The throne room wasnât that far from the start of the corridor, but the situation did not make things easier for Elyse, especially after she witnessed the carnage. She saw bodies strewn all over the floor, dying or severely injured. They all wore armors with the crest of House Gathbergen, the reigning royal family and the name of her family. Realizing that the enemies went in unnoticed, with the soldiers fighting outside as a distraction, Elyse hastened her sprint, this time using her druidic magic to enchant her legs, enabling her to run much faster.
But before Elyse could go far, the tree that she called home warped around her and blocked her way. She promptly jumped and kicked the barrier, creating a hole big enough for her to get through before it closed.
As she ran, she heard a chuckle coming from a disembodied face.
âYouâre a feisty one, princess Elyse,â said the voice. âNo surprise, considering youâre the runaway princess.â
The voice sounded like Fritz, thought Elyse. She initially thought it was the case until she remembered what Fritz said about being impersonated by an impostor. Elyse tried to ignore him as she quickened her pace, this time slipping through another barrier just before it closed.
âSlippery little girl, arenât you? But youâre not fast enough!â
True to what the voice declared, the next barrier trying to stop Elyse closed much faster, forcing Elyse to stop before she put herself in danger. She tried to kick the barrier again, but it did not break like before. Instead, it ensnared her hooved legs and pulled her to the wall, this time restraining her limbs, leaving her immobile.
âYouâre too easy to read, Gathbergen, just like your father,â said the voice.
âNo, youâre just underestimating me!â declared Elyse.
Green aura filled her body before it exploded outward, breaking the vines restraining her as she continued her assault on the barrier. This time, she had anticipated the vines and managed to dodge them all. However, she knew she would end up exhausted first if she kept dodging and attacking the barrier. She then devised something very powerful, yet very risky to pull off.
She started to do so by engulfing her body with natureâs aura, creating an armor that could blow up upon contact. This unusual use of druidic magic even earned her praise from her enemy.
âThat is a very interesting application,â said the voice. âBut the reward is not worth the risk, so youâre doing a foolâs gamble, Gathbergen.â
Fritzâs impostor was right. Druidic magic was raw, meaning that it would transfer its energy everywhere, including towards Elyse. However, she had no other ideas and, hoping she wouldnât end up getting killed by her own magic, dashed towards the barrier.
Then to her surprise, the barrier simply disassembled, and she ran through it. She quickly stopped, sliding on the wooden floor.
âThatâs not a smart move, princess,â said a familiar voice, though this one wasnât taunting her. She turned around and saw Fritz, but she was unsure.
âI am not taking any chances, Fritz,â said Elyse. Fritzâ presence caused her to not see a vine coming at her from a blind spot and at a very fast rate. Before it could ensnare and caused a self-injuring explosion, it was stopped as Fritz held out his hand.
âHow about now?â said Fritz as he forced the vines to retract into the wall, which Elyse witnessed.
âGood enough.â
âTake your armor off. It wonât serve you well for the coming battle.â
She obliged and dispelled her green aura armor before she continued to run towards the throne room, this time with Fritz accompanying her
âYour dragon friend told me to go ahead while she holds back the trees attacking her,â said Fritz. âI donât know what kind of ice magic she uses, but that dragonâs something else.â
âStill think itâs wise annoying her?â
âAfter she caused a blizzard in the reception hall? Nah. You made some friends out there, Elle. Exiling yourself does have merits.â
âIt didnât start that way.â Elyse then reminisced the time she met Azureath, Adeline, and Hans. She vividly remembered kicking Hans with her powered-up hoof kick. As she smiled, she said, âBut Iâm glad it worked out in the end.â
âLooks like it.â
The two satyrs kept running while fending off the living tree that was also the castle. Each time they did, the attack intensified, causing Fritz to feel the strain of wrestling his control against the fake Udvik who took his identity. Then, just as they approached the throne room, their proximity with the fake prince made battling for control much harder for Fritz.
As the fake prince tried to stop them using all his power, Fritz tried to wrestle control from him, but found that something helped made his plant control that much powerful that it started corrupting the plant itself. Fritzâs control was being overtaken by it.
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âShit!â he exclaimed as he struggled to open the barrier to the throne room. âElle, I canât open it for too long! Get through once there is an opening!â
âBut how about you?!â
âIâll be fine! Get to Udvik and stop him from corrupting the tree! Oh, and before you go, tell me the name of the tree so I can talk sense to it!â
Normally, asking someone a treeâs name would be dismissed as the words of an insane person. But Fritz knew Elyse could talk to plants, just not the ability to control and manipulate them. The satyr also knew that the name of the plant would also make them more âwillingâ to be controlled, and only Elyse should know.
âIts name is Anrichâar,â said Elyse.
âNoted.â
The barrier then opened as Elyse jumped through it. Fritz kept it open long enough for her to get through before he became too strained to keep it and released the control before quickly changing his focus to compelling the tree to stop.
âCome on, you sorry excuse for a tree. Listen to me!â He commanded. âThat satyrâs corrupting you. Snap out of it, Anrichâar!â
Fritz could not feel the treeâs assault to lessen. Fritz could feel his muscles straining and blood slowly trickle down from his eyes as his vision blurred, the indication that his body was at its limit. He never wouldâve thought that he would be battling for the control of a giant, ancient tree that had become a castle for generations of monarchs and many different houses of satyr royalty. Itâs age, and the magic it accumulated, along with the corruption the fake prince fed it, were working against Fritz.
âGoddamn it,â he said as his knees started to buckle as exhaustion was settling in. âDeal with him quickly, Elle, or we are done for.â
***
âAh. Princess Elyse. Welcome home.â
Elyse turned towards the throne and saw the fake prince. She then experienced many feelings almost at the same time. Shock, sadness, regret, then anger, all held behind a visibly angered and cold caprine expression glaring towards the brown-furred satyr who looked exactly like Fritz. No one would see the difference if they did not know the deposed prince personally.
Behind him was a satyr who had a very complicated relationship with Elyse, bound to the wooden throne carved from Anrichâarâs woods with vines growing from the floor itself, unnatural as it was. He couldnât move his body and was forced to look straight by vines wrapped around his neck. The satyr was the one who raised Elyse to be his successor one day, though in the process strained their relationship for being too insistent. Elyse never wanted the throne, especially after learning that a satyrâs succession law gave blood siblings equal rights. Her sisters and brothers all had the same chance of becoming the next leader of House Gathbergen and the Bracken Woods, but king Abelgard, Elyseâs father, chose her instead.
He had a reputation for having a relatively peaceful relationship with the other satyr kingdoms. Unfortunately, Valâseris declared war and was winning, with the king already incapacitated and at the mercy of the fake prince Udvik.
Seeing her father helpless and could do nothing but look at her made her realize that, despite everything she did to undermine his authority, he was still a caring, albeit strict, father. The fake prince would win, but this time, Elyse would come to her fatherâs aid both as a daughter and as one of his subjects; a princess responsible for protecting the throne.
âUdvik,â said Elyse, with a low, growling voice. âOr should I call you âfakerâ instead.â
âUdvikâ scoffed. âIt seems that he told you everything. I must say. Even after everything I did to secure the throne, he still is a thorn. I donât understand what he hopes to gain with it. His kingdom is no more.â
âAt least he still fights back and keep being your thorn, faker,â said Elyse. âNow, show me your true face before I come up there and kick that stupid face of yours.â
âTry, then! See how foolish your actionsââ
Elyse accepted the challenge without hesitation. She enchanted her legs so she would run and jump so high she practically reached the throne in under a second. âUdvikâ seemed to be surprised and was completely taken off-guard when she round kicked him in the face with such a force that would break someoneâs neck. âUdvikâ was only saved by his own preparedness; he wouldnât taunt her like that without actually planning for something. However, he was so stunned by the force of the druid kick that he could not go on with his plan fast enough before Elyse landed another straight kick directly at his solar plexus, knocking the wind out of him and further stunned him.
Elyse did not delay. Thinking she defeated âUdvikâ, she ran to her father and said, âFather, I have come for your rescue. Is thereââ
âElyse, behind you!â
A familiar female voice caused Elyse to turn around just in time to see a tree root being shot at her. Her agility managed to dodge it, with the tree missing the throne and the king by mere inches.
âOhhhâ¦havenât had someone kick me that hard before,â said âUdvikâ. His voice was mixed with someone elseâs. âA princess with that kind of kickâ¦is so unbecoming of one.â
âWell, I ainât living a pampered life,â said Elyse, making a stance. âAnd you certainly donât know me. Iâm the figurative black goat of the familyâ¦should have used a different term for that.â
âUdvikâ shed his disguise, knowing that impersonating the true prince was no longer necessary. The satyr impersonating the prince was a black-furred satyr with red eyes and two pairs of horns that made him very demonic in appearance while also being intimidating. His fur was soft and short, all of which were covered under the princeâs armor he wore. He then pulled out a mageâs staff out of the tree he controlled. The staff was brimming with natureâs magic, making it possible for him to manipulate plants to do his biddings.
Then she saw a familiar satyr running up the throneâs stairs, daggers on each hand. Elyse recognized her and felt elated. She was the source of the voice warning her.
âLis!â she exclaimed.
âGood to have you back, sister,â she said with a smile on her caprine face.
âWhere are the others?â
âSafe in the common room. Anrichâar was keeping the room free from this satyrâs influence, but we donât have much time. Heâs corrupting the tree. If the tree falls, Bracken Woods will die with it.â
âAnrichâarâs the mother tree? But itâs not even a pine tree!â
âYouâ¦well, never mind. Not like youâll listen, anyway. Be careful, Elyse. Heâs not just some druid mage.â
âI can sense it. But for some reason, it feltâ¦familiar.â
âSo, you freed yourself from that trap,â said the black goat with a deep, almost demonic voice. âI must compliment your royal family, Gathbergen. However, this is the end of your line. Soon, the Great Tree will fall, and this forest shall be the seat of my power!â
Lisle, the dagger-using princess, turned her head towards Elyse and said, âShow me what you can do with those hooves, Elle.â
âOh, I have a lot to show you.â
She and Lisle then dashed towards the satyr, determined to keep the Bracken Woods alive.