They crossed into Western territory at dawn.
Killan had expected resistance at the river, but there was none.
The bridge in front of them stood intact - no sabotage, no burned timbers, no archers in the tree line. The land beyond rolled outward in muted gold hills and narrow forest breaks, deceptively gentle terrain.
Too gentle. Too quiet for his liking.
Harlan rode up alongside him as Athax’s vanguard cleared the crossing.
"No scouts?" Killan asked quietly.
"They reported movent two days ago," Harlan replied. "Nothing since."
"Either they’re retreating or inviting."
Killan signaled forward advance anyway.
If the Western troops were falling back, they needed to press. If they were baiting-
Killan’s jaw tightened.
Then they would step carefully.
His troops moved in disciplined columns. Santi commanded the rear guard. Eir’s archers staggered along the ridges to maintain sightlines. Standard procedure.
Still, the silence felt curated.
No smoke from farmsteads. No livestock. No refugees fleeing.
Western territory had emptied itself in anticipation.
An hour passed. Two.
They entered a shallow valley cut by stone outcroppings on both sides. Narrow, but not impossibly so. The kind of terrain that could compress an army if mishandled.
Killan slowed his horse.
"Signal staggered advance," he ordered.
Killan scanned the heights. "If I were him, I’d position archers there."
"Yes," Harlan said. "If you were him, but this bastard is crazy."
The first horn sounded before he could finish the thought.
Not theirs. Western. It echoed from both ridges simultaneously.
Killan didn’t flinch, and Harlan rounded to the n imdiately.
"Shields!"
Arrows rained from both sides.
Not chaotic. Layered.
The first volley struck shields. The second targeted exposed cavalry. The third aid behind them -to drive them forward.
Forward into the narrowing throat of the valley.
"They’ve cut the rear!" Santi shouted from behind.
Killan twisted in the saddle. Western cavalry had appeared from the tree line at their back - closing the bridge, severing retreat.
"Form inward wedge!" Killan barked.
The n responded instantly, shields overlapping, infantry tightening around central command.
The ridges filled with movent - Western soldiers rising from concealed trenches carved into stone.
The Western troops hadn’t retreated. They have buried themselves in the land.
Nolle grinned despite the chaos. "Elegant."
"Focus," Killan snapped.
The ground trembled. Not from cavalry, but from the front.
Western infantry erged at the valley’s mouth in disciplined ranks, shield walls interlocked, pikes angled forward.
They had been allowed to walk in.
Killan felt it fully now.
This wasn’t harassnt, but full containnt.
"They want to pick us off," he said. "And slaughter."
The Western line advanced. Killan’s n pushed forward to avoid being pinned entirely, blades clashing as the first ranks collided.
Steel scread against steel.
The valley amplified every sound.
Killan broke through a pike line with brutal efficiency. Eir’s archers adapted, targeting ridge positions despite poor angles.
But the geotry was wrong and every gain cost twice what it should.
Killan cut down a soldier pressing his left flank and imdiately replaced him with another.
Western troops rotated seamlessly. Fresh lines. They had been waiting after that first defeat.
A rider broke from the Western center then.
Alone. Unhurried. Prince Maric.
He rode through his own advancing ranks as if the battlefield were rely a corridor clearing for him. His armor reflected the pale sun—dark steel etched in subtle silver. No helm. No visible strain. He reined in his horse just beyond blade range.
"Southern mongrels," he called evenly. "Where is your King?!"
Killan stepped forward through his own formation. "And you are?"
Maric surveyed the valley, the trapped formation, and the ridge archers maintaining pressure.
"You entered farther than I expected."
"You left the door wide open for us, Sir."
Maric smiled faintly. "Did I?"
Behind him, Western cavalry shifted, tightening the back line further.
Harlan muttered under his breath. "He’s enjoying this."
Killan did not take his eyes off Maric.
"You’ve committed heavily for a trap," Killan said. "I admire your confidence."
"I prefer certainty." Maric’s gaze flicked briefly toward the ridges, assessing arrow rotation with casual precision.
"You are a capable commander," he continued. "I did not wish to waste more ti testing that."
The next volley struck harder. The Southern troops’ outer shield line wavered under combined pressure from ridge and front assault.
Killan recalculated rapidly. Break the front, create an escape corridor.
But Western pike depth extended farther than visible. It seed like they’d planned for that too.
"Did your Queen make it ho safe?" Maric said conversationally. "I hope to see her again."
Killan did not respond. Maric’s eyes sharpened slightly.
"My brother would like to et her, you know."
It was not quite a question.
Killan held his expression neutral.
"Your concern is misplaced."
Maric studied him one heartbeat longer than comfortable. Then he nodded once.
"Right. It does seem so."
His words unsettled Killan more than the trap.
Western infantry surged. The valley compressed further.
Eir shouted from the rear, "They’re pushing firepots!"
Killan saw it - clay spheres lobbed from ridge positions, shattering into oil that ignited against shield tops.
Smoke thickened.
Air thinned.
"They’re forcing collapse," Killan realized.
Killan’s mind moved fast.
They could hold for a ti, but not indefinitely.
Maric dismounted. The gesture was deliberate. He stepped forward, sword still sheathed.
"I would offer terms," he said calmly, "but you are not a man who accepts them."
"Correct."
Maric inclined his head slightly.
"Then allow to be honest."
He glanced at the narrowing valley.
"This ends today."
Killan felt sothing in his chest settle - not panic. Clarity.
"If I fall here," he said quietly, "she will co for your head, that much I know."
Maric’s expression did not change.
"That depends," he replied, "on whether she survives what is coming."
The ground shifted slightly under another coordinated push.
Western lines closed tighter. Santi bled from his temple. Eir’s archers were nearly out of high ground options.
Killan’s troops tightened inward again.
This was no longer maneuver warfare. It was survival geotry.
Killan raised his blade.
"Forward breach!" he commanded.
They roared and drove into the Western center with everything they had. For a mont - just a mont - the pike wall bent.
Then second rank reinforcent locked behind it.
Maric stepped back, watching the strain with clinical interest.
"You see?" he whispered as he watched Killan move across the chaos. "I do not gamble."
Another volley from the ridges. Another collapse of space.
Killan realized it then.
Maric had not designed this rely to kill him.
He had designed it to erase his troops as a functioning unit.
To shatter their siege before it solidified.
The realization burned.
Steel clashed again.
Killan staggered back from a shield bash. Eir shouted sothing Killan couldn’t hear over the din.
And then-
The wind shifted subtly. Wrong.
Maric felt it first.
His eyes lifted fractionally toward the eastern ridge.
Killan noticed.
"What is it?" Harlan demanded.
Killan didn’t answer.
Because across the distant crest of the valley - dust rose.
Sobody approaching their lines.
Maric’s jaw tightened by a degree almost imperceptible.
He did not turn fully, but he knew.
Killan followed his gaze.
And for the first ti since entering the valley, hope cut through the smoke.
Banners crested the horizon.
Eastern.
The trap had worked.
But it had not been set for this big of a reinforcent.
Maric exhaled slowly. "Interesting," he murmured.
The battlefield shifted.
And the valley, once a snare, began to feel very, very small.
***
The dust did not rise like how a cavalry passed.
It rose like the weather.
Low at first - subtle against the pale horizon beyond the ridge. A distortion more than a movent. Western archers adjusted their position, squinting into the glare. A horn sounded from the rear flank, uncertain.
Killan and his n did not turn imdiately.
Hoofbeats carry differently depending on intent.
Raiders strike sharp and chaotic. Reinforcents ride hard and desperate.
This was controlled.
The first Eastern banner crested the ridge in full.
Green field.
Gold thread.
The sigil caught light like a blade being unsheathed.
Western officers began shouting.
"Rear rotation!"
"Pivot line three!"
"Reform the back flank!"
But the valley was already too narrow. Prince Maric had compressed the battlefield to ensure no escape. Now the compression worked against him.
Killan watched from within smoke and steel as the Eastern cavalry ford along the ridge line in precise, terrifying alignnt.
Not charging. Just waiting.
At their center rode House Svedana’s banner-
And then he saw her.
In the sa damned armor she wore for war.
Dark plate, darker than royal regalia, shaped for movent. No crown. No ornantation. With her hair unbound, it moved like a storm behind her.
Aya did not raise a weapon.
She simply surveyed the valley.
Killan felt her intense presence as the air shifted.
The smoke that had hung low in the compressed throat of the valley lifted slightly - as though pulled upward by an unseen current.
n paused.
Just for a breath.
Western.
Eastern.
All of them.
Prince Maric turned fully now.
Their eyes t across the distance and Aya’s eyes registered fury before looking away.
Aya lowered her gaze from him to the valley.
To Killan.
Her face relaxed for a fraction before assuming its previous look.
Garrett of House Ambrea, Lord of the Eastern Kingdoms, rode beside her. His wife, Lady Ioanna, rode on the other side of her.
"Your command, my Lady?" Garrett asked.
Aya did not answer imdiately.
She closed her eyes.
And for a mont, Killan thought-
She was steadying herself.
He was wrong.
She was planning to end this battle early.
The ground beneath the valley floor thrumd faintly.
Sothing coiled beneath stone and root and blood-soaked soil.
Aya inhaled slowly.
When her eyes opened-
They were not the sa. Brighter and deeper.
As if sothing ancient had stepped forward inside her and taken the reins.
"Let’s split," she said calmly. "Lord Garrett, please take the left flank.
Garrett didn’t hesitate. "You’ll take care of the rest?"
"You know too well."
Eastern cavalry divided with surgical precision, half riding along the ridge to collapse the Western rear flank from both sides.
Prince Maric’s officers scrambled to respond.
"Archers pivot east!"
"Shield back formation!"
Too late.
Aya nudged her horse forward.
Not into a gallop, but into inevitability.
The Eastern line moved behind her.
Killan watched the geotry of the battlefield unravel in real ti.
Western rear lines began breaking formation under pressure from Aya’s ridge assault. Garrett’s left flank drove downward into exposed cavalry.
The trap strained.
And all the while, Prince Maric’s gaze never left Aya.
He began issuing commands rapidly, voice even, adjusting lines to avoid full collapse.
He was still composed, still calculating.
Aya descended the ridge.
Halfway down, she dismounted.
That stopped Killan’s breath.
What are you doing? He thought as he made a move to run towards her, leaving a distracted harlan behind.
She handed her reins off without looking.
Then she walked down the slope. Passed fighting troops. Into the valley. Alone.
Eastern soldiers hesitated for half a second - then resud their assault.
Because she did not need any escort.
The ground under her boots seed firr.
The smoke thinned around her path.
Western infantry nearest her faltered, not from visible force, but from an invisible pressure.
The kind that settles into the lungs and makes breathing feel labored.
Prince Maric stepped forward to et her.
He had not drawn his sword yet.
"Lady Svedana," he called across the narrowing space.
Her gaze lifted to him.
The battlefield noise dimd - not truly quieter, but distant.
Killan cut down another soldier and pushed forward, trying to close the space between himself and his wife.
But he was too far.
Aya stopped ten paces from Prince Maric.
"You tried to kill ," she said evenly.
"You walked into it, my Lady," Maric replied.
His eyes searched her face - not for fear, but for confirmation.
He found nothing.
Aya tilted her head slightly. "You should not have forced my hand."
"I did not force anything," Maric replied calmly. "I accelerated inevitability."
Western infantry shifted uneasily around them.
So lowered shields without aning to.
Prince Maric noticed, and his face contorted.
"You think this makes fear you?" he asked her quietly. "I know what you are."
Aya’s voice did not rise. Just a faint, "Oh, do you?"
She lifted one hand slightly, and the ground responded.
It began as a vibration beneath boots. Then stone cracked.
Thin fractures spidered outward across the valley floor between the two armies.
n stumbled.
Pikes tilted.
Horses scread.
Killan froze. Sohow, he felt it in his ribs. In his teeth. Not magic like fla. Not lightning.
Western ranks broke formation in instinctive retreat.
Prince Maric did not step back, but his eyes sharpened.
"That resonance," he murmured. "Interesting."
Aya’s gaze hardened.
Just then, the fractures widened.
Not enough to swallow n - but enough to destabilize lines.
Enough to shatter the perfect geotry Prince Maric had built.
Their combined forces surged. And now it was Western troops fighting uphill.
Killan reached the outer edge of the expanding cracks and stopped.
Because he realized sothing terrifying.
Aya was not struggling. She was not straining at all.
Prince Maric drew his sword at last.
Steel sang.
"If you intend to finish this," he said evenly, "do it properly."
Aya stepped forward.
The cracks ceased widening.
But the air thickened further.
Maric struck first - fast, precise, lethal. And Aya t the blade cleanly. The clash rang like struck stone.
Maric tested angles.
Aya matched them.
Maric drove her back two steps, testing limits. Aya pivoted and redirected his montum without wasted motion.
The ground cracked again under the pivot.
Maric’s breath shortened slightly. "You will destabilize your own n," he warned.
Aya did not blink. "Worry about yourself, for I have to co to collect a debt."
Maric frowned as he listened.
Western soldiers flinched.
Killan and Aya’s soldiers straightened.
Killan felt it like a blade drawn across mory.
Aya stepped into Maric’s guard and drove him back three strides. The fractures sealed behind her like earth rembering its shape.
Maric’s boots slid across unstable ground.
"You speak of your sister," he said through tightened breath.
"Her na is Eryn."
She moved again - faster. Steel clashed.
"You dare hurt more of my family? My sister, and now my husband. Is that it?"
This ti, Maric gave ground. Just once.
And Killan saw it. The first flicker of sothing close to doubt.
Aya advanced. Combined forces roared behind her as Western lines faltered.
Maric disengaged sharply and stepped back onto firr ground.
"A dangerous choice, Prince," Aya said, expression not wavering.
And then-
She moved with finality.
The earth beneath Maric’s footing shifted just enough. Just once. Enough.
Her blade struck clean.
The sound of the blade was not dramatic. Not explosive. Simply final.
Maric staggered back one step.
Looked at her as if committing her to mory.
Then he fell.
Silence rippled outward.
A stunned silence.
Western banners dipped. Their soldiers stopped mid-strike.
Aya stood over him - sword in hand, eyes far away. The fractures in the valley floor slowly sealed.
The air lightened.
Killan walked toward her through the aftermath.
He did not run. Because what he felt was not relief. It was awe - And sothing dangerously close to fear.
Aya turned slightly as he approached.
Her eyes t his.
They were hers, but not entirely.
"Killan," she said quietly.
He searched her face for the girl who had once argued strategy by firelight. "Aya?"
She was still there.
But behind her, sothing vast.
"You shouldn’t have faced him alone," he said.
She glanced at the fallen prince.
"I... I’m sorry."
Southern, Northern, and Eastern banners rose fully now.
Alliance no longer theoretical.
No longer fragile and proven in blood.
Killan looked over the valley - the cracked stone, the sealed earth, the Western retreat unraveling in chaos.
Then back at her.
"You changed the war," he said.
Aya’s gaze drifted briefly to the horizon.
"No," she replied softly. "I ended the pretense."
And for the first ti, Killan understood that whatever this was, the woman standing before him was not simply a queen or his wife.
She was sothing the world had not seen in generations.
And that realization frightened him more than any war ever had.
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