《Tales from Interia: LIBERATORES》 ORATORES The day began as it always did: with a hollow whisper of organ chords echoing down the palace corridors, drifting past velvet curtains and marble pillars. The hush of early dawn clung to every tapestry, as though the entire royal household was suspended in solemn prayer. At the far end of the main corridor, beyond tall doors gilded in gold, lay the private bedchamber of the Crown Princess¡ªthough no one ever dared call them anything but princess. The occupant of the gilded bed sat awake, blinking drowsy eyes at a polished mirror that reflected an image he detested. His hair, painstakingly arranged into delicate curls the night before, glinted in the faint morning light. His eyes, lined by the royal attendants with subtle kohl, looked far too gentle. The silken nightgown he wore seemed to mock him, all softness and pastel lace. He resented every thread of it. He hated the suffocating routine. The stiff courtesy bows he was expected to offer. The demure manner in which he was supposed to speak and giggle among the courtiers. The constant scrutiny¡ª¡°Walk gracefully, Princess,¡± they would say. ¡°Bow your head modestly.¡± He wanted to snarl at them, to tear away the illusions of meekness. He was no delicate court blossom. He was not their princess, no matter how many times the courtiers addressed him by that title. The day¡¯s regimen arrived like clockwork: a gentle rap on the door¡ªthe attendants were here to prepare him. Unbidden, they shuffled inside, heads bowed in reverential posture. They began to fuss over him. Their fingers glided over silk garments, their voices pitched in low, respectful tones. In those murmurs, he sensed a thousand judgments and expectations. Every word and gesture reminded him that in the palace¡¯s eyes, he was merely a pretty bauble to be displayed. He remembered how, as a young child, he once tried to insist he was a boy. He had stolen the wooden swords from the training yard, brandishing them in secret, imagining himself as a knight or a prince leading armies. But the King¡ªhis father¡ªhad found him, snatched the weapon from his hands with a sneer of disdain. ¡°You are my daughter,¡± the King had said coldly, ¡°and you will act accordingly.¡± Punishment followed, the memory of it still vivid like a bruise. Over the years, each day hammered him further into the role. The priests in the chapel would proclaim, ¡°For her, we pray. Our beloved princess, so graceful in her devotion.¡± The palace staff would kneel in the hall, chanting praises to her compliance. The kingdom¡¯s subjects adored the sweet-faced ¡°Crown Princess,¡± the living embodiment of purity and virtue. To him, each adoration felt like a shackle. He had grown taller than they ever anticipated. His shoulders broadened in ways the lavish gowns could hardly disguise. His soul seethed with the same unstoppable growth¡ªanger, frustration, bitterness. In quiet moments, he studied his reflection, trying to see the man he was inside, struggling against the powdered face and pinned-up hair. Every day, something in him cracked further, letting in a cold, seething rage. And then came the music. In the palace, the day¡¯s spiritual rites began with a solemn chant that seemed to hang in the corridors like the lingering echo of a prayer. Officially, it was just the morning liturgy¡ªa ritual performed by the priests, accompanied by the rumbling bass of drums and the hiss of wind instruments. Yet he heard it differently. As though from some private realm, his own voice sang the lines in his head, words no one else reacted to:
¡°I am so much bigger / Than you ever could have feared.¡±He had first caught these whispered lyrics in the far corner of the cathedral aisle weeks ago, repeated in hushed reverence by the kingdom¡¯s spiritual choir. But even then, it felt personal, as if the song belonged to him alone. Now, it reverberated in his mind like an eerie clarion call. Yes, he thought grimly, I am more than you ever allowed me to be. You turned me into something monstrous in the shadows of your expectations. He rose, letting the attendants lace him into yet another gown. The tension in his chest tightened. He allowed them to comb his hair into a regal updo, all while his mind wandered through fantasies of defiance. If he truly gave in to that inner storm, would they still see a meek princess? Could they even begin to fathom the fury that burned within him? Soon, the morning ritual ended. He was escorted to the royal chapel. Incense clung to the stone walls. Flickering candles illuminated grand murals depicting heroic kings and pious queens. But he was not moved by any sense of devotion. Instead, he recalled more lines from that mysterious, privately heard melody, creeping again through his thoughts:
¡°I¡¯m far more dangerous and terrible / I am the nightmare you created in your head.¡±The King and Queen, the priests, the courtiers, his siblings¡ªthey had all played a role in forging his resentment. By forcing him into a gilded role that negated his true self, they had created a creature poised to strike back at the very foundation of this oppressive structure. He bowed mechanically before the altar, going through the motions while the official choir in the chapel continued its ordinary chanting. The King sat on his jeweled pew, chin held high, his imposing presence dominating the room. The Queen offered polite nods to the priests. Not once did her gaze settle on her child with any warmth. This was duty for her, not love. The day¡¯s sermon ended, concluding with murmurs of a prayer. But in the prince¡¯s mind, the refrain emerged clearly, as if only he could hear the words:
¡°And still you love me¡ / Your greatest weakness¡ / It¡¯s not my fault you love me.¡±They don¡¯t love me, he thought. They love their idea of me. When the chapel service finished, the day resumed. He was guided back through the halls by two ladies-in-waiting. They chattered about the upcoming festivities, about how the princess would look so lovely in a new gown, how the kingdom relied on her virtuous image to maintain alliances. He offered curt nods, barely containing the sharp retort on his tongue. At midday, he was seated in the royal gardens, expected to embroider or read poetry, as though these were the greatest ambitions he could hold. The sky overhead was a bright, merciless blue. Birds flitted among the rose bushes. He stared at his pale, needle-pricked hands and saw the calluses that had begun to form from clandestine swordplay. They were faint, nearly hidden under layers of forced delicacy, but they were there. A secret truth. One day, he vowed, he would stop hiding. Across the courtyard, a cluster of guards performed a ceremonial drill. The bright clang of steel against steel made his pulse race with hunger. He recalled stolen moments in the armoury, the exhilarating heft of a blade in his hands. Before anyone could notice his longing stare, he dipped his head back into the embroidered handkerchief, hiding his expression of yearning behind a veil of compliance. An attendant approached to fetch him for lunch with the royal family. He rose, his steps slow and measured, because to do otherwise invited scrutiny. The corridor leading to the dining hall was adorned with frescoes of past monarchs¡ªstern kings and proud queens presiding over a devout land. He felt his lips tighten in disdain. He wanted to be none of them. He wanted to be a prince. At the dining table, the King scarcely looked at him, except to give a dismissive sneer when he spoke too directly or let his voice drop into a lower register. The Queen nattered on about court alliances, the priesthood that guided the moral code of the realm, the necessity of the princess¡¯s public image. Rage flared in him, but he kept silent. Not a single word of this was about his happiness. It was all about how well he performed as a piece in their grand design. His knuckles turned white around the silverware. The silent voice in his mind returned, lyrics swirling like a mocking taunt:
¡°And still you love me / Your greatest weakness / It¡¯s not my fault you love me.¡±They placed him upon a pedestal of false worship, an icon of purity to be prayed to in the grand cathedral of their monarchy. But in truth, the King and Queen¡¯s brand of love was control. The palace¡¯s brand of affection was nothing more than pageantry. He excused himself from the meal. A flurry of courtiers stood to bow, but he walked past them with clipped steps. Lifting his chin, he walked outside, ignoring the gentle protests of the attendants who said something about it being improper for the princess to roam unescorted. But he needed to be alone¡ªjust for a moment. He found refuge in one of the lesser-used palace hallways, where tall windows looked out onto the wide moat and forest beyond. His reflection in the glass was ephemeral, superimposed over a vista of green and sky. He pressed his palm against the cool surface, listening to his heart pound. Something was shifting in him, like a dam about to burst. He might have stood there for hours if not for the approach of a single guard who stiffened at the sight of the princess. The guard respectfully lowered his spear and apologized for the intrusion. A swirl of revulsion twisted in the prince¡¯s stomach. Another person staring at me like I¡¯m precious glass. He decided to wait no longer. Something must break. When the official lessons in decorum resumed that afternoon, he found himself in a tutoring chamber with a refined old bishop. The bishop wore robes embroidered with gold thread that caught the lamplight. As was the day¡¯s custom, the bishop led him through scripture, praising the Almighty for the benevolent princess. All the while, a pang grew in his chest. The bishop spoke of devotion, humility, and gratitude. The prince felt his fingernails bite into his palm as he recalled more lines that surfaced, unprompted, from the song only he seemed to hear:
¡°Is this a savior¡¯s complex? / That you have come to create / Is that why you¡¯ve tied me to this day?¡±Yes, the entire monarchy had a savior¡¯s complex, forging a holy narrative about a princess who would guide the realm in virtue. But all they were doing was chaining him to a lie. A lie repeated so often that no one noticed the ragged edges it left in his soul. At last, the bishop paused. ¡°You seem distracted, Princess,¡± the bishop observed gently. ¡°Is something troubling you?¡± He forced a small, polite smile. ¡°No, Your Grace,¡± he lied. The bishop droned on, but the prince no longer heard the words. Instead, memories flashed: the King¡¯s scornful face, the endless dresses, the forced courtesy. The humiliations coiled into a single, inescapable truth. I will not endure this any longer. Dismissed from lessons, he walked briskly to his private chamber, ignoring the calls of servants. He closed the door and let out a trembling breath. His gaze fell upon an old trunk in the corner. Underneath layers of lace and ribbons lay something he had hidden: a short sword, stolen from the training yard. He retrieved it, the weight familiar in his hand. He had practiced with it when no one was looking, hacking at imaginary foes in the dead of night. The blade had felt like an extension of his body, more natural than any piece of jewelry he had ever been forced to wear. Now, he touched its hilt, and the spark of anger within him flared.
¡°You think you¡¯re stronger / Bow and arrow / Draw your sword now / It can¡¯t save you now.¡±Those words played in his mind as though mocking the monarchy that had forced him to be their little princess. The time had come for him to show them exactly how he felt. Outside, the chanting of evening devotions drifted through the corridor in muffled form, beautiful and solemn to all who heard it. But the prince¡¯s version of the song was deafening in his own head, each note fueling his sense of righteous fury. He opened the door of his chamber and stepped into the hallway. The first person to see him¡ªa startled servant girl¡ªgasped at the sight of the gleaming blade. She cried out, ¡°Princess, no¡ª!¡± But he walked on, resolute. Guards rushed forward, confusion twisting their faces at the spectacle. Why is the princess armed? A whisper of shock rippled through the staff. The corridor seemed to stretch, each step echoing. At the far end, the ornate doors of the palace¡¯s interior chambers beckoned. He had no plan beyond confronting the hypocrisy that had trapped him here. Yet a single line of that secret melody pulsed in his mind:
¡°Do you see this power? / Power you gave me / Undefeated / I am in control.¡±They had unwittingly taught him everything he needed¡ªhow to hide, how to bide his time, how to unleash fury. They had molded him into something monstrous, and tonight, the beast would bare its fangs. He lifted the sword in both hands, and just then, a cluster of royal guards advanced. Their leader shouted, ¡°Halt, Princess! Put the weapon down!¡± Instead, the prince lunged forward, all the pent-up rage fueling his blow. The clang of metal on metal reverberated down the corridor. The guard, too stunned to react properly, fell back. Shouts of alarm spread. He slashed past them, the blade glancing off armor, drawing sparks and, on occasion, a terrible, bloody consequence. He felt the wet sting of a strike across his arm. Pain flared, but so did his resolve. A savage cry erupted from his throat, primal as any creature defending its right to live free. The corridors teemed with chaos¡ªservants running, guards shouting, courtiers screaming at the sight of this ¡°princess¡± turned berserker. A distinct part of his mind observed it all as though from a distance. This is me, he thought. This is who I truly am: not your delicate flower but your worst nightmare. He recalled the private lyric:
¡°I am the nightmare you created in your head.¡±Yes. Let them see the truth. He pressed on, heading toward the throne room. The King and Queen, the priests, the entire rotten structure of forced piety and tradition¡ªhe wanted them to behold what they had wrought. Down side passages, the alarmed clergy and courtiers babbled in frantic tones. From some distant hall, the official choir continued its chants, oblivious. In his mind, however, the song¡¯s mocking refrain grew deafening:
¡°And tell me you love me / It¡¯s not my fault / It¡¯s not my fault you love me.¡±Panting, with adrenaline coursing through his veins, he slammed open the tall double doors to the grand hall. More guards rushed forward, forming a wall of pikes, but his rage was unstoppable. Swords flashed. The shriek of metal. The tang of blood in the air. Yet behind this savage momentum, he felt oddly calm, as if the path had always led here. The final confrontation was in sight. The King would be there, enthroned on high, the symbol of everything that had denied him his rightful life.Unauthorized duplication: this narrative has been taken without consent. Report sightings. He fought forward, ignoring the pain of shallow cuts and bruises forming on his arms. Shouts echoed, soldiers collapsed. With each step, he felt the weight of the blade grow heavier, the palace walls seeming to close in around him. But there was no going back. At last, he stood at the entrance to the throne room itself¡ªlarger than life, glimmering with columns of polished stone. The dais at the far end held two thrones, carved from dark wood and gilded with gold. The King and Queen rose in alarm, priests circling them. Panicked courtiers scattered behind pillars. The King roared, ¡°Seize the princess!¡± But the prince¡ªno princess at all¡ªmerely tightened his grip on the sword.
¡°You think you¡¯re stronger / Bow and arrow / Draw your sword now / It can¡¯t save you now¡¡±No one else reacted; no one else heard it. But it filled him with a cold resolve. The sister in front of him was not just an obstacle¡ªshe was part of the system that refused to see him as anything other than a broken extension of herself. His arm throbbed from the earlier wound. The reek of spilled blood and burnt candlewax clawed at his senses. He stared at his sister¡¯s desperate face¡ªat the faint tremor in her posture¡ªunable to remember a single moment when she had tried to understand him. ¡°I won¡¯t go back,¡± he growled. With a cry halfway between sorrow and determination, Clarice lunged. Steel clashed against steel, ringing through the vaulted hall. The priests retreated in terror, and the King roared again for more guards. Courtiers cowered behind pillars. Striking blow after blow, Clarice fought with well-trained precision. She had been groomed for leadership, prepared to defend her station if ever the kingdom required it. Her swordsmanship spoke of countless hours in the practice yard. Yet the prince¡¯s fury made him unpredictable. Each slash he delivered carried the weight of a lifetime¡¯s pent-up rage. ¡°I¡¯ve always envied you,¡± Clarice hissed through gritted teeth, batting aside one of his thrusts. Her eyes were wet with tears. ¡°Your fire, your refusal to bow even when it cost you everything.¡± He scoffed, pressing forward. ¡°You never once supported me. You never once stood up to our father when he beat me down!¡± A flicker of guilt passed over her face, but she did not lower her weapon. ¡°I couldn¡¯t¡ I¡ª¡± She was forced to parry another strike. Their blades scraped and locked, faces inches apart. Over Clarice¡¯s shoulder, the prince glimpsed the Queen, pale and trembling, while the King roared commands at a handful of arriving guards. The entire hall seethed with frantic energy. Blood pounded in his ears. A savage part of him exulted in this chaos. Finally, they see me. But even as adrenaline surged, a faint pang tugged at his conscience. Clarice was not the one who pronounced the cruel edicts. She had been another cog in this merciless machine, just like him. Her voice tore him from his thoughts: ¡°Surrender!¡± she demanded. ¡°We can fix this¡ªstop the killing! I¡¯ll¡ª I¡¯ll speak to Father. We¡¯ll find a way!¡± He flinched, recognizing the note of sincerity. But it was far too late. The monarchy had proven that it valued only obedience. He could never trust them to offer him a place at the throne as a prince, nor even to let him live as one. ¡°No more lies,¡± he growled. He twisted his blade free and swept it in a sudden arc. Clarice parried, but the shock of it reverberated up her arms. As she stumbled, he pressed the attack, forcing her back across the slippery floor. Her foot found no traction on the blood-slick marble, and she fell hard onto her side. Panicked, she swung upward, narrowly missing his torso. He stepped forward, blade raised. ¡°Don¡¯t¡ª!¡± she pleaded, eyes wide with horror. For a heartbeat, the prince hesitated, chest heaving. Then the next line of that private melody seared through his mind:
¡°Do you see this power? / Power you gave me / Undefeated / I am in control.¡±If there was any chance to end this vicious rule, he could not falter. With a cry that mixed fury and sorrow, he brought the sword down. Clarice threw up her arm in a desperate block, but the angle was off¡ªhis blade tore into her shoulder, slicing diagonally across her chest. A burst of crimson stained her regal attire. She choked, lips parted in silent anguish. For an instant, time seemed to freeze. Her eyes found his¡ªfilled with both heartbreak and a wordless apology for never having done enough. He stared, breath caught in his throat. What have I done? Her sword clattered to the floor, ringing out like a funeral knell. Then she collapsed, the world resuming its roar. A stunned hush gripped the throne room. The queen¡¯s shriek pierced the air. The King, face contorted with rage and despair, lurched forward as if to charge. But the fresh wave of guards forced him back, forming a protective ring. Courtiers looked on in horror, covering their mouths in trembling shock. Chest heaving, the prince staggered a step away from Clarice¡¯s motionless form. He could still feel her blood warm on his hands. A thousand memories flashed¡ªbrief childhood moments when she¡¯d tried to be gentle, if distant. He had taken her life.
¡°Love won¡¯t free me / Love won¡¯t free you / Love will curse me¡¡±The quiet lyric thrummed in his skull, almost mocking. This tragic moment was an inevitable outcome of a love twisted into control, of a family that refused to see or accept him. No redemption, the melody seemed to say. No turning back. ¡°You filth!¡± the King thundered, voice cracking under a father¡¯s grief. ¡°Guards! Stop that wretch!¡± The newcomers¡ªarmored soldiers streaming in through side doors¡ªsurged forward. The prince gripped his sword more tightly, though a hollow ache spread in his chest, nearly robbing him of breath. His sister¡¯s death hung in the air, heavy and irreversible. Scraping footsteps, shouted orders¡ªevery sound blended into a cacophony. The prince realized he was badly outnumbered. At this rate, he would be trapped, pinned against the columns or the dais. The King¡¯s voice roared, but to the prince it sounded muffled, as though submerged underwater. He risked one last glance at Clarice¡¯s still body. In that same moment, more soldiers closed in. He ducked a pike aimed at his chest and slashed upward. Another soldier lunged, but the prince sidestepped. The swirl of violence continued. Then, from the corner of his eye, he saw his mother¡ªashen-faced¡ªclutching at the King¡¯s arm, screaming about their eldest daughter. Far behind them stood another figure: the prince¡¯s older brother, at the throne room¡¯s edge, watching with silent fury. Their gazes locked for an instant, a cold promise of confrontation to come. A guard rushed in from the side. The prince spun, sword cutting across the man¡¯s chest. A fountain of blood sprayed, and the guard collapsed. Gasps rippled from those who still cowered near the pillars. ¡°Surround the traitor!¡± the King bellowed. The prince realized with a pounding heart that he had to escape or risk being cornered. Every muscle screamed, but his mind conjured the final lyric from the swirling storm in his head:
¡°Think love is healing? / Love won¡¯t free me¡¡±A savage calm fell over him. No love here¡ªonly the raw instinct to survive. He sprinted down a narrower corridor branching off the throne room¡¯s left side, knocking aside two trembling servants in his path. The hall beyond led to a set of double doors that opened onto a mezzanine overlooking the courtyard. Shouts echoed behind him as guards gave chase. Pain flared in his side, but he kept running. The corridor¡¯s high windows revealed night¡¯s dark sky, swirling with storm clouds. The tapestry on the walls flapped in gusts of wind from the battered doors. He burst through the final set of doors onto the mezzanine. Rain had started to fall, slicking the stone balustrade. He could see a raging courtyard below¡ªmore guards, more panicked attendants. Torchlight flickered, half extinguished by the downpour. Steps thundered behind him. He turned, sword at the ready, prepared for another furious clash. Four guards, panting and determined, fanned out to block his escape. Lightning flickered outside, casting monstrous shadows across the balcony. Somewhere in the distance, the King¡¯s outraged voice reverberated. The prince¡¯s heart hammered. They will never let me go free. Yet at the edge of his hearing, the quiet, private melody swelled once more, pushing him past the horror of what he¡¯d done.
¡°It¡¯s not my fault¡ It¡¯s not my fault you love me¡¡±He raised his blade in a trembling grip. The wind whipped at his hair, sending cold rain against his face. Behind the guards, at the balcony entrance, he caught a glimpse of his older brother standing stock-still. Their eyes met again¡ªtwo points of focus in a chaos of swirling storm and torchlight. The brother¡¯s rage was incandescent, but something else simmered there, too: heartbreak, maybe, for the sister lost. A voice in the prince¡¯s mind whispered that the next confrontation would be even worse. If they remained here, locked in steel and fury, more blood would soak the palace stones. Lightning lit up the sky once more, and the distant thunder rumbled like a funeral drum. The guards closed in, setting spears for a final strike. The prince exhaled, bracing. He would not die as their ¡°princess.¡± If he was going to fall, it would be on his own terms. The moment sharpened into a hush. Then he lunged forward.
¡°Is this a savior¡¯s complex? / That you have come to create¡¡±He ground his teeth. They had imposed their savior¡¯s complex¡ªhe, the princess who never existed, the false paragon of virtue. Now that falsehood lay drowned in blood. At last, he reached the tower¡¯s summit. Rain battered the open parapet, the wind near strong enough to topple a grown man. Beyond the battlements, darkness reigned, broken only by the lightning that revealed swirling black waters at the cliff¡¯s base. The sea below churned in a frenzy, vast and merciless. He staggered toward the edge, sword still in hand. Another flash of lightning, and he whirled¡ªsomeone had followed. From the stairwell stepped his elder brother, eyes blazing with anguish. Taller than the prince by a head, clad in partial armor, the brother advanced with grim purpose. Rain streamed down his face, but did not wash away the fury etched there. ¡°Sister,¡± the brother rasped, voice trembling. ¡°You will pay for Clarice.¡± The prince¡¯s heart lurched. Once, long ago, he had looked up to this brother, a paragon of knightly prowess. But that had been before the palace¡¯s traditions turned them into strangers, before the brother stood silent while the King enforced cruelty. ¡°I am not your sister,¡± he said, voice hoarse. ¡°Not now. Not ever.¡± A moment of silence stretched between them, broken only by the howl of the wind. Then the brother drew his sword, steel glinting in the flicker of lightning. ¡°You took our sister from us,¡± he said, barely audible over the storm. ¡°You¡¯ve shattered this family. I should end you here and now.¡± ¡°Try,¡± the prince growled, gripping his own blade with both hands. They lunged, and steel rang out over the howling winds. The prince¡¯s fatigue weighed on him, each swing a desperate effort. His brother fought with disciplined skill¡ªevery strike methodical, refined by years of rigorous training. Each clash jarred the prince¡¯s bones. He felt his breath grow labored, felt the sting of fresh wounds as the brother¡¯s blade found gaps in his defense. Rain lashed the tower¡¯s stones, making each step treacherous. The prince managed to drive a blow toward the brother¡¯s shoulder, but it was deflected with ease. Sparks danced from the clash. A counterstrike sliced across the prince¡¯s thigh, and he choked back a cry. Focus, he told himself, though dizziness pulled at the edges of his vision. The brother pressed the advantage, forcing him back. ¡°You¡¯ve destroyed everything,¡± his brother said through clenched teeth. ¡°Your madness ends here.¡± Rage flared anew in the prince¡¯s chest. ¡°It was your blindness that let this happen!¡± he spat, locking blades. ¡°All I ever asked for was to be seen for who I am!¡± The brother grimaced, eyes brimming with raw sorrow. ¡°And it brought you to murder.¡± Thunder crashed. Their swords parted, then locked again. The prince tried a feint, hoping to exploit some open angle, but he was too slow. His injuries sapped strength from his arms, and his brother¡¯s mastery outmatched his wild fury. Lightning revealed their faces¡ªboth contorted, both bearing the same determined line of the jaw that marked them as kin. The brother hammered the prince¡¯s guard, blow after brutal blow. The prince¡¯s wrists screamed in protest.
¡°Draw your sword now / It can¡¯t save you now¡¡±The phantom lyric slashed through his mind, mocking. He felt his footing slip on the wet stones. The brother seized that moment, sweeping in with a savage thrust that knocked the sword from the prince¡¯s grasp. It clattered against the stones, skidding to the tower¡¯s edge. Gasping, the prince staggered back until his shoulders met cold stone¡ªthe low parapet wall. Wind and rain whipped around him, thunder rattling the very air. The brother advanced, sword leveled at the prince¡¯s chest. Pain spiked through every inch of his battered body. He glanced at the fallen sword a few paces away, but the brother¡¯s blade blocked any hope of retrieving it. The next flash of lightning showed the anguish twisting the brother¡¯s features. ¡°Did you ever think of us?¡± he whispered, tears mingling with the rain. ¡°Did you ever think what this would cost?¡± The prince¡¯s chest convulsed. Clarice¡¯s pale face flickered in his mind, the memory of her final breath searing his conscience. There was no undoing that act. No returning to any innocence. The monarchy¡¯s illusions had forced him into a monstrous shape, and now the cost was immeasurable. He looked down. A sheer drop yawned behind him, the dark waters below raging against jagged rocks. He could hear the thunderous crash of the waves. His brother drew a breath, sword trembling. ¡°Come back inside,¡± he pleaded, though his eyes were hard. ¡°Face justice. End this.¡± But justice in this kingdom had never once sided with him. An empty laugh rattled from the prince¡¯s throat, lost in the storm¡¯s roar. ¡°There¡¯s no place for me here,¡± he said. ¡°Not in these walls.¡± He glanced over his shoulder. White foam churned far below, beckoning with a terrible finality. The wind keened like a mourner at a wake. Slowly, he raised his arms, palms outward, as though in surrender. The brother¡¯s sword wavered. In that instant, the prince let himself arch backward over the parapet wall. ¡°NO!¡± The brother lunged, fingers catching at empty air. Time seemed to slow, the thunder¡¯s rumble replaced by the rush of blood in the prince¡¯s ears. He felt the stone edge leave his feet. Rain battered his face, the wind tearing at his garments as gravity pulled him down. He plummeted backward into darkness, away from the palace spires, away from the brother¡¯s anguished cry. In that suspended moment, it was only him, the storm-lashed void, and the final lines of that private song echoing through the hollow in his chest. He couldn¡¯t tell if he was merely hearing them in his thoughts or screaming them aloud:
¡°It¡¯s not my fault you love me ¡¯Cause I¡¯m not your girl You¡¯re no hero¡¡±Wind whipped past like the roar of a thousand voices. The tower lights receded into the swirling storm above. The black sea rushed up to meet him, an endless maw opening wide. For a heartbeat, he thought he saw the faint silhouette of a younger self, wooden sword clutched in boyish hands, free and unbound by anyone¡¯s commands. Then he struck the waters. Freezing shock consumed him, wrenching the air from his lungs. He sank into the fathomless depths, the final note of that song fading in his mind. Darkness pressed in from all sides, erasing the last thought of whether he had finally escaped¡ªor had only found oblivion. Everything went black. BELLATORES Dawn broke over a stretch of rugged shoreline, the sky streaked with pale gold and faint lavender. A salted wind dragged itself across the open sea, laying a crisp chill upon the gray waters and the jagged rocks. There, near a small cove where the ocean had carved out a sandy crescent, a young fisherman trudged through the damp sand, eyes scanning for salvage. Storms often washed oddments of driftwood or the occasional wreckage onto this remote beach. But on that particular morning, he found something infinitely stranger: a body. It was a figure dressed in tatters of what must once have been fine fabric. At first glance, the fisherman feared the person was long dead. Yet as he knelt and turned the limp form over, he saw a ragged, shallow breath. Streaks of blood had dried across the forehead, and the cold had settled into pallid skin. Tangles of hair clung to salt-rimed cheeks. The fisherman cupped the stranger¡¯s face and felt a faint trace of warmth. ¡°H-help,¡± he croaked, calling out to his companions. Two other villagers, both hauling empty nets, rushed over. Their eyes widened at the battered figure. Together, they lifted the stranger gingerly and carried him back to the huts perched near the shore. Days turned into weeks in a blur of fever and hushed murmurs. A small cluster of peasants¡ªfisherfolk and foragers eking out a meager living from the sea and the untamed forest beyond¡ªlooked on with uncertain compassion. They had no clue who this person was or from whence he had come. The only certainty was that he was near death. Gradually, the color seeped back into his cheeks. Nightmares seized him at odd hours; he would thrash and mumble incoherently about knives, blood, a burning rage. Some nights, he cried out in terror, choking on phantom seawater. The fisherman¡¯s wife, a gentle, big-hearted woman named Marta, tended him with herbal poultices and hot broth. She insisted the half-drowned stranger would recover if fate willed it. ¡°One more mouth to feed, but heaven knows no child of the sea should die alone,¡± she told her neighbors, who half agreed and half worried about the burden. The first time he stirred enough to speak coherently, Marta was at his bedside. He whispered only one phrase: ¡°I¡¯m a prince¡ I¡¯m¡ not¡¡± Then tears choked him. Marta smoothed the hair from his face, thinking perhaps delirium had taken hold. She told him softly, ¡°Hush now. You¡¯re safe.¡± It took another week before he could walk without swaying, supported by a makeshift crutch. The tightness in his chest and ribs reminded him of the brutal fall he had taken, how the sea had swallowed him. Fragments of memory flickered: the throne room bathed in torchlight, his sister¡¯s pale face, his brother¡¯s sword. Pain clenched his stomach each time he recalled that final confrontation. He remembered pitching backward into the stormy void. After that, only darkness. He stood one morning outside the fisherman¡¯s hut, letting the briny wind buffet his face. He could not remain silent about his identity forever. These kind souls deserved the truth, or at least as much truth as he could bear to share. But which truth? The half-lies about a lost princess from a land far away? Or the deeper truth: that he was a prince, never a princess, who had torn his family apart in a spree of bloodshed? He tested the words on his tongue: I am the prince. They still felt surreal, as though referencing someone else¡¯s tragedy. Yet he knew, in his bones, that continuing to live as the palace¡¯s ¡°princess¡± was impossible. Something in him had died on that throne room floor, along with Clarice. What remained was a battered man¡ªexiled from everything he once knew, cast adrift in a life where he might finally be recognized for who he was. That evening, as Marta and her husband Coren sat by the hearth, he eased himself onto a stool, breathing shallowly from the pain in his ribcage. Flickers of firelight danced across the rough-hewn walls. ¡°I should speak to you,¡± he said quietly. Their curious gazes settled on him. ¡°I owe you an explanation for¡for everything.¡± Coren nodded, brow furrowed. ¡°Speak. We¡¯ll listen.¡± A part of him wanted to laugh¡ªhow simple, how direct. No formalities, no ranks, no fear of humiliating scorn. So he began, voice rasping at first, telling them his name¡ªhe used the name he had always longed to claim, a name untainted by the palace¡¯s shackles. They looked puzzled, as if they expected a more common name. But neither Marta nor Coren interrupted. He hesitated, then pressed on. ¡°I am a man. I was not born into a life that allowed that truth, but I assure you, I¡¯ve always been a man.¡± A swirl of emotions churned in his chest, but he forced himself to continue. ¡°The clothes, the mannerisms¡ªmy family forced them on me. I was¡someone¡¯s ¡®daughter,¡¯ but that is not who I am. Not who I¡¯ve ever been.¡± Coren exchanged a glance with Marta. The fisherman¡¯s wife exhaled softly, her gaze full of a gentle acceptance. ¡°All right,¡± she said. ¡°If that¡¯s who you are, it¡¯s who you are.¡± Her voice lacked the surprise he had feared. He swallowed, relief and confusion warring in him. That¡¯s it? No condemnation, no mocking sneers, no forced correction. No one demanding he pretend. The wave of gratitude nearly brought tears to his eyes. Coren rested his elbows on his knees. ¡°We might not be fancy courtiers, lad, but we know folks come in different stripes. If you¡¯re a man, you¡¯re a man.¡± He paused, choosing words carefully. ¡°But these are troubled times. If you have a past that might bring trouble to our door, we¡¯d like to know.¡± That question weighed like lead in the prince¡¯s stomach. He took a shaky breath. ¡°Yes¡my past is dangerous.¡± He could not bring himself to say the word prince. Perhaps he feared they would view him as tainted nobility or a murderer. After all, he had killed people¡ªhad drawn blood in a rage that still haunted his dreams. ¡°But I swear, I do not wish harm on you or your home. You saved my life.¡± Coren and Marta exchanged another thoughtful look. Outside, the wind rattled the hut¡¯s loose shutter, emphasizing the quiet moment. At last, Marta set a comforting hand on the prince¡¯s shoulder. ¡°You¡¯ll work to earn your keep,¡± she said, a gentle firmness in her tone. ¡°And we¡¯ll call you what you wish to be called. That¡¯s enough for us right now.¡± He managed the faintest of smiles, tears threatening again. ¡°Thank you.¡± That night, lying on a pallet in the corner, listening to the rhythmic breath of the household asleep, he mulled over the transformation of his life. Cast into the sea, presumed dead by the palace¡ªhe had the freedom to forge a new identity, to step out from under the monstrous legacy he¡¯d left behind. At the same time, the fury still glowed like an ember. His father¡¯s face, his mother¡¯s cold aloofness, his siblings¡¯ complicity¡he could not forget. Weeks passed. The prince, soon called by a simple shortened name¡ªAdair¡ªlearned the routines of the village. He rose before dawn to gather driftwood, patched nets, helped smoke the fish. He carried water from the well, wrestling with his still-sore body. Over time, his strength returned. Gone were the formal gowns and the suffocating decorum. He wore simple tunics and breeches, the coarse fabric raw against his skin but far more fitting for who he was. He began to notice the subtle tensions in this small community. The talk of heavy taxes, of tithes demanded by local lords loyal to the crown. Marta¡¯s sister had been forced to send half her harvest in tribute, leaving them barely enough to survive the winter. Children went hungry while the King¡¯s officials collected gold and grain. Adair saw the resentful glares whenever a tax-collector¡¯s insignia reared its head. In the evenings, as villagers gathered around the communal fire, they spoke in low, cautious tones of rumored rebellions, of traveling outlaws who struck at royal caravans. Names surfaced¡ªrebels, rogues, folk heroes¡ªdetails jumbled by rumor and speculation. Adair listened with quiet intensity, feeling a stirring in his chest. Violence directed at the royal house¡ Once, he retreated from the group, haunted by a memory of the blood-slick palace floors. He told himself he should bury those old hatreds and start anew. But the next morning, a royal guard patrol visited the village, roughing up two farmers who were late on taxes. Adair watched the soldiers sneer, watched them use the butt of a spear to strike an elderly man to the ground. Rage boiled in his veins¡ªrage at the monarchy that had never cared for its people, that had taught him cruelty firsthand. But he kept silent, stepping forward only to help the old man up once the patrol left. If they knew who he really was¡ªif they sensed the threat he posed¡ªthis sanctuary would be destroyed. As time passed, he grew bolder in small ways. With a few younger villagers, he slipped into the forest on moonlit nights, practicing archery with a humble bow he¡¯d carved himself. He taught them rudimentary sword moves with wooden sticks¡ªwhat little he remembered from stolen moments in the palace training yard. They were stunned by how quickly he adapted, how fluidly he moved. Adair tried not to let bitterness seep into his every word, but sometimes it spilled over. ¡°These are the skills of our oppressors,¡± he hissed one evening, ¡°but we can make them our own.¡± They nodded, enthusiasm tempered by the fear of retaliation. Rebels might be lauded in quiet corners for stealing from the rich to feed the poor, but the King¡¯s justice was swift and brutal. Tales abounded of entire villages razed for harboring outlaws. Still, the seeds of defiance had been planted. Adair¡¯s position in the village solidified. He was neither master nor commander, simply a man with a mysterious past and a fierce sense of justice. The fisherfolk might have been suspicious at first, but his willingness to work hard and share his knowledge of swordsmanship won them over. When he quietly confided his desire to see the monarchy¡¯s power weakened, if not destroyed, some listened with a dark gleam in their eyes. They, too, had lost loved ones to the palace¡¯s merciless taxes and punishments. One crisp afternoon, Marta found Adair standing at the edge of the village, staring out to sea. She sensed the turmoil in him. ¡°You¡¯ve grown stronger,¡± she said kindly, ¡°but I see a restlessness, too.¡± He exhaled, crossing his arms over his chest. ¡°I don¡¯t belong here, not forever. Your kindness saved me, but I can¡¯t stand by while the King¡ªwhile that entire palace¡ªcontinues to crush ordinary folk. I was¡close to them once. I know how they think. I¡¯ve seen their cruelty.¡± Marta¡¯s eyes were sharp with understanding. ¡°So you¡¯ll fight them?¡± ¡°Yes,¡± he admitted, voice low. ¡°I can¡¯t let what happened to me¡ªor to so many others¡ªremain unchallenged.¡± A small pause. ¡°I won¡¯t tell you it¡¯ll be easy,¡± she said softly. ¡°Folks around here¡we¡¯ve heard stories of roving bandits who pass themselves off as heroes. They¡¯re not always noble. Some are just thieves. But we¡¯ve also heard rumors¡ªof real rebellions forming in the north, in the hidden camps. Of leaders stepping forward.¡± Adair nodded, emboldened by her support. ¡°I aim to find them. Or gather people here. Either way, the kingdom must change.¡± That evening, beneath the flickering lantern of the fisherman¡¯s hut, Adair gathered a few like-minded villagers¡ªyoung people who chafed under royal rule. They spoke in hushed tones, planning small raids on local tax caravans or outposts. Simple goals to free imprisoned villagers or steal back the harvest stolen by the lords. Each new scheme lit a spark in Adair¡¯s eyes, a reflection of the smoldering resentment that had once erupted violently in the palace halls. No longer was he a hidden, tortured figure forced into submission. Now he was a nascent rebel, forging a path that might one day topple the very monarchy that denied him his rightful self. Yet he could not completely banish the guilt that haunted him at night¡ªimages of Clarice¡¯s final breath, the brother¡¯s anguished face. Am I just continuing the cycle of bloodshed? he wondered in the darkness. But then he remembered the old man struck down by the tax collector¡¯s spear, the broken families left hungry, and the silent acceptance that had let him suffer for years. Violence was not chosen; it was forced upon them by those who refused to yield power. Thus, the days began shifting into something new: stealthy reconnaissance, quiet gatherings in barns, and whispered signals in the moonlight. At first, only four or five souls joined Adair in these clandestine efforts. But word traveled, carried by travelers and through discreet messages. Tales spread of a tall, dark-haired stranger who had once survived the palace¡¯s cruelty and now led small raids to free the oppressed. He did not reveal his true heritage. Instead, he let rumors swirl¡ªsome said he was an exiled noble, others that he was the bastard son of a minor lord. A few whispered that he was the dreaded ¡°Princess¡± returned from the dead. Adair neither confirmed nor denied. Mystery served him well. As the circle of rebels grew, so did their ambitions. They seized a shipment of grain headed for the King¡¯s granaries, redistributing it among starving families. They ambushed a petty noble known for terrorizing peasants, forcing him to sign over farmland rights to the villagers. Their tactics were not always gentle¡ªAdair¡¯s sword had tasted blood before, and he no longer hesitated when threatened. But they tried, wherever possible, to spare those who surrendered. Meanwhile, the monarchy could not ignore the rising tide of rebellion. Reports of stolen cargo, rescued prisoners, and rebellious pockets filtered up the chain of command. Loyal soldiers were dispatched to track down these rogues. Adair and his allies had to move carefully, changing hideouts often, ensuring the local people shielded them. On a chill night beneath a scattering of stars, Adair found himself huddling in the old barn that served as their current base. A small map lay spread on a makeshift table, lit by a single flickering lantern. It depicted the region¡¯s roads and watchtowers¡ªlines of ink marking the King¡¯s hold on the land. A handful of rebel leaders crowded around, voices hushed but crackling with resolve. ¡°This next raid,¡± one of them, a burly forester, said, pointing to a route near the forest¡¯s edge, ¡°should be on the tax wagon. It carries gold meant for the capital. If we take that, we can fund weapons and supplies for many more.¡± ¡°Agreed,¡± said a young woman who had lost two brothers to the King¡¯s dungeons. ¡°But we need a diversion. They¡¯ll have a full escort this time.¡± Adair studied the map. ¡°We can stage an ambush near the rocky pass, where the cliffs overshadow the road. A couple of us scale the ledge and drop boulders to block the path¡ªthen the rest close in from the forest. We disable the guards quickly and retreat with the spoils before reinforcements arrive.¡± Nods all around. Excitement pulsed in the air. They began assigning roles. The plan would be dangerous¡ªany misstep could mean swift retribution. Yet they felt unstoppable, powered by desperation and the just cause of freeing the exploited. In a quiet moment, Adair glanced out the barn door, at the pale moon overhead. Memory tugged: a flicker of that cliff, that stormy night, his fall into the sea. If he died in this rebellion, would the water close over him again in a swirl of darkness? He pushed aside the thought, focusing on the fight ahead. I should have died that night, but I survived for a reason. He would see this through. The whiff of woodsmoke brought him back to the present. He turned to his cohorts, resolute. ¡°Prepare yourselves. At dawn, we move.¡± Their gazes met his, brimming with a quiet fervor. The spark of rebellion had caught. Soon, that spark would become a wildfire¡ªand with it, the long shadow of vengeance would reach toward the palace walls.