The scent of roasted at and spiced cider drifted through the streets, children's laughter echoing alongside the lody of a musician's flute. Colorful banners hung overhead, lanterns flickered with warm light, and for the first ti in what felt like forever, Goldspire had co alive.
But Darian wasn't celebrating.
He stood just inside the doorway of his small ho; his fingers curled around the rough wood of the fra. His wife, Mara, held onto his arm, her grip tight with fear. Outside, their neighbors had begun to step into the streets, drawn by the music and the promise of festivity. Even their young son, Taron, tugged at his mother's sleeve, his wide eyes pleading to go outside.
"Papa, can we?" the boy asked, his voice filled with excitent. "I wanna see the dancers!"
Darian swallowed hard, his throat dry. He should let them go—his wife and son deserved this mont of peace. But fear clenched his chest, an iron grip refusing to let go.
The last ti there was a celebration in Goldspire, it ended in flas.
Darian still rembered that night with horrifying clarity. The city had been quiet for days, the streets empty, the air thick with tension. Then, without warning, the attack ca. Explosions shook the ground, and fire spread outside of the city while all he could do was watch. The sky had been swallowed in smoke. The screams of his neighbors and the panicked shouts of guards were all too familiar.
He had barely managed to get his family to safety, dragging Mara and Taron through the back alleys, their feet slipping on blood-soaked stone. The city was supposed to be secure, but the enemy had co anyway. Just like they always did.
And now, they were supposed to believe that it was over? That there was nothing left to fear? That this festival wasn't just another illusion before the next horror struck?
Find your next read at My Virtual Library Empire
Mara's voice was gentle but firm. "Darian, we can't keep hiding."
He turned to her, his jaw tight. "What if it happens again?"
She held his gaze, her own filled with the exhaustion of too many sleepless nights. "What if it doesn't?"
Taron let go of her sleeve and stepped forward, placing his small hands against Darian's leg. "Papa, please," he whispered.
Darian closed his eyes, exhaling shakily. He had spent so long waiting for the next disaster, trapped in a cycle of fear that had stolen more than just his peace—it had stolen their lives. But looking at his son's eager face, at the hope in Mara's eyes, he realized sothing.
Fear had already taken too much.
If he let it rule him, it would take even more.
He released his grip on the doorfra and forced himself to step forward. The mont his foot touched the street, his heart pounded violently against his ribs, every muscle in his body screaming at him to retreat. But he didn't.
He took another step.
And then another.
Mara smiled, taking his hand in hers. Taron bead, his little legs rushing ahead toward the sound of laughter.
Darian's chest felt tight as he watched his son disappear into the crowd of dancing children. But sothing else began to settle in his heart instead of dread—sothing unfamiliar.
Relief.
Maybe, just maybe, it was truly over.
Maybe I could live again.
The festival continued, stretching across the days like a slow-burning fire, flickering to life in the people's hearts. At first, they had erged only in small numbers—children drawn by the scent of sweets, elders peering cautiously from doorsteps, wary hands clutching the edges of cloaks. But each night, the streets of Goldspire grew busier. Each morning, the silence that had plagued the city seed to go further away.
Darian had taken cautious steps forward, but his fear still clung to him like a second skin. He lingered on the edges of the festival, never straying too far from his ho, always close enough to retreat should the unthinkable happen. Mara and Taron enjoyed the celebrations more freely, but they never pushed him, never forced him to go deeper into the crowds than he was ready for.
By the third day, the air was thick with the scents of roasted ats, spiced bread, and sweet fruit ciders. Laughter had beco a constant hum, blending with the sounds of music and the clatter of wooden mugs in celebratory toasts. Fire dancers twirled in the streets at night, and for the first ti in a long ti, the city didn't feel like a place waiting to die.
But still, Darian hesitated.
Even as Mara pulled him gently toward the town square and Taron ran ahead, giggling with a wooden sword in his hand, Darian remained rooted to the side streets, watching but never fully stepping in.
Then, the rchants arrived.
They ca in a caravan from Lunaris, their wagons painted in rich blues and deep silvers, carrying fabrics that shimred like water and trinkets that humd with faint traces of mana. But it wasn't the goods that caught Darian's attention—it was the people.
They laughed, speaking of their ho in the distance, of the life they had built beyond Goldspire's walls. They talked of prosperity, security, and a world that had not been reduced to endless fear.
He didn't know he was staring until a voice pulled him from his thoughts.
"You should go look," said Orlen, an old friend from the forge. The man's hands were calloused, his face lined with worry that mirrored Darian's own. He had been one of the few people Darian had spoken to since the attacks, one of the few who had never given up on trying to pull him from his self-imposed isolation.
Darian shook his head. "I don't need anything."
Orlen scoffed, crossing his arms. "It's not about needing sothing. It's about seeing what's out there, beyond your walls."
Darian frowned. "I know what's out there. It's war. It's ruin."
"Not everywhere," Orlen said simply. "Not anymore."
Darian turned toward him, frustration bubbling in his chest. "How can you be so sure? How do you know this peace will last?"
Orlen t his gaze, unwavering. "I don't. But I choose to believe it can."
The words struck sothing deep within Darian—sothing raw and aching. For so long, he had only prepared for the worst, convinced that any mont of happiness would be stolen away. He had lived as if fear was the only constant.
But what if it wasn't?
What if there was sothing beyond this fear?
What if he had been keeping himself trapped all this ti?
He turned his head, looking past Orlen, past the market stalls and rchants, past the glowing lanterns and flickering flas. He saw Mara standing near a fabric stall, running her fingers over silk that shimred like starlight. He saw Taron, wide-eyed, staring at a vendor selling miniature animals, his joy untainted by the shadows of the past.
They weren't waiting for another attack.
They weren't trapped in fear.
They were living.
Darian exhaled slowly. Then, before changing his mind, he took a step forward.
Then another.
And another.
Orlen clapped him on the back as he passed, grinning. "That's more like it."
Darian barely heard him. His mind was still adjusting, and his body was still tensed for the danger that didn't co. But sothing strange happened as he walked past the rchants, the revelers, and the perforrs.
The tightness in his chest eased.
The weight on his shoulders lifted.
And as he reached his wife and son, who turned to him with bright, welcoming smiles, Darian realized sothing he hadn't in a long ti.
He was free.
Darian stood frozen for a mont, the weight of fear pressing against his back like an invisible force, whispering that this was a mistake, that he should turn back, that safety was in the shadows of his ho. But then Mara noticed him.
Her eyes widened in surprise, and then, like the sun rising after a long storm, her face broke into a radiant smile. It wasn't just relief—it was joy—the kind of joy he hadn't seen in her in far too long.
"Taron, look," she said, her voice thick with emotion. "Your father's here."
Taron spun around, his small face lighting up with excitent. "Dad!" he shouted, abandoning the wooden toy animal he had been looking at to run straight toward Darian.
Instinct told him to brace himself, to prepare for impact, but as his son's arms wrapped tightly around his waist, sothing inside Darian cracked and crumbled. The fear, the guilt, the mories of the war—it all felt so distant at that mont, dwarfed by the overwhelming warmth of his son's embrace.
"You ca!" Taron's voice was muffled against his coat, but its pure happiness made Darian's throat tighten.
For the first ti in years, he felt sothing other than fear. He felt wanted. Needed. He wasn't just existing in his family's life, hiding in the shadows while they tried to move forward—he was part of it.
Slowly, hesitantly, he let himself kneel and wrap his arms around his son. Taron held him tighter as if he had been afraid Darian would disappear again.
"I'm here," Darian murmured, the words feeling like a promise and an apology. "I'm here."
Mara walked up to them, her steps slow and careful, as if she feared this mont would break if she moved too fast. When Darian looked up at her, he expected to see resentnt for all the tis he had let his fear keep him away, for all the nights she had carried the weight of their family alone. But there was no anger in her eyes—only love.
She knelt beside him, placing a warm hand on his cheek. "I missed you," she whispered.
His breath hitched. "I—" He wanted to say he was sorry. He wanted to tell her he wished he had been stronger and could walk into the light with her instead of cowering in the dark. But the words wouldn't co.
Instead, she leaned forward and kissed him softly. It wasn't a kiss of passion or desperation but of understanding. Of forgiveness. Of welco.
Reviews
All reviews (0)