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Chapter 50 - Old names

‎The Ballroom

‎The dolls moved with precision.

‎Most of the audience watched the performance. Dot watched the story being told through it — the gestures, the weight of each movement, what the puppeteer was trying to say underneath the spectacle.

‎"It's something, isn't it," Astrid said, glancing at him.

‎Dot turned. "Yeah." A pause. "When do we get to see the one pulling the strings?"

‎"Not until the end."

‎He looked at her properly for a moment. "This isn't your first time. I can tell."

‎Astrid's hand went to her hair, turning a strand slowly. "When I was younger my mother and I used to visit a doll maker in Thornhold. The best there was. He performed at the castle — I can still remember how hard he made my father laugh." She smiled without meaning to. "My mother too."

‎"William," Dot said.

‎"William."

‎"We're going to find him." He watched her face. "Maybe you'll get to thank him."

‎Astrid turned to look at him.

‎"WILL YOU TWO SHUT UP."

‎Someone from the row behind them. Dot faced forward immediately.

‎"Sorry," he said.

‎Astrid pressed her lips together. Looked at her lap. Laughed quietly.

‎Somewhere in the Capital — An Alley

‎Garon drew Skógrimr.

‎The blade caught the dim alley light and held it differently than metal should — not reflecting it, absorbing it. The edge gleamed with something that had nothing to do with polish. Eight generations of proof humming in his grip.

‎Roan looked at it.

‎Something crossed his face. Not fear. Recognition.

‎"That blade." A pause. "That's it, isn't it."

‎Sable moved first.

‎Low and fast from the left, two short blades angled for his forearm not his body.

‎"Die, you—"

‎Skógrimr shifted in his hand before he consciously moved — grip adjusting, balance changing, the blade shortening slightly like it had already read the angle.

‎He caught the first. Turned the second off his forearm — close, the edge kissing his sleeve but not his skin.

‎No blood.

‎"Not bad for a girl," Garon said.

‎Sable reset. Frustrated this time. She'd expected one pass to be enough.

‎Roan still hadn't moved. Just watching. Reading.

‎Garon couldn't hear her feet.

‎Not quieter than normal — completely absent. No footfall at all. The alley was getting darker, the shadows thickening, and he had no sound to track her by.

‎She's a skilled one.

‎Roan raised the crossbow.

‎The bolts gleamed green at the tip — whatever coated them, when it landed it didn't just pierce. It dissolved. The arrow. The material it hit. Both gone in seconds.

‎The first bolt came fast. Garon caught it on Skógrimr's flat — redirected it, the bolt skipping off the blade and narrowly missing Roan's face.

‎Roan didn't flinch.

‎Garon charged straight at him.

‎Roan let him come — used his momentum, pulled him off balance, fed him directly into Sable's angle.

‎She was already there.

‎The blade caught his shoulder. Shallow. Fast.

‎Blood.

‎Roan inhaled slowly. The crossbow came up again, firing at speed — bolt after bolt, the green tips burning through whatever they touched. A bystander threw open a window above them.

‎"What's going on out—"

‎A bolt dissolved the window frame. The man disappeared back inside screaming.

‎Garon's eyes lit blue.

‎He went up — Skógrimr propelling him, using the blade's resonance to push off the alley wall, the crossbow bolts tracing where he'd been a half second behind. He landed between Roan and Sable, closer than either of them expected.

‎Skógrimr responded.

‎Not to the wound. To the blood — to the bloodline, eight generations fresh in Garon's veins. The blade brightened. A low resonance moved through the metal, through his hand, up his arm, into his teeth before he heard it.

‎The aura came off him without announcement. Blue. Low. The kind that doesn't ask permission.

‎Roan stepped back. First time he'd moved backward in the whole fight.

‎"Still want to keep going?" Garon said.

‎Sable came again — no sound, no warning, the phantom step bringing her in from his blind side.

‎But Garon wasn't tracking her by sound anymore.

‎Skógrimr turned toward her before his eyes confirmed the movement. Like a compass settling on north. She overextended by half a step — he read it through the blade before his body knew to respond — redirected her and put her against the alley wall with the edge at her throat.

‎She went very still.

‎Roan stopped.

‎Nobody moved.

‎"Call it off," Garon said.

‎"You won't kill her." Roan's voice was flat. "She's my only daughter."

‎"Try me."

‎Roan looked at his daughter. At the blade. At the boy holding it with both blue eyes and eight generations of something he hadn't expected to see tonight.

‎"Tell whoever hired you," Garon said. "Garon — prince of Greenwood — won't go home until his promise is kept. Pass that on. Or I deliver the message in pieces."

‎A long pause.

‎Roan said one word to Sable.

‎She stood down.

‎Garon stepped back. Let her cross to her father. Then walked back toward the capital entrance without looking behind him.

‎Roan watched the blade until it rounded the corner and disappeared.

‎He looked at his crossbow. At the bolts he hadn't fired. At the buildings behind him still quietly dissolving where the green tips had landed.

‎"That was Skógrimr," Sable said.

‎"Yes."

‎"Should we—"

‎"We haven't been paid." Roan wrapped the chain back around his arm. "And nobody told us the blade would be involved." A long pause. "This isn't our fight."

‎He looked at the corner.

‎"He's a good kid."

‎Sable stared at him. "Don't tell me one fight changed your entire personality."

‎"No," Roan said. Smirking slightly at the dissolving wall beside him.

‎Knights' voices echoed from the far end of the street — drawn by the noise, by the melted stonework, by the window frame that was no longer there.

‎The Red Fangs were already gone before the first torch rounded the corner.

‎The Ballroom — Backstage

‎The show ended.

‎Dot and Astrid moved through the thinning crowd toward the stage, excusing themselves past people who were in no hurry to leave.

‎Outside the backstage door a middle-aged man stood alone, smoking. He looked at the door. Looked at his smoke. Chose the smoke.

‎"William—" Dot called from inside.

‎The man turned.

‎"Astrid — is that him?" Dot asked.

‎Astrid looked up, still catching her breath.

‎"That's not him," she said. Frustrated. Signed.

‎Then Cottage crashed through the side door carrying enough weapons for four people, panting, eyes wide.

‎"Guys. I may have brought all of this inside and I think we're about to get arrested."

‎"How do you know that name?" the man outside said.

‎They all looked at him.

‎"William is my father's name," he said. "Was."

‎Astrid went still.

‎"Jeffrey," she said quietly.

‎He squinted at her. Stepped closer. Tilted his head.

‎Then — recognition. Slow, and then all at once.

‎"Astrid." He almost laughed. "Princess Astrid. Don't tell me you've gone rogue."

‎"Jerk," she said.

‎She punched him.

‎Not lightly. Cottage and Dot both flinched backward at the same time.

‎Jeffrey touched his jaw. Let out a genuine laugh.

‎"You've gotten stronger."

‎"Guys — let's go," Astrid said, already walking. "He's a waste of time."

‎"Hold on," Dot said.

‎"Dot—"

‎"We still need to know if he can help us." He turned to Jeffrey. "Do you know anything about the witches?"

‎The air changed.

‎Jeffrey's expression closed like a door shutting.

‎"Brat." He grabbed Dot by the collar. "Be careful what you say out loud."

‎"You do know," Dot said. Calm. Still.

‎Jeffrey held him there for a moment.

‎Then let go.

‎He turned back to his smoke.

‎"Not going to happen," he said. "Take your girlfriend and go. She's already tired of waiting."

‎Silence.

‎Then — a sound that didn't belong. High and thin and fast, cutting through the air.

‎Dot's fist moved before anyone else registered it — a single motion, breaking the projectile mid-flight, the pieces scattering across the cobblestones.

‎Everyone froze.

‎Two figures stepped out of the dark at the end of the alley.

‎The Hound. Both axes loose in his hands, swaying slightly. Easy. Like he had all night.

‎Whisper beside him, smiling the way she always smiled — like she already knew how it ended.

‎"Long time," the Hound said.

‎Dot's fist was still raised. Slowly he lowered it.

‎His jaw tightened.

‎"You," he said.

‎Astrid and Cottage moved without being asked — stepping into position, weapons or no weapons, the instinct of people who had been through enough together to know what a stance means.

‎To Be Continued…

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