Heir Of Novron: The Riyria Revelations

“You said… You said that you could die a happy woman if only that were true.”

 

 

She looked up at him tenderly, but her eyes lost focus and began to wander. “I can’t see you, Royce. It’s dark. I can’t see in the dark like you can. I’m scared.”

 

He clenched her hand. “I’m here, Gwen. I’m right beside you.”

 

“Royce, listen to me. You have to hang on,” she said, her voice suddenly urgent. “Don’t let go. Don’t you dare let go. Do you hear me? Are you listening to me, Royce Melborn? You have to hang on, Royce. Please… give me your hand. Give me your hand!”

 

He squeezed her hand tighter. “I’m here, Gwen. I have you. I’m not letting go. I’ll never let go.”

 

“Promise me. You must promise. Please, Royce.”

 

“I promise,” he told her.

 

“I love you, Royce. Don’t forget… Don’t let go…”

 

“I love you.”

 

“Don’t… let…”

 

Her body hitched again. She struggled to breathe, stiffened in his arms, and then slowly… gradually… fell limp. Her head tilted backward. Clutching her tightly to his chest, he kissed her face. Gwen was gone and Royce was alone.

 

 

 

Amilia, Breckton, Hadrian, and Arista led thirty horsemen to the gates of Colnora. The cavalry detachment was selected from the Northern Imperial Army and included Breckton’s best soldiers. Most of them had been at the siege of Drondil Fields only weeks before. These were not the sons of counts and dukes. They did not wear elaborately decorated armor of full plate. They were grim, battle-hardened men who honed their skills on bloody fields.

 

In the wake of Modina’s abduction, Amilia found herself in the surreal position of imperial steward. The former scullery maid now ruled the empire. She tried not to think about it. Unlike Modina, she was not descended from Novron and held no pedigree to protect her station. And she had no idea how long she had before her power, her station, and perhaps her very life ended.

 

She had no idea what to do, but to her great relief, Sir Breckton mobilized his men and vowed to find the empress. When Sir Hadrian and Arista volunteered to join them, Amilia decided to ride as well. She could not sit in the palace. She did not know how to administrate, so she left Nimbus in charge until her return. If she could not find Modina, there might be no point in returning at all. They had to find her.

 

“Open the gate!” Sir Breckton shouted toward the watchtower that sat atop the wall in Colnora.

 

“City gate opens at dawn,” someone replied from above.

 

“I am Sir Breckton, commander of the imperial hosts, on a mission of grave importance to Her Eminence. I demand that you open at once!”

 

“And I am the gatekeeper with strict orders to keep this gate sealed between dusk and dawn. Come back at first light.”

 

“What are we going to do?” Amilia asked as panic threatened to consume her. The absurdity of the situation was overwhelming. The empress’s life was at stake, and they were at the mercy of a foolish man and a wooden gate.

 

Breckton dismounted. “We can lash tree branches together to make ladders and go over the walls. Or we can build a ram—”

 

“We don’t have time for that,” Hadrian interrupted. “The full moon’s high. Royce is doing the exchange at the Langdon Bridge. We have to get inside and down to that bridge—now!”

 

“This is all your fault!” Amilia burst out, and shook with fury. “You and your friend. First you attempt to kill Sir Breckton, and now he’s taken Modina.”

 

Breckton reached up and took her hand. “Although he had the power to do so, Sir Hadrian did not kill me. He is not responsible for the actions of his associate. He is trying to help.”

 

Amilia wiped tears from her eyes and nodded. She did not know what to do. She was no general. She was just a stupid peasant girl whom the nobility would soon execute. Everything was so hopeless. The only one who did not seem upset was Arista.

 

The princess was humming.

 

Already off her horse, she stood with her eyes closed and her hands outstretched. Her fingers moved delicately through the air and a low vibration echoed from deep in her throat. The sound was not a tune or a song of any kind. There was no discernible melody, and as Arista’s voice grew louder, the air seemed to grow thick and heavy. Then there was another hum. An echo resonated from the gate. The wooden beams moved like a man quivering in the cold. They cracked and buckled. The great hinges rattled, and bits of stone fractured where they met the walls. Arista stopped humming. The gate ceased its trembling. Then, in one burst of voice, she uttered an unrecognizable word, and the gate exploded in flying bits of splintered wood and scattered snow.

 

 

 

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