Chapter 1: Under the Moonlight
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A dreary howl echoed through the dark woods, a telltale sign of wolves on the prowl in the twilight. As the sun slowly disappeared behind the western mountains, a luxurious carriage trudged along the muddy road, drawn by the muscles of two strong horses. Two soldiers on horseback escorted the carriage, flanking it. They brandished a torch with one hand while the other rested on the hilt of their sword.
Two women were comfortably traveling inside the carriage. The first one was a young woman dressed with an opulent frilly white dress. On the top of her head sat a silver diadem, jeweled with invaluable gemstones. She was nervously playing with a lock of her long blonde hair as she gazed through the window of the carriage, trying to see through the veil of night.
Sitting on the opposite side, the other woman seemed barely older but wore a bulky plate armor with a moon etched on her chest plate and on her shoulders. Her brown hair was tied in a ponytail and her matching eyes were calmly observing her travel companion. A sword was laying on the seat next to her, the same moon engraved on the hilt.
"Loretta, did we really have to travel by night? This road is terribly unsettling." The blonde woman asked, her eyes still watching the passing landscape.
"Yes, Princess Elisa. I'm deeply sorry but your father the King requested your urgent return." The female knight answered gently. "But don't worry, the Order of the Moon will always be there to protect you." She added with a tender smile.
The Princess finally moved her eyes away from the window, looked at Loretta and smiled in turn. "I'm glad you were the one chosen to escort me, but I know that watching over me isn't the most exhilarating assignment you could have had." Elisa said softly, almost apologetically.
The knightess lowered her eyes, fleeing Elisa's gaze. "T-To be truly honest with you, Princess, I... huh... I volunteered for this." Loretta admitted.
Elisa perked up. "Really?! You did?" The Princess asked, beaming. "But why though? Is there something you're not telling me, my dearest Loretta?" Elisa continued, suddenly very serious.
Loretta fidgeted on her seat, her eyes focused on her armored greaves. She tried to find an answer to the Princess' question, but none came to her mind, or at least none that she dared to voice out loud.
Elisa suddenly burst out laughing. After a minute and once she got her bearings under control, she swept the teary corner of her eyes with the back of her hand. "You're still soooo easy to tease. You've not changed a bit, Loretta." The Princess said cheerfully.
"Princess, please. This is not..." Loretta tried to weakly reprimand the Princess, but her sentence was abruptly interrupted.
"Stop calling me Princess!" Elisa exclaimed adamantly. "Please, please, call me Elisa. Don't you remember when we used to play with sticks in my Father's garden, pretending to be knights? I wasn't just a Princess to you back then." Elisa finished, melancholically.
Loretta sighed. "I remember. It was terribly improper. A commoner sneaking in the castle grounds to play dangerous games with the young princess unbeknownst to the whole court. What would your Father have done if he had known?"
"He knew." Elisa said simply, shrugging. "How do you think I justified all the dirtied and torn dresses?"
Loretta slumped against her seat, taking in all the implication of what Elisa had just said. She shivered at the thought of having to face the King's gaze, now that she knew that he knew all along.
"I think he was just happy that I had a friend." Elisa continued, obvious to the knightess sudden existential crisis.
Silence crept in the carriage, and before long Elisa let out a noisy, unladylike yawn.
"You should get some rest, Prin... You should get some rest. We'll reach the castle tomorrow morning." Loretta advised gently.
With a sigh, Elisa closed her eyes and leaned against her seat, trying to find a comfortable position to get some rest.
"Tomorrow, before your duty sends you somewhere far away, will you humor me one more time? For a cup of tea, maybe?" The Princess asked, her eyes still closed.
"I will." The knightess answered, her reddening cheeks unseen by her friend. "I definitely will."
With a smile on her lips and under the watchful eye of her friend, Elisa was soon lulled to sleep by the sound of the wheels and the wind in the trees.
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Princess Elisa woke up with a start as a loud neigh resounded in the night, followed by a wet thump. The carriage rocked, then it stopped and the world stood still and silent.
Loretta swiftly wrapped her gloved hand around the Princess' mouth and brought her left index finger to her lips, wordlessly asking Elisa to stay silent. Slowly, the knightess removed her hand from the Princess' mouth. Satisfied by the quivering Princess' silence, she grabbed her sword by the hilt before looking Elisa in the eyes.
"Stay right here, stay silent. I'll be right back." Loretta whispered, and Elisa nodded back.
With a deep breath, Loretta opened the door of the carriage just enough for her to slip through, and bravely headed into the night, noiselessly closing the door behind her.
Outside, the fearless knightess held back a gag as her eyes fell on the remains of a horse. Its head had been cleanly severed and had rolled further down on the path. Its body was slumped against the carriage. The soldier that had been riding the horse wasn't faring better. His lower body was crushed under the dead horse's weight and his throat was sliced open so deep that he had been almost beheaded. Blood permeated the mud around the carriage, the darkness hiding its hideous red taint but not the metallic smell in the air.