LOGINChapter 2: The Unseen Currents
The scream that woke Makil was not a memory.
It was sharp, short, and female, cut off with a gasp of effort. It came from the gardens below his window, in the deceptive hour before dawn when the world belonged to guards, ghosts, and fools.
He was at the casement in three strides, still in his sleeping trousers, the chill morning air raising gooseflesh on his bare chest. Below, in the mist-shrouded knot garden, two figures moved.
One was a guard—Petyr, from his bulk—and he was on the ground, clutching his wrist, his training sword lying in the dew-slick grass several feet away. Standing over him, holding a practice longsword with an alarmingly familiar ease, was Leigh.
Her hair, freed from its severe knot, was a dark braid over one shoulder. She wore not a dress, but men's riding leathers, fitted and worn soft with use. They did not hide her form; they revealed it as something functional, powerful. She wasn't breathing hard.
"Again," she said, her voice carrying on the still air, quiet but clear. It wasn't a taunt. It was an instruction.
"My lady, I don't think—" Petyr began, scrambling up, his face a mixture of pain and profound embarrassment.
"You didn't think. That's why you're on the ground. Your guard was too high. You were anticipating a slash from my right. I feinted and came low from the left. You overcommitted."
She tossed the practice sword back to him. He fumbled the catch. "Footwork. It's not about strength, it's about balance. Like dancing."
"I don't dance, my lady."
"You do now." She picked up a second practice blade from against a hedge. "En garde."
Makil watched, transfixed. This was no noblewoman's dalliance with archery. This was the language of combat, spoken with a native's fluency. Her movements were economical, precise.
She wasn't fighting to win; she was dissecting Petyr's technique, creating openings, then pointing them out with a clinical detachment as she disarmed him again. "You're leaning into your strikes. It leaves your center vulnerable." "You watch my eyes, not my shoulders. The shoulders tell the story."
This was the "dutiful" daughter. This was the "feminine arts." A liar. Just like all of them. A more fascinating liar, perhaps, but a liar nonetheless. The fury from yesterday's confrontation reignited, but it was now alloyed with a cold, prickling curiosity.
He dressed swiftly, in plain, dark clothes, and descended into the waking castle.
---
Leigh felt the prince's presence before she saw him. It was a change in the air pressure, a shift in the morning's soundtrack—the distant clang of the forge pausing, a maid's chatter cutting off. She finished a disarming maneuver that sent Petyr's sword spinning once more, then turned, wiping sweat from her brow with the back of her wrist.
Makil stood at the entrance to the knot garden, leaning against the arch of climbing roses. He was not in princely finery, but in boots, dark trousers, and a simple linen shirt, the sleeves rolled up. He looked less like a sovereign-in-waiting and more like a displeased landowner surveying a mismanaged field.
"A curious form of morning devotions, Lady Leigh," he said. His voice was calm, a flat stone dropped into the quiet pool of the garden.
Petyr froze, then snapped to a rigid, pained attention. "Your Highness! I was just—the lady was—"
"Being thoroughly educated," Makil finished, his eyes never leaving Leigh. "Dismissed, Petyr. Tend to your wrist. And your pride."The guard fled, leaving his practice swords in the grass.
Leigh did not curtsy. She planted her sword point-down in the soft earth and leaned on the hilt, mirroring his casual posture with a warrior's defiance. "Couldn't sleep, Your Highness? Or is spying on your guests another royal tradition?"
"Observing," he corrected, pushing off the arch and walking toward her. The mist curled around his boots. "My father said you were educated in the feminine arts. He failed to mention the art of bladework."
"It's a border feminine art. We have different priorities." She watched him approach, assessing not as a woman assesses a man, but as a strategist assesses terrain. He moved with a latent power, restrained but evident. He was taller up close, the morning light carving the sharp angles of his face.
He stopped a few feet away, his gaze dropping to the practice sword, then traveling up her form in the leathers. It was not a leering look; it was an appraisal, cool and thorough. She felt strangely more exposed than she had in the ridiculous sapphire gown.
"You lied," he stated.
"You assumed," she countered. "There's a difference. My father said 'act like a lady.' He didn't say be one. This," she gestured to herself with the sword, "is who I am. The rest is costume."
"A costume you will wear," he said, his voice hardening. "You are here for a purpose. Your little display yesterday, and this... morning exercise... undermines that purpose. It makes you look unstable. It makes me look a fool for allowing it."
Anger, hot and immediate, flashed through her. "My purpose, as far as I can tell, is to be decorative livestock. My stability is irrelevant. And you," she took a step forward, into his space, "look like a fool all on your own, playing this cynical game of 'pick-a-queen' while pretending you're above it. At least I'm honest about my contempt."
His hand shot out, not to strike her, but to close around the hilt of her practice sword, just below her own grip. His fingers brushed hers. They were calloused. Calloused. The discovery was a shock. He wasn't just a pampered prince; he trained, too.
"Honesty," he mused, his face inches from hers, his storm-sea eyes boring into her flint-gray ones. "Is that what you call it? Or is it simply a different strategy? Shock the prince, stand out from the simpering crowd. A calculated risk."
She didn't pull the sword away. The contact was a live wire. "You think everything is a calculation."
"I know it is." His grip tightened. "My brother was not a calculating man. He was honest. He loved honestly. And it killed him. So forgive me if I find your brand of 'honesty' to be just another weapon in an arsenal."
For the first time, she saw past his icy scorn to the raw, unhealed wound beneath. It wasn't just misogyny. It was grief, fossilized into bitterness. The realization disarmed her more effectively than any feint.
She released the sword, taking a step back. "Then we understand each other," she said, her voice losing its edge. "You see a weapon. I see a cage. We're both prisoners of this... purpose."
He held the practice sword, looking momentarily wrong-footed by her retreat. He studied the crude blade, then her face. The anger seemed to drain from him, leaving a weary, cold curiosity.
"What are you, really? A spy for your father? A trained assassin sent to unsettle the court?"
A genuine, surprised laugh escaped her, short and dry. "If I were an assassin, you'd be dead. And my father wouldn't waste a resource like me on mere espionage. He needs me on the border."
"For what?"
"To keep people like you safe in your castles," she said simply, turning to pick up the other practice sword. She didn't elaborate. "Are we done with this interrogation, Your Highness? I'd like to finish my training before I'm forced back into the costume."
He was silent for a long moment, tossing the practice sword from hand to hand, feeling its weight. "Tomorrow, at this hour," he said finally. "Meet me in the old tiltyard. The one behind the armory. No guards. No audience."
Her eyes narrowed. "Why?"
A ghost of something—not a smile, but the memory of one—touched his lips. "You claim a battlefield is where you'd rather be. So let's have a battle. A private one. I want to see if your skill matches your mouth."
The challenge hung between them, stark and undeniable. It was madness. A prince sparring with a potential bride. Yet, it was the first genuine thing that had been offered to her since she arrived.
"And if I best you?" she asked.
"Then you'll have the singular pleasure of humiliating your future king."
"And if you best me?"
His eyes gleamed with a cold light. "Then you'll put on the costume, play the lady without complaint for the rest of the day, and admit that some games are worth playing well."It was a test. Not of her skill, but of her word. Of her ability to move between worlds. She saw the trap, and the tantalizing freedom within it.
She nodded once, sharply. "The tiltyard. An hour before dawn."
Without another word, she collected the swords and walked past him, her stride eating up the garden path. He didn't turn to watch her go. He stood in the mist, feeling the residual warmth of her grip on the sword hilt, and the unsettling sense that the carefully ordered chessboard of his life had just been swept clean, replaced by a game with rules he did not yet know.
---
The "old tiltyard" was a forgotten rectangle of packed earth between the mossy back of the armory and the high, blank wall of the monastery. Weeds pushed through the cracks in the viewing stands. It smelled of damp stone, old hay, and solitude.
Makil was already there, warming up with a series of fluid stretches that further betrayed his training. He wore similar clothes to yesterday, and two practice longswords were thrust into the ground at the center of the yard.
Leigh arrived silently, a shadow detaching from the deeper shadows of the archway. She'd re-braided her hair tightly. She said nothing, simply walked to the center, pulled one sword from the earth, and tested its weight.
"No rules," Makil said, pulling the other. "First to yield, or be disarmed."
"Understood."
They circled. The mist was thinner here, burnt away by the coming sun. Leigh watched him. He was taller, had a longer reach, and clearly had mass and strength behind his movements. But she had speed, and a lifetime of training not in ceremony, but in survival.
He attacked first, a testing slash. She parried, the wooden *clack* startlingly loud in the silent yard, and instantly riposted, aiming not for his body but for his forward knee. He barely pivoted in time, grunting in surprise at her aggression.
"You don't fight like a guardsman," he said, resetting.
"I don't fight to style. I fight to end." She came in low, a series of controlled blows aimed at his legs and lower torso, forcing him to defend downward. She was a vortex, drawing him in.
He adapted, his movements growing sharper, less princely and more pragmatic. He began using his strength, beating her blade aside to create openings. She danced away, using footwork so light she seemed to skim the earth. He'd fought trained knights. She fought like a wolf—elusive, patient, aiming for tendons and openings.
Clack. Clack. THUMP. She landed a solid blow on his ribs. He returned one on her shoulder that numbed her arm for a second. They broke apart, breathing harder now, a new respect dawning in the space between them.
This was no longer a test. It was a conversation. Their blades spoke a language of feints, parries, and counters. He learned she favored her left side when tiring. She learned he had a tells when he was about to lunge. They were evenly matched in skill, but differently schooled. His was the art of the duel. Hers was the art of the kill.
Sweat stung Leigh's eyes. Her blood sang. This was real. This was the clarity she craved. For a few moments, she forgot he was the prince, forgot the cage. He was just an opponent, a magnificent, frustratingly skilled one.
Makil, for his part, felt something long frozen begin to crack. The pure, physical dialogue stripped away pretense. There was no flattery here, no hidden agenda in the swing of a blade. Her skill was undeniable, hard-won, and earned. It commanded a respect he was unwilling to give to anything else.
The end came not from a master stroke, but from the ground. Leigh stepped back onto a loose stone, her ankle twisting. She stumbled, her guard faltering for a crucial second. Makil's blade swept in, hooked hers, and wrenched it from her grasp. It flew through the air, landing with a dull thud in the dirt.
He stood over her, his sword point hovering near her chest. They were both gasping, steam rising from their bodies in the cold air.
She looked up at him, from the ground, defiance still burning in her eyes, but mixed with the acknowledgement of defeat. "Yield," she said, the word gritted out.
He didn't move. He stared down at her, his chest heaving, seeing not a defeated lady, but a warrior on her back. The urge to gloat died unborn. The victory felt hollow, won by chance.
He lowered his sword, offering his hand instead.
She stared at it for a heartbeat, then took it. His grip was firm, pulling her to her feet with ease.
Her ankle protested, but she put weight on it, refusing to show weakness.
"The ground bested me, not you," she stated, brushing dirt from her leathers.
"A battlefield includes the ground," he replied. "You said so yourself." He retrieved her sword and handed it to her, hilt first. "You fight... differently."
"So do you. For a prince."
A faint, almost real smile touched his lips. "For a prince." He paused. "You held back your word. You play the lady today. Without complaint."
She sighed, a sound of genuine exasperation. "I remember our terms." She sheathed the practice sword in a rack at the yard's edge. "But a question first."
"Ask."
"Why? Why the secret match? You could have just ordered me to behave."He looked out over the deserted tiltyard, the rising sun painting the high walls in streaks of gold.
"I needed to know if you were real," he said quietly. "Or just another pretty illusion. Illusions shatter. They make a mess." He looked back at her, his gaze unguarded for a fleeting moment.
"You're real. Annoyingly, inconveniently real."
Before she could process that, he was turning away, the prince's mask settling back into place.
"The ladies are taking a tour of the royal gallery today. Portraits of my illustrious ancestors. I'm sure you'll find it fascinating."
He left her standing in the tiltyard, the echo of his words—"You're real"—mingling with the ache in her ankle and the unsettling realization that Prince Makil was not the man she thought he was. He was more complicated, and therefore, more dangerous.
---
The royal gallery was an endless march of oil-painted vanity. Leigh, now clad in a demure lavender gown that felt like a personal betrayal, walked with the others, her ankle a muted throb with every step. She listened with half an ear as the curator droned on about conquests and treaties.
Adelaide clung to her side, having decided Leigh was a "tragic, quiet soul" in need of friendship.
"Isn't Prince Makil just so... intense?" she whispered, gazing at a portrait of a grim-faced king.
"But there's a sadness there, don't you think? Like a wounded stag."
Leigh thought of the calloused hands, the controlled fury in the tiltyard, the brief, raw honesty in his eyes. "More like a wolf in a trap," she murmured.
"What was that, dear?"
"Nothing."
Vanessa was sketching a particularly ornate frame. Briana was assessing the jewels in each portrait, her mind clearly calculating carats and political influence.
Leigh's mind, however, was on the eastern border. On the Iron Pass. On the last report from her father, coded in a merchant's letter. "The shadows in the pass grow longer. The quiet is brittle."
Her being here, playing this role, was a strategic liability for her family. Every day was a risk.
Her sharp eyes, trained to notice everything, caught a discrepancy. In a grand painting of Makil's grandfather receiving tribute, the depiction of the Eastern Marches was wrong. The mountain ranges were off by a crucial few miles. A small error to a courtier, but a fatal one to a general moving troops. She almost said something, her strategist's mind overriding the lady's, but bit her tongue.
Later, during a tedious lute performance in the solar, Makil entered. He was cleaned up, wearing a dark blue doublet, every inch the aloof prince. His eyes found Leigh immediately, a flicker of something—acknowledgement?—before turning to ice as he greeted the others.
He played his part flawlessly, asking Vanessa about her art, discussing trade tariffs with Briana, admiring Adelaide's knowledge of horticulture. When he came to Leigh, he was meticulously polite.
"And you, Lady Leigh? I hope the gallery was to your liking? Less thrilling than a battlefield, I'm sure, but we must take our diversions where we can."
She met his gaze, playing her own part. "The portraits were... educational, Your Highness. One can learn much about a kingdom from the faces it chooses to remember." She let the double meaning hang, watching to see if he caught it.
He did. A tiny muscle flickered in his jaw. "Indeed. Though sometimes, the most important faces are the ones left out of the frames." He held her look a beat too long, then turned away to accept a glass of wine.
As the evening drew on, Leigh found a moment alone on a balcony overlooking the main courtyard. The cold air was a relief after the perfumed heat of the solar.
She heard the step behind her but didn't turn. She knew his footfall now.
"Your ankle," Makil said, coming to stand beside her, not looking at her but at the courtyards below. "You're favoring it."
"It's fine."
"Liar." He said it without heat. "You played the lady today. Adequately."
"High praise."
A silence stretched, comfortable in its tension.
"The map in the gallery," he said abruptly, his voice low. "The one in my grandfather's painting. It's wrong. The Cragmire peaks are too far west."
She turned her head to stare at him, shock unraveling her composure. "You noticed that?"
"I notice many things that are wrong," he said, finally looking at her. In the twilight, his eyes were the color of the deep sea. "My father believes your family's debt is about loyalty. It's not, is it? It's about the Pass. About whatever 'shadows' are lengthening there."
Her blood ran cold. How could he know? The coded letter... had it been intercepted? "I don't know what you mean."
"You don't have to confirm it," he said, turning to leave. "But understand this, Leigh of the Iron Pass: this castle is not just a cage. It's also a fortress. And sometimes, the best way to defend a distant border... is from the very heart of the kingdom you claim to despise."
He was gone before she could form a reply, leaving her with the chilling, exhilarating sense that the game had just changed entirely. He wasn't just a wounded prince choosing a bride. He was a player, and he'd just shown her he was reading from the same map.
Far below, in the torch-lit courtyard, a single rider arrived, splattered with mud from hard travel. He carried a sealed missive for the King, marked with the crest of the Eastern Courier Service.
The brittle quiet was about to break.
Chapter 9: The Silent Plan on the Screaming ChasmThe night was moonless, perfect. They moved like ghosts through the absolute darkness of the high cliffs, guided by Duncan and two of his clansmen who seemed to see with their feet and their fingertips. Leigh led, her memory an infallible map. Makil followed just behind her, the rough granite scraping against his leathers, the void yawning somewhere to his left.They reached the slide—a tumble of house-sized boulders that seemed to seal the Whisper Cut completely. In the pitch black, Leigh placed her hands on the rock, feeling, remembering. “Here,” she whispered. “There’s a gap. Follow my voice.”She vanished into a black slit no wider than his shoulders. Makil squeezed through after her, the rock pressing on his chest, the darkness swallowing him. For a terrifying minute, he was blind, entombed, only the scuff of Leigh’s boots ahead pulling him forward. Then the space opened slightly, and the sound of dripping water echoed in a vast,
Chapter 8: The Stone and the SmokeValerius Hold was not a castle. It was the mountain’s own grimace—a fortress hewn from the living granite of the cliff face, its towers extensions of the natural spires, its gates recessed into shadowy clefts. No banners flew. No gilt adorned its walls. It was pure, unadorned function, a fist clenched against the wind.As they ascended the steep, winding path, Leigh felt the last vestiges of the court lady slough away. The air was thinner, colder, scoured clean by altitude. The scent was of pine, forge-smoke, and stone. Home .The word had a bitter tang now. It was the place she was from, but no longer the place she was of. She had seen the gilded cage, and part of her hated how its comforts had left a faint, traitorous longing in her bones.The great hall was a cavern, its ceiling lost in darkness, lit by fire pits and torches that guttered in the drafts. Trophies hung on the walls—not tapestries, but the banners of fallen enemies, the massive antler
Chapter 10: GryffenOn the third day, they reached the edge of the chaos.The road descended into a wide, high valley—the approach to the Iron Pass. The difference was visceral. The neat fields were replaced by scorched earth. A crofter’s hut stood as a blackened skeleton. The air, once clean and cold, carried the faint, acrid tang of smoke.And there, ahead, where the valley narrowed into the mouth of the pass itself, was a scene of tense stalemate.On one side of a rushing, glacial river, a makeshift camp flew the banners of several eastern lowland lords—a silver gryphon, a green serpent, a black tower. Perhaps two hundred men-at-arms were arrayed in disciplined ranks, their pikes gleaming dully in the overcast light. At their head, on a sleek chestnut horse, was a man in polished half-plate: Lord Gryffen, his face handsome and cruel under a trimmed beard.On the other side of the river, the north side where the cliffs rose toward the Hold, stood the clansmen. Perhaps fifty of them,
They rode with the grim efficiency of a military column, but without the banners.Makil led from the front, astride a powerful black courser. He wore practical riding leathers and a dark grey cloak, the hood pulled up against the persistent drizzle that had greeted them at dawn. Behind him came Captain Arlen and nine of his Eastern Scouts—lean, weathered men who spoke little and saw everything. Rykker, the King’s personal guard, a mountain of a man with a face like scarred granite, rode at the rear, his eyes constantly sweeping the surrounding hills.Leigh rode in the middle of the column, a position of both protection and containment. She wore her own riding leathers, a worn pair she’d brought from home, and a hooded cloak of muted green. She looked exactly what she was: a border woman going home. The pretense of the lady was packed away with the lavender gown.For the first day, they rode in near silence, eating up the miles on the well-maintained post road that led east from the ca
The following day, Adelaide tentatively brought up water-table management during a walk in the gardens. Makil, to Leigh’s surprise, engaged. He asked precise, technical questions. Adelaide, on her own territory, blossomed, speaking with a quiet passion and intelligence that had been buried under layers of social training. Makil listened, nodded. It wasn’t romance, but it was respect. Adelaide floated for the rest of the day, casting grateful glances at Leigh.It was a small manipulation, Leigh told herself. A kindness. But it felt like another thread in a web she was both spinning and getting caught in.The true storm broke a week later, with the arrival of two messengers.The first came at noon, from the east. A single rider, this one not wearing royal colors, but the dun-gray of the mountain clans. He delivered a small, charred leather tube directly to Makil in the training yard, where he was practicing longbow against straw targets. Leigh, observing from a shaded archway, saw Makil
Chapter 5: The King’s GambitThe shell was a secret. Leigh kept it tucked in a small velvet pouch, hidden beneath the false bottom of her jewelry case—a case that held no jewels, only lockpicks, a garrote wire, and a vial of distilled nightshade. The irony was not lost on her. The shell, a fragile, beautiful thing, was the most dangerous item in there.Makil did not seek her out. The castle was a whirlwind of activity. The captured pirates were interrogated in the deep cells, their information weaving a map of syndicates and safe houses that kept the admiralty busy for days. Vanessa’s family, delirious with gratitude, sent lavish gifts to the castle, which Makil quietly distributed among the men who had followed him into the sea-cave.He was different. Not softer—never that—but the icy brittleness had been replaced by a focused, kinetic energy. He moved through the halls with a new purpose, his council meetings ran longer, his questions sharper. The victory was a key that had unlocked







