Chapter 72: The Jewel of Stormcrest
Stormcrest rose from the grey stone hills like a mountain carved by the hands of giants. Its towers pierced the clouds, and its walls had stood for centuries, weathered by war and wind but never broken.
Banners bearing the crest of House Stormcrest snapped in the cold wind—a storm cloud split by a bolt of lightning, the mark of a family that had learned to endure.
Inside the estate, Duke Vane sat at his desk, reading through reports that all said the sa thing. The monsters were still coming. His soldiers were still dying. The Royal Army was still silent. Four days had passed since he sent the letter to the rcenary leader, and every hour of waiting felt like a year.
A knock ca at the door, and the Duke told whoever it was to enter. His son Edric walked in, tall and broad-shouldered, with the sa cold grey eyes as his father. He carried a letter in his hand.
"The Iron Hounds sent a response," Edric said, placing the folded parchnt on the desk.
The Duke broke the seal and read the words carefully. His expression did not change, but his shoulders relaxed just a little. "...He accepted. He will co within two weeks. He wants to et before he gives his final answer."
Edric crossed his arms. "And if he does not like what he sees?"
"Then we find another way," the Duke said, though his voice lacked confidence.
"There is no other way, Father." Edric’s voice was sharp. "The monsters are tearing through the domain. Our soldiers are exhausted. The Royal Army has abandoned us. This rcenary is our only chance."
The Duke stood and walked to the window, looking out at the grey sky. "I know. That is why we need to convince him. He is coming to see if we are worth fighting for. We need to show him that we are."
"And Clara?"
The Duke turned to face his son. "Clara will do her duty."
Edric’s jaw tightened, but he said nothing. He knew his father well enough to know that arguing would not change anything.
"Where is Clara?" the Duke asked.
"In the garden," Edric said. "She is always in the garden."
The Duke walked toward the door. "Co. We need to speak with her."
The gardens of Stormcrest were quiet, hidden behind high stone walls that blocked the cold wind. Flowers that had been planted generations ago still blood every spring, their colors muted by the grey light that filtered through the clouds.
Clara sat on a stone bench beneath a weeping willow, her fingers brushing the petals of a flower that had not yet blood.
Her hair was the color of sun-dried wheat, falling past her shoulders in soft waves, and her eyes were a soft green, not sharp like eralds but gentler, the green of moss in deep forests or adows after rain.
She was not laughing today.
She had heard the rumors. Servants whispered and guards talked. The Iron Hounds were coming, and her father was going to sell her to their leader like a piece of livestock.
She did not know... how to feel about that.
Her father’s voice pulled her from her thoughts. "Clara."
She looked up to see the Duke walking toward her, with Edric following close behind. She stood up and waited for them to reach her.
"The Iron Hounds are coming," her father said without any greeting. "Their leader accepted my offer. He will be here within two weeks. You will marry him, bear his children, and do whatever is necessary to keep his loyalty."
Clara kept her voice steady even though her hands were trembling. "...Yes, Father."
Edric looked away, unable to et her eyes.
The Duke continued. "He is a commoner with no family na and no noble blood, but he is strong and his n are loyal. With his help, we can drive the monsters back and save the domain. You understand what is at stake."
"I understand, Father." Clara said.
The Duke nodded, satisfied, and walked away without another word. Edric hesitated for a mont, glancing at his sister with sothing that might have been guilt, then followed.
Clara sat back down on the bench. The flower she had been touching was now crushed between her fingers, its petals stained with the faint green of crushed stems.
She stared at it for a long ti.
That night, Elara found her in her chambers. The maid sat behind Clara, brushing her long wheat-colored hair with slow, gentle strokes. The fire crackled in the hearth, casting warm light across the room, but the warmth did not reach Clara’s eyes.
"You are too young for this," Elara said. "You are only twenty-five. You should be marrying for love, not for politics."
Clara looked at her reflection in the mirror. Her face was beautiful, not in the cold, polished way of noble portraits, but in a natural, unpretentious way that felt warr and more real.
"...Love is a luxury, Elara," she said. "I am a daughter of House Stormcrest. My duty is to my family."
"Your father is selling you," Elara said, her voice sharp with anger. "He is trading you for swords."
Clara did not flinch. "If I can help the domain, I will."
Elara set the brush down and knelt beside her, taking Clara’s hands in hers. Her voice was heavy with worry.
"You do not understand, my lady. rcenaries are not like the knights you have seen at court. They are a different breed entirely. They are brutal n who have seen too much blood and cared too little about anything except their next paynt. They have no discipline and no honor. They fight because they enjoy it, not because they believe in anything."
She squeezed Clara’s hands tighter.
"And their leader, this Roran... they say he crawled out of the mud. A commoner who built his company on the bodies of his enemies. He has never lost a battle, but do you know what that ans? It ans he has never hesitated to kill. It ans he has left a trail of corpses behind him. n like that do not know how to be gentle. They do not know how to love. They only know how to take."
Clara’s hands trembled, but she did not pull away.
Elara continued, her voice dropping to a whisper. "They will use you, my lady. They will take what they want from you and leave you with nothing. Your father is sending you to live among wolves, and I am afraid there will be no one there to protect you."
Clara pulled her hands free and stood up. She walked to the window, looking out at the dark garden below. The moon was hidden behind clouds, and the flowers were nothing but shadows in the darkness.
"...You do not need to be sorry for , Elara."
"But—"
"It is okay." Clara’s voice was soft and distant, like she was speaking to soone far away. "I will help if I can. That is all that matters."
Elara said nothing.
She watched her mistress stand at the window, her hands clasped behind her back, her eyes unfocused, lost in thoughts that no one else could hear.
_
A week passed. The Iron Hounds marched through the hills, past villages that had been burned and rebuilt, past fields that had been trampled by monsters and reclaid by farrs.
Their banners snapped in the wind, and their boots pounded the earth in rhythm. Word of their arrival spread ahead of them, and by the ti they reached the outskirts of Stormcrest, the villagers had lined the roads to watch them pass.
So cheered, so stared in silence, and others crossed themselves, as if the rcenaries were ghosts or gods or sothing in between.
Roran rode at the head of the column with his face unreadable. Kael rode beside him, silent and watchful. Aldric was sowhere behind them, shouting orders at the n. The estate grew larger with every step.
At Stormcrest, the Duke stood at the main gate with his son and a dozen knights in polished armor. The wind pulled at their cloaks, and the grey sky hung low overhead.
"...He is here," Edric said.
The Duke did not respond. He watched the column of riders approach, his eyes fixed on the man at the front.
Roran was not what the he had expected. He was young, younger than the Duke had imagined. His hair was dark and ssy, his jaw was sharp, and his eyes held a hardness that ca from years of fighting.
He was not handso in the soft, polished way of nobles, with their smooth skin and practiced smiles. His face had seen too many battles for that. His hands were calloused and scarred, but his features remained clear and striking.
There was a quiet, rugged confidence in the way he carried himself that made people stop and look. His eyes were steady, holding a gaze that never wavered.
Roran stopped his horse a few feet from the Duke and dismounted. His n stopped behind him, forming a loose formation that spoke of discipline and experience.
He gave a slight bow, nothing too deep, but enough to acknowledge the Duke’s station.
"I am Duke Vane of Stormcrest," the Duke said. "You must be Roran."
Roran t his gaze without flinching. "...I am."
The Duke gestured to the young man beside him. "This is my son, Edric."
Edric nodded stiffly, his eyes cold. Roran returned the nod without saying a word.
The Duke studied Roran for a mont longer, his eyes moving over the rcenary like a rchant appraising goods. There was no warmth in his gaze, only calculation.
Roran felt it, the weight of those grey eyes asuring his worth, his usefulness, his price. It was not a pleasant feeling, but he had expected it.
"Let us go inside," the Duke said. "...We have much to discuss."
Roran glanced back at Aldric and gave a small nod. Aldric understood and began directing the n to set up camp outside the walls. Then Roran followed the Duke and Edric through the gates.
The guest chamber was large, with high ceilings and a fire burning in the hearth.
Servants brought tea and small cakes, setting them on the table between the chairs before retreating. Roran sat across from the Duke, and Aldric stood behind him like a shadow. Edric remained near the window with his arms crossed.
The Duke spoke first. "You read my letter."
"I did," Roran said. "And I ca to see what I would be fighting for and to find out if your offer is worth the blood of my n."
The Duke’s expression did not change. "...The monsters are growing bolder. They co in waves now, larger than anything we have seen in decades. My son has been fighting them on the front lines for months, but we cannot hold much longer."
"How many have you lost?" Roran asked.
"Seven villages in the last month alone," the Duke said. "The creatures are not random. They are organized. There is sothing leading them, sothing with intelligence."
Roran leaned back in his chair. "A higher rank monster maybe? If we wait too long, the situation will get worse. We should start tomorrow. I want to see the battlefield for myself."
The Duke raised an eyebrow. "You would not rest first?"
"Rest will not save villages," Roran said. "Every day we wait, more people die."
The Duke was silent for a mont before nodding slowly. "...Very well. Edric will show you the eastern front tomorrow morning."
Edric uncrossed his arms and gave a short nod. "I will be ready at dawn."
Roran turned to look at him. "You have been fighting these creatures for months. I want to hear what you have seen. Every detail matters."
Edric seed surprised by the request, but he nodded again. "I will tell you everything."
The Duke leaned back in his chair. "There is still the matter of the marriage."
Roran t his gaze. "The marriage happens after I see what I am dealing with. I will not make promises I cannot keep."
"And if you decide not to go through with it?"
"Then we fight for paynt. Gold, supplies, whatever we agree on." Roran’s voice did not waver. "I did not co here to trick you, Duke Vane. I ca to see if your cause is worth fighting for. If it is, I will fight. If it is not, I will walk away."
The Duke stared at him for a long mont. "You do not trust ."
Roran almost smiled. "I do not trust anyone."
The silence stretched between them, heavy and unbroken. Then the Duke let out a slow breath. "We will draw up a contract. A mana oath. It will bind both parties to their word."
Roran nodded. "That is acceptable."
A mana oath was a binding agreent, written on parchnt and sealed with the blood of both parties. No one knew where it ca from or who had created it, but it had existed for as long as anyone could rember.
Once signed, the magic within the words would mark the mana core of both parties with an invisible seal. If one side violated the oath, their mana core would be permanently damaged, destroying their ability to use magic and leaving them crippled for life.
That was why the mana oath was so feared.
It was not used lightly. It was only brought out for agreents that truly mattered, when both sides needed absolute certainty. For nobles and rcenaries who did not trust each other, it was the only way to make sure neither side would betray the other.
The Duke’s scribe brought the docunt, and both n signed. Roran’s hand was steady, and the Duke’s was steady as well.
When it was done, Roran stood up. "We will begin tomorrow. If you will excuse , I need to prepare."
The Duke nodded. "Edric will find you at dawn."
Roran turned and walked toward the door, with Aldric following close behind.
Roran wandered the halls of Stormcrest alone after Aldric left to check on the n. His thoughts were heavy, turning over the conversation with the Duke, the reports of the monsters, and the weight of what he had agreed to.
He did not realize where he was going until he stepped through an archway and found himself in a garden.
The air was cool and carried the scent of flowers he could not na. The sky was grey, but the garden felt alive, full of color and life that seed out of place in the grey stone fortress.
He was lost in thought when a voice cut through the silence.
"Oh no! What are you doing?!"
Roran froze.
He looked down and saw a flower crushed beneath his boot, its petals sared across the gravel path.
He looked up and saw a young woman standing a few feet away with her hands clasped in front of her and her eyes wide with horror. Her hair was the color of sun-dried wheat, falling past her shoulders in soft waves, and her eyes were a soft green, like moss in deep forests or adows after rain.
Her face was beautiful in a natural, unpretentious way, not the cold, polished beauty of noble portraits, but sothing warr and more real.
"You stepped on my flower," she said, her voice trembling with indignation.
Roran stepped aside quickly, his boot leaving a sar of green on the stone. "I am sorry."
The young woman knelt down and began tending to the flower, her fingers gentle and her movents careful. "I have been tending to this one for months. It was supposed to bloom next week."
Roran crouched down beside her and studied the plant. The stem was bent but not broken, and the roots still looked healthy. "It will survive."
She looked at him, her soft green eyes narrowing. "How do you know?"
He pointed at the base of the stem. "The roots are still strong. The petals are damaged, but the plant is not dying. Give it a few days, and it will be fine."
She stared at him for a mont, surprised. "You know about flowers?"
Roran scratched the back of his neck, suddenly aware of how close they were kneeling. "A little. The woman who raised
taught . She had a garden, and she made sure all the children learned how to take care of it."
The young woman’s expression softened. She looked back at the flower.
"It is a moon petal," she said. "They are rare. They only grow in high altitudes where the air is thin and the soil is rich with minerals. My mother planted this one years ago, before... she passed away."
She took a breath and continued. "They are supposed to symbolize patience, because they take so long to bloom."
Roran looked at the crushed petals and the bent stem. "They are also resilient. Even when they are damaged, they find a way to grow back."
The young woman looked at him, really looked at him, for the first ti. She took in his ssy hair, his sharp jaw, and his tired eyes. There was sothing about him that she had not expected, sothing that made her chest feel tight.
She realized she had been staring and looked away quickly, her cheeks flushing with embarrassnt. "I... I am sorry. I do not even know your na. Here I am, talking to you like we are old friends, and you are a complete stranger."
Roran stood up and shook his head, a small smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. "It is fine. I did not mind."
She fidgeted with her sleeves, suddenly shy, her fingers twisting the fabric. "I... I am Clara."
Before Roran could respond, a voice called out from the garden entrance. "There you are! I have been looking everywhere for you!"
A young woman in a maid’s dress hurried toward them, her face flushed from running. She stopped when she saw Roran, her eyes widening in recognition.
"Your partner is looking for you," she said to Roran. "He has been asking everyone where you went."
Roran nodded. "Thank you."
He turned to look at Clara one last ti. She was watching him, her soft green eyes curious and confused, with sothing else hidden beneath the surface.
Then he walked away without another word.
Clara watched him leave, her eyes fixed on his back until he disappeared through the archway.
Elara asked, "My lady, when did you et him? I thought you were not supposed to et him until later."
Clara blinked, confused. "What do you an?"
Elara’s eyes widened with realization. "That was him. Roran. The captain of the Iron Hounds. The man your father wants you to marry."
Clara’s heart stopped. She looked at the archway where he had disappeared, then at the crushed flower on the ground.
She had not known. She had imagined the rcenary leader as soone rough and brutish, a man with cold eyes and no kindness in his face. She had pictured a scarred brute who cared only about gold and blood.
But the man who had knelt beside her in the garden, who had spoken gently about the flower and listened to her talk about her mother—he was nothing like what she had expected.
"...I did not know," she whispered.
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