heart as she focused on Herrick.
Sure that it was only her overactive imagination being fueled by her worry for him, she tried to separate the dream of him from her memories.
He had always been so lively, so full of energy that quickly became infectious even if she would never admit it to him.
Maude wasn't sure how she knew, but she could feel that he was still alive in Logi.
Unable to sit still, Maude ripped herself from the silken sheets and paced in front of the window that looked over Nida.
When the rhythmic back and forth of her pacing stopped working, she launched into a workout routine she used to complete when she was confined to her room or couldn't risk showing her face in Logi after a run-in with the palace soldiers.
Through pushups, squats, sit-ups, and pull-ups using the ledge of the window, Maude exercised until sweat ran down her spine and coated her skin in a thick layer of salt.
It got a little easier every day, her endurance building back to its original strength slowly but surely.
By the time her mind had calmed enough to notice, the violet hues of dawn were peeking over the high mountaintops surrounding this Elven city.
The tall moonstone spiral buildings, which lay in a half-circle around the bay, were bright under the moon, and the carved stone was seamless in its construction.
Climbing up the walls were various vines and flowers, all blooming in the coldest part of the night, their scents mixing to form a heavy blanket over the sleeping city.
From where her room was positioned, Maude could see that the lower buildings had open rooftops that allowed the moonlight in, their airy courtyards simple in design but no less beautiful.
Reluctant admiration had swept through Maude the first time she observed the city after she woke from her stasis, or whatever the Shadow King had called it.
Turning away from the awakening city, Maude washed her skin with water and linen before she dressed in fur-lined fighting leathers, strapped her sword and axe to her belt, and slid the dagger into the sheath on her thigh after donning the leggings.
The blade had not left her sight since it had been returned to her on awakening.
It was curious that the Valkyries had carried her physical body and weapons to Nida.
She didn't understand one bit of what the healers had been saying to her when they explained what stasis was, how her fatemark bound her to the Valkyries and this life until her fate had run its course, and how her body would continue to reanimate after death until her true fate was reached.
With every mention of reanimation, her mind would shut down.
She couldn't meld her day to day life with the idea that true death would not be achieved until some unknown threshold was passed.
How would she know her fate was complete? Would she just wake one morning and know? Would there be a sign from the gods? Would Odin himself deign to walk the earth simply to pat her on the shoulder and say "mission accomplished" before finally leaving her alone?
She told herself she didn't understand it because thinking about it for too long would force her to deal with the truth of her heritage and face the fact that she would be stuck running for an eternity if she continued ignoring her fate. She'd shuddered at the thought.
So she stayed true to herself and ignored it.
Maude exited her room to find Liv outside, appearing to stand guard over her through the night. She ignored her friend and turned down the hall that would lead to Gunnar's room in the Healers Wing of the palace. Quiet footsteps followed behind her, lighter than air.
"You're going to have to talk to me eventually," Liv said quietly, her voice more musical than it was before.
She ignored her, irritation still burning in her heart for how they had left Herrick at the hands of the Flame Soldiers. Liv sighed and continued following Maude in silence.
Over the last few days, Maude had explored the Midnight Palace with Bryn while Liv remained a few paces behind them, occasionally offering morsels of information on the city or structure itself.
There was a sense of ease in the halls, the Elven they passed all pleasant and genuinely happy to be there.
With great reluctance, Maude found that exploring the palace settled something in her that seemed to have been adrift all her life.
It felt as if she belonged in the long marble and moonstone halls that curved around open courtyards that housed some of the most beautiful night-blooming gardens she had ever seen.
Not a day had passed where Maude was idle or content to stay in one part of the palace.
She saw all the courtyards and memorized the easiest paths to the libraries and kitchens until she could navigate them in the dark.
Eager to learn more about the Shadow Elven who lived here, she would occasionally pause to speak with those who roamed the halls with their noses in a book or a meditative air around them.
She quickly stopped engaging with them, however, when it became clear that they knew who she was already.
The Shadow King must have told the Elven who frequented the palace in case they ran into her.
Their signs of respect for royalty grated on Maude enough that she stopped speaking with them, even though her curiosity burned brighter every day.
Now that she was familiar with the palace, the only places Maude ventured to included Bryn's room, the library, the kitchens, and the Healer's Wing, where Gunnar was being kept while the healers worked on him. The only person Maude had not seen was Hakon.
Holed up in his room, the Heir of Rivers was refusing to speak with Maude for even one moment.
She'd tried to talk to him and plan a way for them to get Herrick back, but he seemed to want nothing to do with Maude.
The last time she had seen Hakon, they were all being held captive by her father— by Helvig— and he had explained to them in excruciating detail how grandly they had fucked up.
It seemed that the Flame King had been training his Heir to retrieve the Bone Dagger for quite some time.
Maude had only ever been told that she was required to train to be a fighter and protect her kingdom.
She had been just as in the dark as the rest of them.
But the Heir of Rivers did not see it this way; he thought Maude had been tricking them all.
Liv had argued with him about it for days, but eventually, he had shut himself in with a fully stocked liquor cabinet and was rarely seen or heard from since.
Now, the Prince sulked in his chambers every day, drowning in the Elven liquor that he had taken to since their arrival.
Once, when Maude and Liv had peeked in on him in the hopes of catching him sober, they found him snoring on the couch, his arm hanging down to the floor with an empty bottle still in his grasp.
It had taken everything inside of her not to storm into the room and slap him senselessly for being so selfishly absorbed.
Rather than trying to find a way to free his brother, it seemed Hakon had chosen instead to add Herrick to the list of the dead and was intent on grieving him.
Flames had sparked at her fingertips when Liv had finally pulled her back into the hall, leaving him to his misery. Her friend's hunched shoulders told Maude that she had been trying to get through to him but was losing the battle.
Coming back to the present, Maude tried to focus on what Liv was saying to her as they made their way toward the Healers Wing.
"I still don't know if I want you to be angry with me or not," Liv chuckled as she shook her head slightly. "I'm starting to think I would prefer your sympathy over this. At least that would be a real punishment."
Maude snorted once, her reaction surprising her.
Then she remembered that even though Liv hid big parts of herself from everyone, she was still the same Liv who had fought by her side and become someone who mattered greatly to her.
They were friends and Maude trusted her, even in the light of her secrets being revealed.
"Well, when you're right, you're right," she said, glancing at Liv and giving her a small smile before shaking her head.
Liv punched her lightly in the shoulder as she laughed a little louder. "I knew you were a sadistic asshole."
Shooting her a small grin, Maude winked at her friend and delighted in how easy it was between them.
Comfortable silence lapsed between them as they kept walking.
As if she had been walking these halls for years, Maude navigated through the palace quickly, ignoring the Shadow Elven she passed in the halls who bowed to her. Her focus was on Gunnar now.
She just hoped that they hadn't been too late in getting him help.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8 (Reading here)
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
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- Page 110
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- Page 112