Chapter 67: For Her
Chapter 67: For Her
Her fingers tightened in the coverlet.
This was no idle threat. Whoever dared to strike at Rhaegar had planned it carefully—had infiltrated the estate itself. That meant power, influence... and maybe... desperation.
And worst of all—she had heard it. All of it. She knew.
Her breath grew uneven. Should she warn him?
The thought rose instinctively—almost violently. But just as quickly, it faltered.
If she went to him now, every step she had taken to distance herself would collapse. Every eye already watching her would turn sharper, more suspicious.
Dorian was already wary of her behavior. Yvaine was already probing, watching her every step.
One wrong move—and not only would she be exposed—
Rhaegar might be implicated as well.
She closed her eyes tightly, struggling to calm the storm of thoughts inside her head.
No.
She could not act recklessly.
But neither could she do nothing.
Slowly, Caelith turned onto her side, clutching the edge of the blanket as though holding onto the last thread of certainty. The tremor in her hands began to fade.
Three days. She had three days.
Three days to decide whether to remain hidden in the shadows she had chosen... or step forward and risk everything again.
Dorian’s spies watched her. Yvaine’s eyes shadowed her every step.
How, then, was she to warn Rhaegar?
A letter? Impossible. If such a message were intercepted, it would not merely fail—it would condemn them both.
No... she could trust no one. She would have to go herself.
At the hour of deepest night, when even the last patrol had changed and the great residence lay drowned in slumber, Caelith finally rose.
She donned a plain, unremarkable gown, dark as the hush of midnight. Into her hair she fixed the black iron hairpin Rhaegar had once given her—its hidden blade a silent promise of protection and safety. At her waist, concealed beneath folds of cloth, rested the token bestowed upon her by the bold and radiant princess.
Without a sound, she pushed open the rear window.
Then she slipped into the night.
The back alley stretched long and narrow, hemmed in by high, cold walls. Moonlight could not reach its depths. It was a place where shadows ruled, where even breath seemed swallowed whole.
She moved forward carefully at first—then faster.
And faster.
Urgently.
And then... she stopped.
Something was wrong. It was too still.
No wind. No whisper. Not even the hum of insects.
Silence, heavy as a grave.
Her heart lurched.
She turned, but it was too late.
From the darkness, figures burst forth like wraiths.
A brutal kick struck her back. The force sent her crashing to the ground, her palms and knees scraping against the rough stone. Pain flared, sharp and immediate.
She pushed herself up, but they were already upon her.
Four or five of them at once.
Her hand moved instinctively.
The black iron hairpin slid free—a flick of her fingers, and its hidden blade sprang forth with a cold gleam.
Rhaegar’s voice echoed in her mind.
Do not meet strength with strength. Look for the weakness. Use it.
The first attacker lunged.
She twisted aside, swift as instinct, and drove the blade into his arm. A cry tore from his throat as blood splattered warm across her cheek.
But they were too many.
Another struck from the side—his fist slammed into her ribs. The impact stole her breath, a strangled gasp escaping as she staggered backward, crashing hard against the wall.
Then—a stone flew from the dark.
It struck her forehead with sickening force.
Light shattered across her vision. Warm blood streamed down, blurring her sight.
They closed in.
Blows rained upon her like a storm—fists, boots, merciless and unrelenting.
She curled inward, arms shielding her head, teeth clenched so tightly her jaw trembled.
She would not scream. She would not give them that.
Pain consumed her.
Her ribs burned with every breath—each inhale a blade, each exhale a wound.
Her strength ebbed.
Darkness crept at the edges of her mind.
And yet, one thought remained.
Rhaegar is in danger.
A hand seized her collar, dragging her upward like a broken thing.
Through the haze, she saw it—the gleam of a dagger.
Cold.
Fatal.
The man’s eyes held no hesitation, only death.
"Medler," he spat. "Die for it."
The blade drove toward her heart—
And then—the night split.
A shadow descended from above like judgment itself.
With a single, devastating strike, the attacker was sent crashing aside.
Strong arms caught her—firm, unyielding—drawing her into a familiar embrace.
Held.
Shielded.
Saved.
The familiar scent of cold pine wrapped around her—steady, unmistakable.
Rhaegar...
He had come.
Through the haze of pain, she heard it—the clash of steel, sharp and ringing; the strangled cries of men; the dull, sickening crack of breaking bone.
Each sound seemed distant, as though carried across a great expanse of water.
She wanted to lift her head—to see him, to be certain—but her eyelids were unbearably heavy, as though weighed down by iron.
Time lost all meaning.
A heartbeat. An eternity.
And then—silence.
"Caelith! ...Caelith!"
His voice broke through the darkness, close—so close—yet laced with something she had never heard from him before.
Not command.
Not cold certainty.
But fear.
Raw, unguarded fear.
She tried to answer. She tried to say his name, but her throat would not obey. It was as though something had sealed it shut, stealing even the smallest sound.
Then, arms gathered her up.
Carefully. Gently.
Too gentle for the man who commanded the feared Shadow Guard.
Those hands—they were trembling.
With all the strength she had left, Caelith forced her eyes open.
The world swayed, blurred by blood and shadow––until it settled upon him.
Rhaegar. Rhae.
In the pale wash of moonlight, his face was drained of all color, stark and ashen. The composure he wore like armor was gone, shattered beyond repair.
And in his eyes—there was something she had never seen before.
Not calculation. Not iron resolve.
But unmistakable, unhidden panic.
For her.
novelraw