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Chapter 9: The Iron Pass

Author: ergnrmt
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-07-18 00:30:34

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 capital. The land was gentle, rolling, quilted with fields and orderly villages. By afternoon on the second day, the land began to shrug. The hills grew steeper, the farms more sparse, the forests thicker and darker. The air grew sharper, tasting of pine and wet stone.

Makil dropped back to ride beside her as the road narrowed into a rocky pass between two shoulders of granite. “We’re crossing into the Marcher Lands,” he said, his voice low. “The King’s peace is thinner here.”

“The King’s peace has always been an idea here, not a garrison,” Leigh replied, her eyes scanning the tree line. “It’s held by blood and barter.”

He glanced at her profile, sharp against the grey sky. “The scouts say we’re being watched. Since noon.”

She didn’t seem surprised. “The Highlanders. They’ll have sent runners ahead the moment we entered the foothills. They’re deciding if we’re prey, or if we bear your father’s seal.”

“And which are we?”

She turned her flint-gray eyes on him. “That depends on you, Your Highness. They respect strength, but they despise arrogance. They’ll test you.”

The test came an hour later, at a place where the road was forced to switchback up a sheer cliff face. A rockslide, recent and deliberate, blocked the path. Stones the size of sheep littered the roadway.

The column halted. Arlen and his men dismounted, hands on weapons, eyes scanning the cliffs above.

“An ambush?” Rykker rumbled, drawing a massive two-handed sword from his saddle.

“No,” Leigh said, swinging down from her horse. “A conversation.”

She walked forward, past the wary scouts, and stood before the pile of rubble. She didn’t look up at the cliffs. Instead, she knelt, picked up a piece of the fallen rock, and examined it. Then she placed it carefully atop the pile, not as an attempt to clear it, but as a marker.

“Duncan of the Red Bear!” she called out, her voice not shouting, but pitched to carry in the narrow defile. “Your slide is sloppy! The limestone is fractured! A child could see it’s been pry-barred, not fallen! If you’re going to block a king’s road, at least do it with conviction!”

Silence. Then, from the cliffs above, a deep, rolling laugh echoed down. A figure appeared, standing on a ledge as if he’d grown from the stone itself. He was huge, bearded, and wore a cloak of shaggy bear fur. “Leigh Valerius!” he boomed. “I heard you’d gone soft in the south, playing princess! Your eye is still sharp, I see!”

“Sharper than your wits, Duncan! This is Prince Makil, son of Alistair. He comes under the King’s seal, on business for my father. Clear this rubble, or I’ll tell your wife where you really go on your ‘long hunts.’”

Another laugh, warmer this time. Duncan whistled, a sharp, bird-like sound. A dozen more men materialized from the rocks—big, armed, clad in furs and leather. They began moving the stones with surprising speed, not with aggression, but with a workmanlike efficiency.

Makil watched, a strange tension coiling in his gut. She moved among these wild men as if they were her own household guard. She traded insults with Duncan that were clearly a form of affection. She was in her element, and the power she held here was not through title, but through earned respect. It was a side of her he’d only glimpsed; now it was on full display, formidable and utterly alien to his courtly world.

The path cleared, Duncan swaggered down to the road. He ignored the tense scouts and Rykker’s looming presence, his eyes going straight to Makil. He looked him up and down, not with a subject’s deference, but with a man assessing another man.

“Prince,” he grunted. “Your father’s seal buys you passage. But the road ahead is... lively. The Wheel’s vermin are scurrying, and some of your own lowland lords are puffing up their chests at the border, shouting about ’savages.’” He spat. “We are cleaning your house. They don’t like the mess.”

“The crown appreciates the... cleaning,” Makil said, choosing his words with care. He kept his seat, meeting Duncan’s gaze evenly. “But we must ensure the house itself is not damaged in the process. That is why we are here.”

Duncan’s eyes narrowed, then he gave a grudging nod. “Spoken like a man who knows a rotten beam when he sees one. Leigh’s father waits at the Hold. We’ll shadow you. The cliffs have eyes that are not ours.” With that, he melted back into the rocks with his men, vanishing as quickly as they’d appeared.

The column moved on, the atmosphere now charged. They were being escorted, and watched, by unseen sentinels.

As they made camp that night in a defensive hollow, the scouts taking first watch, Makil approached Leigh where she sat sharpening a small, wicked-looking dagger by the fire. “You have a way with your people,” he said.

“They’re not ‘my people.’ They’re allies. There’s a difference. They follow my father because he’s never broken a promise, and because he fights beside them. Not from behind a wall.” She sheathed the dagger. “Duncan was right. The lowland lords will be at the border. Men like Lord Gryffen. He owns the mines south of the pass. He’s been trying to get my father’s land for years. This chaos is his opportunity.”

“Then we will deal with Lord Gryffen,” Makil said, but his mind was on the ease with which she’d commanded the situation at the rockslide. “You called him by name. You knew his technique.”

“I trained with him. When I was twelve, I spent a summer with the Red Bear clan. My father believed in knowing your allies as well as your enemies.” She poked the fire with a stick. “You held his gaze well. He respects that. He would have killed you if you’d looked away.”

A cold thrill went through Makil. This was not court politics. This was life and death, measured in glances and the quality of stone in a rockslide. “You live in a sharper world than I do.”

“We live in the same world,” she corrected, looking at him across the flames. “You just have more tapestries hanging over the cracks.”

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