Owl Knight
Don't let it ruffle your feathers, my liege.
Mordin stamped his feet and rubbed his gloved hands in a vain attempt to banish the cold the gnawed at his old bones like a starving wolf. For thirty miles the cold had been seeping deeper and deeper into his body until even the fur lined tunic he wore did little to preserve him from the chill.
The land of Bremmerlund was hard. As hard as the iron scraped from the mines that gave her her name "the iron land". And his knees felt every bit of that hardness as he made his way along the trail ahead of the carriage. He pulled his horse behind him by her lead. He didn't mind riding, so much. But there came times when he just needed to feel the ground beneath his own two feet.
The princess had been quiet for some time, hidden away in the carriage. But then, he supposed, who could blame her, being delivered this way like chattel in a prince's political game. She deserved far better than what her sex and position had forced her life to become. Mordin only hoped that the crown prince of Lyria was a better man than Ethred, the girl's hateful bastard of a brother, and he would be there for her in whatever capacity he could. All the same, his heart grieved for the child he had all but raised and the uncertain future that lay before her.
"Woah!" came a call from the rider at the head of the train. The young soldier whirled his mare around and rode back towards Mordin's position by the carriage.
"What is it?" the bodyguard asked, raising a hand to stop the carriage. The driver pulled up the wagon horses.
"A tree fell across the road up ahead," the young soldier replied. "It's not very stout, we should be able to do away with it quickly."
Mordin frowned. He had seen enough treachery in his life to know that mysteriously felled trees were not always the result of unfortunate happenstance. Indeed, they were a favorite method of highwaymen and other unsavory types that were all too common along these deserted roads, far from the nearest town.
"Alright," Mordin commanded. "Take three men with axes from the rear wagon and clear the way. Set the rest of the guard along the sides of the road. The longer we are delayed the greater the risk to her highness."
The young soldier nodded and rode back to inform the rear guard of Mordin's orders. Mordin ground his teeth as he pulled his horse back to the carriage and tied her off to an iron bracket on the side. The king had only offered him a dozen men. Twelve members of the castle guard to make the journey as quiet and expedient as possible. Mordin had argued for more men, but Ethred, the prattling little gobsmack couldn't be swayed.
Everything about this stank to heavens high.
Three soldiers, axes in hand, strode past him from the rear of the caravan, on their way to clear the blockage. Mordin watched them go and then rounded to make his way to the carriage door. His cold eye scanned the forest that rose on either side of the sunken road, the rough pine trunks wreathed in chill mist.
He knocked gently on the carriage door.
"Your highness?"
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