The red-roofed cottage stood quietly on the hill, framed by rustling trees and the soft hum of bees drifting lazily through the flowerbeds.
From the open window, the faint whistle of a kettle rose into the breeze, mingling with the scent of steeping herbs and sun-warmed wood.
Lucien climbed the final stretch of the path, boots crunching softly over worn stone. He didnât hesitate. He rapped his knuckles twice against the wooden door.
A moment passed.
Then it opened.
Elia stood in the threshold, wiping her hands on a linen towel. Her auburn hair was tied back, her sleeves rolled up, a light dusting of flour on her apron.
She blinked in mild surprise, her smile touched with unease. âLu... Lucien-sama. What brings you here?â
âMrs. dâArk,â Lucien said, slightly out of breath. âIs Mira home? I need to speak with her.â
The smile faded from Eliaâs face. She stepped aside and gestured him in. âShe went to the town. Would you like to come in and wait?â
Lucien nodded, offering a faint smileâbut Elia had already caught the tension in his eyes.
She closed the door behind him and led him into the kitchen, where the kettle had just begun to rattle gently on the stove.
The room was warm and inviting, filled with the scent of herbs, fresh bread cooling on the counter, and the subtle spice of dried lavender hanging above the window.
âYou look troubled, Lucien-sama,â Elia said, pouring him tea with steady hands. âWhatâs wrong?â
Lucien accepted the cup, though he didnât drink. His voice was low and measured.
âThere are strangers in town. Four of them. Definitely not from around here.â
Eliaâs hand paused mid-reach toward a second cup.
âThey were asking questions,â Lucien continued. âAt every shop, every inn. Even down at the docks. I saw them myselfâand spoke to them.â
He looked up, meeting her eyes.
âTheyâre looking for Mira.â
The silence that followed felt long and heavy.
Elia set the untouched mug back down. Her voice was calm, but her eyes had sharpened.
âWe knew this day would come eventually,â she murmured. âMira⦠sheâs just too gifted.â
Lucien nodded. âYes. She is.â
Eliaâs tone stayed even. âWhat did you tell them?â
âWhat I wanted them to hear,â he said. âWhich wasnât much. But theyâre sharp. The kind who smile through half-truths and recognize the rest.â
Elia folded the towel in her hands slowly, carefully, placing it on the counter. Her composure remained, but there was a tension in her posture.
Lucien hesitated, then asked, âHave you ever considered⦠Mira going to the capital?â
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Elia turned to him. âYou mean as a guest? Or under protection?â
âBoth,â he admitted. âWith her power, her talent, she could be granted nobility within weeks. And under the Crownâs aegis, no one would dare approach her. She could study at the Academy. Even train with the greatest talents on the continent.â
Elia gave a short, quiet laughâbut it held no humor.
âYou think sheâd be safe in the capital?â
Lucien lowered his eyes. âTo tell you the truthâno. Not truly. But there are walls. Guards. Resources. Things I canât offer her here.â
He paused, voice softer now. âMaybe you all should go. You, your husband, Mira. If these people keep sniffing around, Peace wonât last much longer."
Elia turned to the window. The fields beyond swayed gently in the afternoon breeze. A sparrow flitted across the garden. The curtains stirred.
âWeâve thought about it,â she said at last. âWe even spoke with Mira several times. But sheâ¦â
âShe doesnât want it,â Lucien finished.
Elia nodded. âShe wants to live quietly. To help people without expecting anything in return. She believes her gifts were meant for this. For Mermaid's Cove.â
There was a long pause.
Then Elia asked, âDo you think sheâd be happy in the capital?â
Lucien was silent for a moment. He took a sip of the teaâit had gone lukewarm.
âI donât know,â he admitted. âBut I know I wouldnât be happy if something happened to her out here.â
Elia studied him, her gaze soft but steady. âYou care for her.â
âYes,â Lucien said without hesitation.
âAnd if it came to itâ¦â she asked quietly, âwould you take her away?â
He met her gaze. âOnly if she asked me to.â
Elia nodded once, then walked across the room and finally sat.
The kettle began to whistle in earnest behind them.
Suddenly, a flutter of wings outside. The sound of birds flapping in alarm.
They both turned toward the window.
Just beyond the tree line, a shimmer of movementâa cloak, vanishing behind the bushes.
Elia stood slowly.
Lucien was already at the door.
He stepped out onto the porch, boots thudding softly against the wood. His gaze swept the trees. Nothing.
Then he spotted the axe leaning against the wall. He grabbed it without a word.
âShow yourself,â he called into the wind.
No reply. Just the rustling of branches.
The kettle inside shriekedâhigh and unbroken.
Behind him, Eliaâs voice came, calm but low. âLucien-sama⦠you should come back inside.â
Lucien didnât answer.
His golden eyes stayed fixed on the tree line. Because he had a really bad feeling about this...
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Meanwhileâsomewhere in the lower quarter of Mermaidâs Coveâ¦
Cassian adjusted the brim of his hood and ducked behind a slanted rain barrel, his breath slow and controlled.
Heâd been trailing a group of travelers for fifteen minutes now.
At first glance, they looked ordinaryâdust-streaked boots, muted cloaks, nothing flashy.
But they didnât speak. They didnât haggle. And they didnât look at the town like outsiders should.
No curiosity. No awe. No badges. Nothing on the surface to identify them.
But something about these six made the hairs on Cassian's neck stand.
He slid from barrel to stack of crates, keeping his distance.
His fingers brushed the grip of the dagger sheathed at his hip, and his eyes never left the group's trailing figure.
Then it happened.
The last cloaked figureâbroad-shouldered, slowest of the sixâstopped.
Cassian froze.
A moment passed.
Then, slowly, the figure tilted its head. Not all the wayâjust enough.
Cassianâs chest tightened. Did he make me? He thought.
The rest of the group continued on down the lane, but this one⦠stepped into a narrow side street, almost casually.
Cassian hesitated.
Then swore under his breath and followed.
The alley narrowed quickly. A dead end ahead, framed by the crumbling brick of an old fishery wall.
The figure was standing there.
Waiting.
Cassian stepped in, blades drawn.
âYouâve got ten seconds to explain who youâre working for,â he growled, voice low.
The figure didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Cassian took another step forward, daggers gleaming.
âI saidââ
The sound behind him was too fast to react.
Boots on stone. A flutter of cloaks.
He spunâ
But too late.
A boot struck his shoulder from behind, slamming him into the wall. The wind knocked from his lungs.
Three more cloaked figures emerged from the shadowsâsurrounding him.
Cassian stumbled back, blades raised, blood roaring in his ears.
âWho are you?â he spat.
The figures didnât answer.
They didnât need to.
Because in the dim alley light, one of them reached upâslowlyâand pulled back their hood.
Cassianâs eyes widened.
Not at the faceâ
But at the mark burned across their throat.
Old. Twisting. A brand feared by any kingdom.
âCrimson Crow. Youâre assassins,â Cassian's eyes narrowed.
The branded one smiled.
âYes, we are,â he said. âAnd youâre about to die.â
Then they moved...