Font Size
15px

"I have given my terms. What is your King's reply?" The fearso woman raised her voice and the hall trembled.

Pillars shook and I felt unsteady. The ground beneath felt as though it might crumble and give way. I was on top of an icy pond and felt as though I could fall through at any point. I wanted to run, but could not do that to leave my friends to a hideous fate.

I turned to Cali and Carrion, expecting looks of horror. Instead I saw Cali's firm set expression of determination. She was always stubborn. She was not going to leave her father, the only parent she ever really knew, in the hands of these won. She would fight for what she thought was right no matter what it cost her.

Carrion's face was a blank slate awaiting a reaction. It seed as though he was trying to reason out if this all was really happening. I could only hope this was a nightmare and that dawn might soon wake us all.

"Still this place, Autarch! If you want discussions to continue," King Caderyn demanded with a fully royal tone in a forceful yell above the noise of stone trying not to give way.

The room settled montarily, although the ice and chill remained. A twinkle in the Autarch's eye betrayed the expressionless stare she coldly gave King Caderyn. She was enjoying playing her twisted ga.

"Should discussions continue? Are you ready to hand over Ensis to the Norads? I am sure your people will grow to respect their magical superiors," The Autarch bead with her own victory.

"I will not allow my people to be enslaved. We already won the war against such ideals. Be gone with your antiquated ideologies. I will not entertain such ridiculousness," King Caderyn's speech reeked of hubris. This type of shortsighted pride seed to be one of King Caderyn's biggest flaws.

My father looked my way. He montarily bit his lip, thinking of sothing beyond my scope of understanding. Then he seed to co to a realization of so kind. His face fell into an apologetic pout.

What sche did my father just decide on that would cause such instantaneous remorse? He had tried to temper the King's overzealous responses to situations for years. This ti should not be any different.

Knowing he had my gaze, my father mouthed a phrase. I was expecting instructions on attack or retreat. I would faithfully follow any command. Alas, none ca. It took a mont for my head to unravel the words, but they finally pieced together.

'Proud of you,' was the ssage that my father deed important enough for this mont. I do not understand. Why was that his ssage?

The Autarch did not take the words of the King lightly. Her nostrils flared with a deep rooted anger. She threw up her hands toward the ceiling with open palms, before balling her fists and jerking her hands to beside her hips.

The whole room shook and creaked its own protest. Every visible hallway entrance, every exit the Autarch knew about from this room, suddenly had a thick block of ice fall from each door fra. The sheets of ice were thick, making any light from outside sources struggle to illuminate the space.

Each icy barrier locked into place, making the floor tremble. I lost my footing on the icy floor and took an awkward step toward the enraged woman. Trying to not catch her complete attention, I quickly straightened.

"I will not be spoken to in such a manner! Your people already question your ability to keep them safe. I an if an arrow can so easily strike your guard, what about your people?

I had hoped that such a display of power would make such a man quake. No matter. I tried to reason with you, but it seems you prefer death. Don't worry. Your wife and daughter will have a chance to grovel for their own lives or they can make a wiser choice than yours," the Autarch gloated.

As she raised her arms again, the room began to rumble. Surely she would not bring the entire castle to the ground just to prove a point, right? At least not with her sister and herself inside to be targets for the rubble and destruction.

The Autarch seed calculating and cruel. Why was she toying with one of our monarchs? She threatened, but so far had not outright killed Casimir or Lord Bleddyn. It did not make sense for her to continually display her power and not take so sort of strategic advance in diminishing our numbers forever.

What was I missing that made her desperately need King Caderyn's transfer of power? Also was she so removed from our society that she did not know that Queen Valerie really held the power?

Part of the puzzle clicked into place for , but created more questions than answers. Was the Autarch the most powerful person in the room? Or was it Nyx? A woman who lived among our people would know that the Queen was the link to the royal bloodline. She also might take pity on the man that raised her children. Why was Nyx holding back?

My thoughts scattered as I saw my father move in front of our King. "Autarch, please consider giving us more ti to discuss relations among our nations," my father remained the diplomat, screaming above the chaos.

"Lord Jacob, it is no use reasoning with a viper!" King Caderyn reprimanded.

"A viper? I guess it's ti to strike!" The Autarch ford a scepter from thin air. It must have been made from ice or glass, but slowly illuminated an array of colors, blinding and beautiful.

The Autarch shortened the distance between herself and King Caderyn, sweeping her newfound scepter through the air towards him. My father jumped into the fray, protecting his king and fulfilling his oath as a Swordsman. He defensively brought his sword to et the woman's ethereal weapon.

Sparks flew across the room, illuminating the room to an almost blinding level. Almost. I looked toward the fearso ruler's sister. I saw the hands of Nyx contort into an almost unnatural fist before releasing the tension in her arm as if nothing happened. Maybe I was right about where the power was.

Once the light dispelled, my heart broke into a million pieces. King Caderyn was hit by the blast. He has fallen on the marble floors in a way I had seen once before in a gnomish vision and a million tis since in my nightmares. But my nightmares never imagined my father on the ground next to him.

You are reading The Four Swords Chapter 93: Nightmares on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Mage Manual cover
Similar genre

Mage Manual

Listening Day ·Fantasy

Ashopenedhiseyestofindthathehadtraveledtoastrangenationofmanyraces,andpeoplewerekneelingbeforehim.BeforehehadtimetoadapttothenewidentityoftheTermin...

Above The Sky cover
Similar genre

Above The Sky

Gloomy Sky Hidden God ·Fantasy

Thefirststarthatpassedawayextinguishedtwothousandyearsago. Fourhundredyearslater,themysteriousCalamityofHeavenlyFalldestroyedthecivilizationofthepr...

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.