MasukFor centuries, the four Elven kingdoms of Greenborne, Windrider, Frostborne and Mirefolk have been bound together by King Arion’s Decree, a political pact enforcing marriages between realms to preserve peace. As the four Greenborne princesses come of age, each is sent toward a future decided long before she was born. None of them are prepared for how deeply desire will disrupt duty. Loren, the eldest, is betrothed to the Prince of Windrider. Fierce and determined, she clashes with his cousin, the proud Duke Alix, a man whose presence challenges her control. What begins as hostility unravels into something far more dangerous. In a true enemies to lovers romance, Loren is forced to choose between duty and the pull of her own heart. Sybille, the second princess, is sent north to Frostborne already in love with a man she cannot have. In the icy court of a powerful king, she becomes a queen but remains anchored to her past, unable to give up her childhood lover, her adopted brother. Her story becomes one of betrayal, sacrifice and the devastation of choices made for duty rather than desire. Rowan, the most practical of the sisters, approaches marriage with logic rather than passion. But when she is drawn into a love triangle involving a charming nobleman and a loyal companion she is forced to reconsider everything she believes about love, stability and trust. Mariselle, the youngest, enters Mirefolk through scandal and a forced marriage. Headstrong and untamed, she clashes with her new husband in a union defined by conflict and reluctant attraction, threatening to consume them both as they try to outwit and outmanoeuvre each other. All four sisters discover the Marriage Decree was never just about duty, but about the cost of desire itself and the price to be paid. ROMANTASY
Lihat lebih banyakDuke Alix of Windrider, Commander of the King’s Cavalry, entered the kingdom of Greenborne sitting high on his horse, back straight, face devoid of expression. Four Windrider knights followed him, their red and gold banners sharp against the forest.
He had come to the forest realm to decide whether one of its princesses would become his cousin’s wife. The marriage would not occur for years yet, both the Prince of Windrider and the Princess of Greenborne were still teenagers, but his report would decide the future of the alliance.
At the edge of the kingdom, where the forest began, Greenborne sentries sat high in the trees. No alarm was raised, no signal given. They simply watched him pass., bows strung loosely over their shoulders.
Alix nudged his horse forward.
The Windrider envoy proceeded through the forest. The only sounds were the rhythm of hooves and chorus of birds.
When the castle revealed itself, no challenge came and no herald called his name. The stone archway was passed beneath as though no one knew, or cared, that he had arrived.
Inside the courtyard, chickens pecked between cobblestones. A large hound lay stretched across the steps. A steward emerged from the entrance, blinking as though the sunlight was mildly offensive.
“The King is out hunting, Your Grace,” the steward bowed. “He will return when he returns.”
Alix suppressed his annoyance. “We will wait.”
Alix dismounted. He walked a slow circuit of the courtyard. The fortress walls were half claimed by climbing vines. Somewhere deeper within the keep, a woman sang, slightly out of tune.
By the third hour, Alix had counted every archer’s blind (seven) and every window facing the courtyard (nineteen, with one missing its glass). If so inclined, he could have scaled the tower with a length of rope and not a single soul would have noticed.
He had just begun his fourth lap when a pack of riders broke the treeline, their mounts massive and shaggy. Greenborne wolves, each the size of a pony and built of muscle and malice. At their head rode the King.
By elven standards, the man was an ogre. He dismounted with a bellow, then staggered forward, shining with sweat, holding a flask.
“Duke Alix!” the King called out. “I expected you tomorrow. Or was it yesterday?” He crushed Alix’s hand in a greeting somewhere between a handshake and torture.
“Today,” Alix said, teeth tight.
“Welcome! Come in, come in.” The King gestured wildly, nearly striking a servant with his elbow.
“The King sends his regards.”
“Of course he does. And you’ll carry mine back. But first you’ll have supper and stay the night. Our wolves prefer strangers after sunset.”
The King poured a drink for each of them, insisting on a toast.
“To new friends,” the King clinked his cup so hard the wine sloshed onto Alix’s sleeve.
Alix drank. The wine was sharp with a grassy aftertaste. He watched as the King drained his cup and wiped his mouth with the back of a paw-sized hand.
Inside, the main hall was a cavernous stone chamber, hung with spears and shields. In one corner, a dead boar hung suspended from the ceiling by its hind legs. The air was thick with wood smoke, roast meat and wet moss.
The King sat at a table laden with food, dropping into the chair with a creak. Alix followed, eyeing every exit. The King pointed a rib bone at the chair beside him.
“Tomorrow, we will speak of the alliance,” he declared. “Tonight, we eat. You can meet my daughters in the morning. I’ve no patience for the harridans after a day’s hunting.”
“Windrider custom is to conduct business during supper,” Alix replied.
“Greenborne custom is to see what a man is made of when he’s had three cups of wine and half a deer.” The King tossed scraps to the hound at his feet.
Alix chewed with discipline. He watched the way the King slouched, the way he tore bread apart, the way he barked with laughter and sighed theatrically.
At some point the King asked about the health of the young prince and Alix recited the expected reply: in good spirits and eager for the alliance. The King seemed to find this hilarious.
“Not much like his father,” the King said. “He’s never so much as smiled in the presence of a Greenborne.”
“Windrider tradition prizes restraint.”
“Does it?” The King signalled for more wine. “Perhaps that’s why you Easteners always look so miserable.”
The King’s laughter filled the hall. Even the hound smirked.
Alix let it pass. He thought of the journey here across the steppe, the days of dust and discipline. He thought of the old Windrider saying: the grass bends in the wind, but never breaks. He wondered what it must be like to live in a world where everything grew wild.
The conversation wandered from weather to wolves. The King told two stories that ended with someone losing a finger and by the time supper was over, Alix had learned more about Greenborne than he ever wished to know.
The King leaned back, stretching.
“I suppose you’re wondering about my daughters,” he said. “Gods help me, they’re a handful. The second is a good girl but she’s already promised to the Prince of Frostborne.” He drained the last of his wine. “The youngest will be the death of me.”
He cast Alix a look. “Truth be told, none of them have had much discipline since their mother died.”
Alix nodded. The late Queen had been a princess from Frostborne, renowned for both her beauty and her spirit. She had also been half human. He wondered if that explained the daughters, the court, or the King himself.
In the back of his mind, he began composing the report he would write and send home.
Greenborne remains unchanged.
Its wolves are not limited to the woods.
Loren swept through Windrider’s timber corridors clutching the feather in one hand and the note in the other with the sort of focused fury that made servants flatten themselves against walls as she passed. The Duke’s door was sturdier than the others, bound with iron strapping that suggested either paranoia or extensive experience with people who wished to break it down.A single guard stood beside it, posture rigid, eyes already assessing her as a potential problem. He was young, with the sort of earnest face that suggested he took his duties very seriously and had not yet learned when rules were meant to bend.“I need to speak with His Grace,” Loren announced.The guard’s eyes flicked over her.“His Grace is not receiving visitors, m’Lady.”“He’ll receive me.”The guard hesitated, clearly weighing duty against the likelihood of consequences from arguing with the future Queen. Loren didn't wait for him to resolve the dilemma. Before he could object further, she stepped past him and
Inside the summer house, Mariselle sat with Willa upon a cushioned bench. Through the windows, they watched the Prince pointing to something in the water while Loren leaned forward with interest. The scene was charming, domestic, exactly what one would hope to see between a future king and queen.“Your Prince seems quite taken with my sister,” Mariselle observed.“He is fond of her,” Willa replied carefully.Mariselle laughed.“Fond. What a wonderfully lukewarm word.”“I beg your pardon?”“Fondness.” Mariselle leaned back against the cushions. “It’s what people settle for when they can’t have what they truly want. Comfortable, reliable fondness.”“Fondness can grow into deeper feeling, given time,” Willa said.“Can it?” Mariselle studied him with disconcerting directness. “Perhaps for some people. Perhaps for Loren, who still believes duty and happiness can coexist if one is resigned enough.”“But not for you?” Willa asked.“Absolutely not for me.” Mariselle’s smile flashed bright and
One moment, the Prince, the Earl and Tyllu had been ahead of Loren on the steppe, the next they were gone. Mariselle brought her mare alongside Loren’s.“Perhaps that was the surprise,” Mariselle said with a grin. “Windriders can vanish at will.”As they approached the place where the Prince and Willa disappeared, Loren finally understood. What appeared to be solid ground was in fact the hidden lip of a steep ravine, concealed by tall grass until one was almost upon it.A narrow path zigzagged down the ravine wall. The horses picked their way carefully downward. At the bottom, the world transformed completely.A narrow stream meandered through the heart of the ravine, fed by a waterfall that spilled over a rocky ledge and fanned into a clear pond below. Willow trees leaned over the water’s edge, their trailing branches forming pools of shade.Tyllu swooped low over the pond before flying directly into the waterfall in a scatter of silver spray. He emerged to sit on the ledge, rufflin
The following day, Loren sat among her ladies-in-waiting in an alcove by the eastern windows of the great hall, listening to gossip about court fashions and trying very hard not to fling herself out the nearest window.Her mind kept returning to dark eyes and accusations of treason. The Duke’s words echoed with uncomfortable persistence.Be careful which battles you choose to fight here.Her fingers twisted lightly in her skirts. Had she chosen unwisely? Pushed too hard against a man whose influence over the Prince ran deep? Possibly, though in her defence, he was remarkably difficult not to argue with.“Loren?” Mariselle’s voice cut through her distraction. “Loren, are you listening? The Duke approaches.”He appeared in the archway a moment later. He wore his cavalry uniform, dark braids lying flat against his coat. The ladies’ chatter died immediately, replaced by the rustle of silk as they rose and curtsied with the precision of women who understood exactly where power resided with












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