《The Rícewelig Crown》Chapter Fifty Seven
Advertisement
Firgen sat in his tent at the map table. He pushed a whet stone from side to side across the surface with one finger.
Ebýr stood with his arms folded, glistening with sweat and splotches of oil. Audovera paced around the table, biting her nails.
Firgen pulled his chair in closer so she wouldn’t trip on it, “I cannot believe we lost to that damn weasel.”
“I’m just glad we managed to scare off those things,” said Audovera.
“They wandered off as if they couldn’t be bothered to kill any more of my soldiers. I’ve never been simultaneously relieved and insulted. It's infuriating.”
“Be grateful Firgen. We were lucky to survive,” said Audovera.
Firgen reached for his spiced wine, dipped his finger into the goblet, and traced out Dolwillen’s face on the table surface, “I lost a quarter of my troops and half of the injured will not be fighting again anytime soon.”
“Dolwillen’s casualties were much worse, Sire.” said Ebýr. “I think we killed half of his soldiers. They won’t fight again without reinforcements. I’d call it a victory.”
Firgen spun the tip of his dagger on the tip of Dolwillen’s wine traced nose and shook his head, “When both sides retreat, it’s a loss.”
He repeatedly slammed his dagger into the table, “Gods dammit!”
“I lost my first born son,” said Audovera. “I am as furious as you are, if not more so, but it was a battle. Someone must lose, others have to die.” Audovera collapsed into a chair, “I care little that we lost.”
Firgen sagged and scratched the back of his head, “I’m sorry Audovera. Reymnd was a fine young man.”
Audovera reached across the table and placed her hand over his for a short moment, “You did everything you could to keep us together. Nobody expects a miracle when they face a monster.”
“They only hope for one and the King is supposed to provide it,” said Firgen. “I may wish to perform dashing feats, but it’s not going to happen.” Firgen scored his dagger across Dolwillen’s crude, wine drawn eyes, “Any word from my bridge saboteurs?”
“They were last seen riding south, pursued by soldiers under Mánfeld’s personal banner,” said Ebýr. “I don’t know if the Duke or his Drýmann were with them, but it is likely.”
“What should we do?” said Audovera.
Firgen leant back and stared into the canopy of the royal campaign tent. It had several more patches than yesterday.
Advertisement
“Find out where Dolwillen is. If he’s run off, we’ll send a messenger to the other side. If they refuse to surrender, execute the nobles we captured, then ask again,” said Firgen.
*
Elewýs and the troop had been on the run for a week, travelling cross country, thirty, sometimes forty miles a day. It was mostly flat, but the late autumn heat and chilly nights were taking their toll.
I feel sorry for the horses.
Food was low and tempers were high. Elewýs was eating three times as much as everyone else and she’d still lost weight.
No one has complained about my appetite. They’re so nice I am beginning to wonder if something is wrong.
“Gods this itches,” said Clæfre.
“That’s what happens when you catch the Scales,” said Milde.
“What’s that?”
“No idea,” said Milde. “But it sounds dirty, right? You should get Péton to have a look at it.”
“Have you ever tried riding twenty miles with a pike between your breasts?”
Milde sniggered.
“You really have to fish your brain from the dyke.”
“That’s what-”
“No, don’t go there. I’m really not in the mood,” said Clæfre. “My arse hurts, my thighs are sore, and I’m still finding scales everywhere. They’ve left little scratches all over me and every time this bloody horse jostles me, they all open up.”
“Sounds like a good night out to me.” Milde yawned, “Nice fish though. Last bit of fresh food we’ve had in days.”
Clæfre grinned, “So worth it.”
“Anyone know why Hrolf is back?” said Milde.
“He hasn’t told anyone,” said Clæfre. “I think he’s sulking.”
Elewýs stumbled, then sprinted to catch up.
“You alright?” said Clæfre.
“I’ll live,” said Elewýs.
“You’re amazing,” said Milde. “I don’t know how you do it. You’ve been jogging beside the horses for days and you still look good.”
“Thank you, but it’s not like I have a choice. The Gréatian is still following us, Mánfeld too. I don’t want to find out what happens if either of them catch us.”
“I think if the creature wanted to catch us, it would have,” said Clæfre. “And Mánfeld is too slow.”
“I hope so,” said Elewýs. “He’s creepy.”
“We can’t keep going south though,” said Clæfre. “We’re already in the Cassuc Westeland. None of us have been here before and we’re completely lost. I guess we’ll hit the coast or the Werodflód eventually, but that’s hundreds of miles away. What do we do after that? The Duke is mad enough to chase us forever.”
Advertisement
Milde tried to shrug, a rather useless gesture when riding at a trot, “Ask Leth.”
“He looks as lost as the rest of us,” said Clæfre.
“He’s nice,” said Elewýs, “I like how he makes water appear from nowhere. I’d be pretty thirsty by now if he wasn’t about.”
“I thought he couldn’t make sweet, sweet magic without blowing up,” said Milde.
“Well he’s seventeen, what did you expect,” said Clæfre. She picked a fish scale from her leg and flicked it into the grass, “He’s been getting better ever since he found the yellow rock though.”
“The Feorhhord Gimcynn he unwraps every night?” said Milde. “There’s a real heart inside. Beating. I want to know what we’re going to do with that.”
“It makes me queasy every time he brings it out,” said Clæfre. “Weard won’t go near the thing.”
“Don’t blame him,” said Elewýs. “It’s nothing like the obelisks in the Wúduwésten. It has all these braided black streaks coming out of it. I catch a glimpse of them every time my mind wanders off.”
“Black streaks?” said Milde.
Elewýs nodded, “Like a rope, or chain. Nothing I can do about is though. I am going to ask where we’re going.”
“We’ll go together,” said Clæfre.
Elewýs nodded and they moved up the line.
“Hi, Leth!” said Clæfre, waving.
“Hmmm?” said Leth.
He seems distracted.
“Where are we going?” said Clæfre.
“South.”
“I mean after that.”
“Erm…”
“You don’t have to answer now,” said Elewýs.
Milde dropped her reins and crossed her arms, “We’re lost, aren’t we.”
“No, no, not lost. Just a long way from where we need to be,” said Leth.
“Which is?” said Elewýs.
“I don’t…” He tossed his head from side to side, biting his lip. He glanced at the sky, then grinned, “ The Wúduwésten! We need to go to the Wúduwésten.”
“Why? Why there?” said Elewýs.
“Sorry,” said Leth.
Cempa rode up, “Let’s stop for a few minutes, lad. Neither us, or the horses, can risk an injury.”
“Alright,” said Leth.
The troop pulled up and dismounted. Hrolf and Péton lifted the saddles off the horses to help them cool off. Tadhgán dug around in one of the packs and found a handful of wrinkled carrots.
Elewýs removed her pack and rubbed her shoulders, “Do I get one too?”
Tadhgán laughed and tossed her one.
“I could do with a snack as well,” said Cempa.
Weard reached into his jacket and produced a dry, battered sausage, “I was saving this for a rainy day, but I guess a big decision will do.” He parcelled out thick slices of spiced salty meat.
“A truly unique flavour,” said Péton.
The first slice left Elewýs’s mouth both dry and greasy.
“It’s been marinating for awhile,” said Weard.
Elewýs ate the second with a little more caution.
“I think I can block the Cwylla,” said Leth.
“Not all of us can hear if you whisper,” said Weard.
“The Gréatian’s heartstone has given me an idea,” said Leth.
“And,” said Milde.
“If we stop the Cwylla, the Gréatian will have to move back to the Wúduwésten or die. Duke Mánfeld won’t have his monsters, and the King can beat him back.”
“I wouldn’t call that an epiphany,” said Cempa. “It’s exactly what we’d be doing if we could do it.”
“Both the creature and the Duke are following us,” said Tadhgán. “The only way we can wiggle out of this one is to ride to the end of the world.”
“That was before we found this.” Leth pointed at his left saddlebag.
“Sounds a bit convenient to me,” said Péton.
“I don’t particularly care,” said Milde. “As long as it means I can go back to shooting small furry animals and drinking cider. Can you do it?”
“Yes,” said Leth.
“Then I’m all for it,” said Milde.
“Me too,” said Clæfre.
“It’s not supposed to be a discussion you know,” said Leth.
“Never hurts to know people are on your side,” said Cempa. “If you say you can, we’ll follow you, but if it doesn’t work, you’d better be ready to run. I don’t want to have to explain to Sir Wulfslæd how I let his son get mangled under my watch.”
“We’ll be fine. I can do it,” said Leth. “I’m not a sulking incompetent.”
“Never said you were,” said Cempa.
“How do we find the Wúduwésten,” said Péton.
Leth looked at her.
“Is it the only way?” said Elewýs.
“Yes.”
“Then I’ll lead you,” said Elewýs.
Cempa raised an eyebrow, “How?”
She stared at the magic streaming through the sky and smiled, “I always know where my home is.”
Advertisement
- In Serial36 Chapters
Path of the Berserker (A Daopocalypse Progression Fantasy)
A world destroyed. An axe to grind. And a path to infinite power. Welcome to my reality. When the cultivators came to Earth, they destroyed our entire civilization in a matter of hours. Armies fell, cities burned and that was before the moon turned red and filled our world with monsters. Now, over a decade later, what’s left of humanity slave under the heels of our Qi infused masters. The luckiest of us might even become one of them, they say—if we serve the Dynasty well enough and harness the power of Qi. But I want none of that. I’m sick of serving and I want nothing to do with their world. Instead, I want them to pay for what they did to mine. Maybe that’s why she found me. The dark, angry goddess who showed me a different path. Apparently, Qi is not the only route to power. I may be too late to save my family, but it’s never too late for revenge. Now, I’ll fight to take back my planet, to grow strong enough to beat the cultivators at their own game. I will free humanity or die trying. For that’s the Path of a Berserker. Path of the Berserker is progression fantasy novel for fans of western style cultivation fantasy, post apocalypse and xianxia. Click to enjoy now!
8 218 - In Serial12 Chapters
Memory Lane
Five child prodigies are invited to an elusive tech CEO's private island. Surrounded by enigmatic geniuses, Daniel is forced to face his past through everlasting, haunting, memories. Unravel the mysteries of the island along with the characters inside, but try not to get killed. How does one move on? Must you forget about your past to truly overcome it? If this is going to be the future, why live in the present? Complete
8 110 - In Serial38 Chapters
The Infected Progressive
Weekly thoughts by an inspiring expressionist prepping to take the world by storm through progressive poetry and lyrical precociousness. I hope you will follow me on this imagination rollercoaster that will loop the loop the insecurities of man and beyond.
8 375 - In Serial10 Chapters
Magician's Pact
A young boy with a special key finds himself caught up with an old wizard, an ancient prohpecy, and a possibly conspercy. This sounds like the sort of thing most childern would love to be a part of, but there are just three small problems. The first is that he is not the hero. Someone already got that role. The second is that he isn't a wizard. He is a Magician which complicates things. The third is that there might be a chance that the whole 'problem' might be comming from his end. Personally he never understood (or interacted with) the 'secret' magical world, but that becomes a problem when the magical world apparently has what his role is supposed to be according to their ancient book... and they are not to happy about him not matching their book. Still it shouldn't be to hard right? All he has to do is go to a school, learn some wizard magic, make sure nobody takes his key... also avoid dying. Thankfully he has had a lot of expereince with that last part and a bunch of Twig Twirling childern can't be too dangerious? Right?
8 102 - In Serial15 Chapters
Tales of the Legendary Scholar
They meet in the most unlikely moment and turned their life around. Freidrech newly arrived in his own nation's capital city, which is so foreign to him compared to his village's idyllic and nondiscriminatory atmosphere, after he is forced to come. Now, he is facing a royal prince and tells him to bow. This draws out one of his late father's teachings from the deepest recesses in his mind. "The blood of your great ancestors runs in your veins. Don't easily bow down to anyone, or accept suppression by any being, not even from a monarch, unless you pledge your allegiance to him. Also, giving in to oppression is directly telling the oppressor that you're easy prey and open for manipulation." He is uncertain on how to face this oppression right now. Will he bows or not? What will he do to uphold his father's words while keeping his life safe? As for the prince, Theodrech has nothing to do with Freidrech, so he wishes to let this slip, but the boy opens his mouth and proposes the most ludicrous challenge he ever heard and triggers his curiosity. "I, Freidrech Goederf Gerboud, son of the late Village Chief Louvel Gerboud of Wrilon, will challenge you, Your Highness, to a battle of riddles… If you win, I will not only bow but be your servant for the rest of my life." This amuses the prince. It is the first he met a boy of the same age who is not intimidated by the air of authority he projects. Rather, this boy challenges him. "Why are you so headstrong? In fact, bowing to me is an honor. You saw the King's noble Knights. When they saw me, they bowed," says Theodrech, testing Freidrech. "Allow me to be forward, Your Highness. For me, bowing to a monarch does not guarantee loyalty. If I were you, I rather have men who stand straight in my presence but who got my back, than bowing men who are dreaming of my death," replies Freidrech. The prince’s curiosity increases. A huge smile is seen on his face. Prince Theodrech decides to take Freidrech under his wing. Little did they know, this boy who Prince Theodrech takes in as his confidant and friend in the most ridiculous fashion is someone indispensable in his life and the one who can help him succeed the throne when he almost believes he has lost. Thus, the Tales of the Legendary Scholar begins. ------ o ------ Old Synopsis: A famous ancient adage stated, behind a successful man is a woman BUT… In these lands, the monarchs are seeking not a woman to stand behind them but the man hailed as the Legendary Scholar. However, this legendary figure starts off in life as a youngster of humble birth, a newly orphaned lad named Freidrech, who courageously faces the high-strung aristocrats and big-bellied bureaucrats in the kingdom.He is held in contempt as unscholarly, ignorant, and a plebeian from the hinterlands.But he proved them wrong.Not with an iron-clad fist of which he has none, but with his studious nature, ingeniousness, courage, wit, and honesty. Also, with the assistance of two ousted beings: a former aka 'great wizard', and a burly fairy. Follow Freidrech’s adventures, on how he wins the heart of the future king of Xaeviel, befriends outlaws, prevents the people from being slaughtered from an unknown plague, rerouting the enemies’ attacks when reinforcements are denied, secures Prince Theodrech’s claim to the throne in the midst of utter despair, and many more.
8 237 - In Serial12 Chapters
A Destructive Incarnation
Hey there... It's me.The narrator of this story. I'm here to convince you to read this. Why you ask? Because it has Allen. Who is Allen?What is Allen? Why is Allen?Where is Allen?When is Allen?...Is there any other question words left.Ah yes ... How is Allen?That's important as well. Well,all these questions will be answered if you read it.Intrested yet? No? What if I say this is an isekai? It is one, Definitely.*wink wink Still no?What if I say there is a harem?All of them have happy endings as well... Definitely *wink wink Wait... Don't go yet. I don't want to be lonely. I have OP MC, cute girls, Really bad villains who gets trashed by the MC,the classic system and level ups and the RPG stuffs well.Read this story and we will be friends beyond the fourth wall. That's pretty much it.(This is fucking embarrassing) If you still decide not to read this story.I guess I can only say that I couldn't manage to change my fate. Authors Note : Thank you Fuyu Dust for the cover. Here is the link if you want to go check his thread.
8 120

