Hall of the Elf Lord
Vesian IV
"Please, sir knight! You must help me!"
Vesian lowered a hand to his sword hilt as he brought his courser to a halt. The party approaching him on the road were well-dressed, perhaps merchants or the servants of some high lord, but their clothes were all a mess and their hair disheveled. Ever wary in sight of the enchanted forest, he watched them approach with suspicion.
The lead rider, a woman of near fifty in an embroidered dress of green wool, dismounted and fell to her knees before him.
"My mistress, the Lady Isabelle, is lost!" she wailed. Vesian raised a mailed hand.
"Calm yourself," he commanded, "Good woman, and explain what has happened."
One of her companions dismounted and laid a comforting arm around her shoulder. He looked up to Vesian, his face pale and drawn. "It is our lord's daughter," the man explained. "She has been taken from us.
"Taken?" Vesian inquired. "By whom?"
"By the forest!" the woman cried, a wrinkled hand thrust toward the foreboding face of the forest a mile distant. "We were riding, and..." she choked back a sob, and her companion continued.
"There was a strange sound on the wind, like flutes. Lady Isabelle's horse bolted, and ran straight for the woods. None of us could catch her, and she could not control the animal. Before we could do anything, she disappeared into the trees and was gone."
"She's like a daughter to me," the woman sobbed, bringing herself under control at last. "I am Basine, her nurse and guardian. Gods save me, it was just a few hours of hawking, and now my dear Isabelle is gone. Please, sir. You must save her!"
"Speak sense, Basine!" her companion admonished. "He can't go off into the Dalamari Forest! There's all manner of horrors in there! He'll be dead by sundown."
"And she's in there!" Basine shot back, shoving him away. "My dear girl is in that awful place alone! He has to go in after her. Are you not a knight, sir?"
"I am," Vesian sighed, already knowing that he would not make the tournament at Chateau Vauvert in time. "Tell me what you can, and I will search the forest for your Lady Isabelle."
Basine's face lit up in relief, though her companion looked at Vesian with a mixture of pity and bafflement.
"Aye, sir. She is a slight girl, with black hair, green eyes, and wide hips. I've always said she'd make someone a good wife. She was wearing a blue dress trimmed with sable and riding a red mare, though I'll have the traitorous beast put down if you bring it back. Damned thing, it could have gotten her killed!"
"It might have already," the man muttered, and Basine shot him a furious look.
"She's still alive," Basine snapped. "Now shut your damn fool mouth before the gods hear you!"
"Very well," Vesian replied. "I will search for her."
"Thank you, sir! Oh, the gods bless your travels! I could not bear to lose my Isabelle."
"And the marquis would have our hides if anything happened to her," the man added, though when Basine's eyes turned on him, Vesian knew he wished he had kept his mouth shut.
"There is a manor not far from here that belongs to his lordship," Basine went on when she had finished staring a hole through the man's soul. "We will wait for you there, for a dare not return to the castle without my charge. Please be quick about it, I fear for her safety in that wood. Beasts, fae, even dragons lurk beneath its boughs."
Vesian knew all of that and did not need a reminder of the dangers he had just agreed to brave on behalf of some damsel he had never met before. But he knew her father's reputation, and could expect a generous reward if the girl came home in one piece. He turned over his shoulder to see his squire struggling up the road behind him with their unruly packhorse in tow.
"Damned stubborn thing," Thibault muttered. "What's gotten into you?"
"It's the forest," Vesian called. Thibault looked to his master and shook his head.
"I told you we should have taken the eastern road. Just being in sight of the place is setting the horses off."
"We won't make it to Vauvert anyway," Vesian replied. "We're heading west."
"West... into the forest?" Thibault asked. "What? Why?"
Vesian pointed to Basine's party. "Lady Isabelle's horse carried her off into the forest, and we're her best hope of rescue."
"The forest claims better knights than you every year," Thibault countered. "Why should we fare any better?"